Hi Simon,

You can create a bookmark with Command-D. See my more detailed post replying to the first post Will made on this topic earlier today. Remove the bookmarks with the "Edit Bookmark" option, select the bookmark to remove and return (or navigate to the "Remove" button and press with VO-space). One of the convenient features of the Mac is that everything is easily converted to PDF, so unless there is a more compelling reason to convert pdf to text I'll just set a bookmark.

Cheers,

Esther

P.S. Could we please avoid multiple threads started by the same person on exactly the same subject a few hours apart? It's hard to know where to reply. I generally won't post again, but then I have the impression that some people miss the original answer. If it's quite clear, after a several hours, that people have missed the answer that was made to an earlier post by the same person on the same subject, then I'll usually reply again, if I've picked this up. But this certainly discourages giving more than a bare minimum answer.

On Dec 8, 2008, at 6:32 AM, Simon Cavendish wrote:

Will, I have found that to be true too. Very difficult. therefore, I tend to copy the whole text and paste it into Textedit or convert pdf into text and read it in textedit or Nisus. That's the only way I've found arround it.Best wishes, Simon
On 8 Dec 2008, at 15:17, Will Lomas wrote:

hi i have noted that if you are reading a PDF and switch back to it later you are taken to the top of the document again
this is so annoying :) I wish there was a way round it






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