Hi,

But you can also use hotspots.

Thanks for lisetning,
Alex,


On 8-Dec-08, at 2:07 PM, Simon Cavendish wrote:

I suspect Will's strictures regarding preview are to do with having to switch over to a dictionary while reading ortranslating text that's open in Preview. That was my issue and that is why I tend to copy and paste the text from Preview into Textedit. The ability to set bookmarks is very interesting, and thank you for posting it: I shall certainly use it. Butwhen I have to switch to another application every so very foten, it is less useful. Unless I'm totally misunderstanding Will's needs, this is what he would have found so irritating.

With best wishes

Simon
On 8 Dec 2008, at 18:58, Esther wrote:

Hi Charlie,

You can use the Command-D shortcut to create a bookmark to mark your location in Preview. (Command-D is the same shortcut key combination that's used to create bookmarks in Safari). You have the option to assign a name to the bookmark -- otherwise the default will be the name and page number of the document. What's particularly nice about this feature is that when you navigate to the menu bar in Preview and go to the Bookmarks menu (VO-M, then press "B" to navigate to Bookmarks and arrow down), selecting the saved bookmark will both open the document in Preview and put you at the bookmarked page; you don't even have to know where the document is located or navigate to it. I bookmark items that I want to re-read. For example, I have a bookmark for the section describing NumPad Commander and assigning its shortcuts in the VoiceOver Getting Started Guide for Leopard, since I'm used to using Tiger, and don't often practice NumPad shortcuts because I have one of the newer MacBook laptops that doesn't allow enabling a number pad.

To read more about working with Preview, you can check Tim Kilburn's VoiceOver pages. The page for Preview is:

http://homepage.mac.com/kilburns/voiceover/preview5.html

However, most of that information was based on the experience in Tiger. The default behavior is supposed to remember your last read page (if you interacted before you started reading), but this doesn't seem to hold up in Leopard. Also, I've never tried to read password protected files with Preview, so I don't know how that works. You might need to use Adobe reader, which is a much less pleasant experience.

One way around the problem of Preview not remembering your last read location is to use Travis Siegel's Softcon PDF reader in place of Preview. This is actually based on an early version of Preview that was available when Tiger was first released, and is simply modified to allow continuous reading without having to use Command- Right arrow at the end of each page. You can find it at:

http://www.softcon.com/mac/

Just save this to your Applications folder and start it up in place of Preview. Remember to interact before you start reading. Otherwise, it's easy to read through a huge amount of text, then lose your place because you forgot that first interaction. Softcon PDF reader does not support bookmarking or some of the other new features of Preview.

Will wrote:

hi in a password protected PDF how do i mark where i am for when i reopen it?


and Charlie added:

I'd love to know how to do that with unprotected PDF's even.


Hope this helps.

Cheers,

Esther





Reply via email to