Hi Gunjan,

I was indeed looking for an equivalent of acrobat and not the acrobat
reader. I will try the okular.

Thanks a lot.

Ashvinikumar

On Nov 12, 9:46 am, "Gunjan Patidar" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Hi,
>
> On Tue, Nov 11, 2008 at 9:12 PM, Sharad Birmiwal
> <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>wrote:
>
>
>
> > Hi Ashvinikumar,
>
> > I won't call kpdf as an equivalent of Acrobat Reader but kpdf has many
> > features. The next best pdf viewer, from my experience, is evince
> > which is simple and light and gets most of the work done.
>
> > Sharad
>
> I guess you are more interested with
> editing/highlighting/commenting/annotating pdfs.
>
> kpdf, xpdf etc are plain pdf viewers with no editing capabilities (though
> they are best at what they are supposed to do). 'Okular' which is the
> successor of kpdf in KDE4+ and a Universal Document Viewer, supports
> annotating, commenting etc and works pretty well for me.
> (Although its not actually a pdf editor in true sense, annotations are saved
> seperately unless you export the pdf again, which makes more sense I guess)
>
> But if you are using KDE3 libs, pdfedit should work for you. It has a messed
> up UI though
>
> I've read somewhere that openoffice3 supports pdf import and export. It
> could be used to import a pdf, edit it and export again. Not sure about it,
> never tried
>
> --
> Gunjan Patidar
> Mike Myers  - "My theory is that all of Scottish cuisine is based on a
> dare."

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