Re: Converting Pdf To Word Doc For Free

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Alfonzo Liebenstein

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Jul 12, 2024, 7:29:03 AM7/12/24
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Could you tell me what option you are using for the conversion? Besides the Nitro Pro add-in for Word please also test the 3 workflows for converting an existing file to PDF as explained in this article:

I am converting a word file into a pdf. Word version is 2016. I need to have hyperlinks active (References to sections, figures, etc.)I use Export - Create a PDF/XPS Document and Optimized for Standard. I have references to figures and tables completely working, but references to sections don't work. In the Table of Content, I cannot click on the page numbers. What can be done to have links to sections working?

Converting Pdf To Word Doc For Free


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My thesis is written in word and I have figures all with 600dpi or higher. On Word the figures look very clear but when converted to PDF (In word I select File -> Save As -> PDF) figures get blurred. I have tried several things but could not find a solution. As it was suggested in some online posts I have set in Word-> Options-> Advance -> Image size and Quality as 'Do not compress images in file'.I tried 'print to pdf' as well. Then as there were online suggestions to use PrimoPDF tried using that as well. But nothing worked. Any help to convert to PDF without having blurred images will be helpful as the submission deadline is near.

Hi all,

We need to send out documents on a ongoing basis in a 'durable' file format such as PDF. Problem is when we convert the Word docs to pdf some of the gridlines disappear. I've tried various formatting changes to the doc and converting to 8 different PDF converters, but each one removes part of some grids.

Is there another 'durable' format that can't be edited (I know pdf can be edited if you really want to) that I can try converting to?

Or is there a way Word doc's can be locked... to my knowledge there's always a way of enabling editing one way or another.

Thanks.

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You can batch convert as many files as you like and because you are converting locally, it is dramatically faster. Also because the data never leaves your system it is a more secure option for confidential documents.

Having a weird error that Ive never experienced before. My operting system is Windows Xp Professional and when converting from MS Word (2007) to PDF, the photos in the pdf become pixilated and fuzzy. But when the word doc is printed it looks as crisp as it does on my compiter screen.

I have tried:
1) Changing the image quality of the photos in PhotoShop, but that didnt help.

2) Went into MS Word PDF preferences and changed the Image Settings (under the advanced tab) to High and Maximum, and no change was noticed.

3) In Word I saved manually as a PDF and also used the "Create PDF" option (under Acrobat) and both had the smae effect.

Any help would be very appreciated.
Thanks

I've formatted all the section, chapter and sub-topic headings appropriately (Heading 1, 2 and 3), and when converting in Calibre, making sure the software recognises these. I know that this means that the index will work properly, but the issue I'm having is with the spacing of the chapters themselves.

Basically, in the ebook, new chapters will start in the middle of a page, and jump all over the place. Is there a way to format things (either in word, or in the Calibre software itself when converting) so that each new chapter begins at the top of the page?

Retrieving a WordPerfect document using Word. Letting Word do the converting is usually a better choice, in my experience, than letting WordPerfect do it. The formatting codes tend to be translated far better. Be sure to save the document under a different name with the .doc filename suffix.

The standard way of calculating word count, aside from simply using the "word count" feature of your word processor, is to format your document in standard submission format and then multiply the number of pages by 250. This is the technique that was used back in the days before computers could instantaneously count the number of words in a document. It also has the incidental advantage of accounting for the actual length of your paragraphs on the page, so that long passages of dialogue (which consist of lots of short paragraphs) or lists are correctly adjusted for.

The font chosen, the type size, the linefeed (font leading), the paragraph spacing, the hyphenation settings, whether the text is justified or unjustified, the kerning, the letter and word spacing, the text column width, the text column depth, the likely number of footnotes and so on.

I did my second book with the intended final page size and margins in Word and I found that helpful to give me a feel for how long chapters would look, as well as to help me keep toward my targetted total length. In my case I figured that 250-300 pages was a good length for that particular book and I had it divided into five sections so I wanted at least roughly 50 pages each. So as I was working I had a feel for whether I was beeing too wordy or not wordy enough, whether I needed more material or had to trim, etc.

I went ahead and broke it down: Give or take, the average paperback has 250-350 words per page. Thats 35 lines at 10 words per line. Of course some of those lines may only have 3 or 4 words (for dialogue). So again we're at, say, 300 words. take your total word count and divide it by 300. that'll give you an idea, not accurate down to the letter but still a pretty good idea. I used James Pattersons "3rd degree" and Dean Koontz's "Odd Hours" for reference as they were closest to me atm.

.pages files are documents, created with Apple's word processor Pages, which is part of the iWork package. Pages is available for Mac OS X and iOS and is a competitor to Microsoft Word. .pages files can contain complex documents with tables, charts and pictures.

DOC is a word processing file created by Microsoft. This files format turns a plain-text format into a formatted document. It supports almost all the Operating Systems. It can contain large amount of text, data, charts, table, image etc. It can contain rich text format (RTF) and HTML texts also.

We do not have a specific supported extension, however I have seen users use Respondus in order to accomplish this. Here is a link to an online forum describing that process: -base/how-to-export-quizzes-to-ms-word/

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