...I find that good old ghostview is often a good standby too...
There is no perfection in life!
Kpdf has the awesome feature to select part of a document and save it as text or drawing.
But unfortunately it cannot open the latest versions of * .pdf documents.
You have to keep a "menagerie" of programs on your computer.
LanceHaverkamp wrote:Which I can't link for you because of poorly executed forum security.
What do you mean by "poorly executed forum security"?
The forum software is designed to let users insert linked URLs for the convenience of readers. But later, when someone goes to the trouble to track-down the correct link, provide it with the correct tags--so it will be easy for others to access; the form software says linked URL's have been disallowed.
I don't know if breaking the ability to have working links is security theater, or an attempt to avoid spam, or done for some other reason; but such intentional breakage doesn't seem to make users more secure, rather they're just an inconvenience for the users.
Some days I'm just curmudgeonly ;-)
]]>Which I can't link for you because of poorly executed forum security.
What do you mean by "poorly executed forum security"?
]]>Okular is an OK reader. If you need to fill in government forms or other such stuff; there's a great tool at the following url:
code-industry.net/masterpdfeditor/
Which I can't link for you because of poorly executed forum security.
I also use Master PDF Editor. I my opinion, currently it is the best PDF viewer and editor for Linux.
https://code-industry.net/masterpdfeditor/
code-industry.net/masterpdfeditor/
Which I can't link for you because of poorly executed forum security.
]]>I find that good old ghostview is often a good standby too.
On the subject of printing pdfs I used to run in to problems with the standard CUPS driver, but with the same ppd CUPS+gutenprint does the job just right.
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