8.0
Table Of Contents
- Why are PDF files popular?
- What PDF Professional does for you
- Installation and Activation
- How to Get Help
- Starting the Program
- Overview of creating PDF files
- Create PDFs from PDF Professional
- Create PDFs from Print dialogs
- Use the PDF Create Assistant
- Create PDFs from Windows Explorer
- Create PDFs from Microsoft Word
- Create PDFs from Microsoft Excel and PowerPoint
- Create PDFs in mailing applications
- Create PDFs from Internet Explorer
- Nuance PDF Create Properties dialog box
- How to overlay PDF files
- How to package files
- Cloud connectors
- SharePoint and other DMS support
- Starting the Program
- Exporting PDF from the Professional program
- The PDF Converter Assistant
- Starting the Program from other places
- Processing modes and outputs
- Handling Mixed Input Files
- How do PDF files work?
- Language Support
- Cloud Connectors
- SharePoint and other DMS support
- XPS File Support
- Web Updates
- Un-installation
35
Note: In Office versions before 2007, if you do not see the Open PDF/XPS button
in a toolbar, go to View > Toolbars and select Nuance PDF, or open the
Preferences dialog box of the PDF Converter Assistant to enable Microsoft Word
integration and restart Word.
The Open Dialog Box in Microsoft Word
1. Click Word's File Open button
or go to the Microsoft Word
File menu and click Open...
2. Select PDF (Portable Document Format) (*.pdf) or XPS in the Files
of type box.
3. Select the PDF or XPS file you want to
convert. Multiple selection is
possible; then files are converted one after the other.
4. Click Open. (The picture shows steps 2,
3 and 4 under Windows
XP.)
5. Conversion starts with or without the Converter Assistant, as
specified in the PDF Converter Settings dialog box, found in Word
2003's File menu. In Word 2007 and 2010, the PDF Settings button
in the Nuance PDF tab displays the dialog box.
6. If the PDF Converter Assistant is enabled, the PDF/XPS is
pre
viewed and you can change mode settings before starting the