Looking for more help on How to Edit PDF?
- Consult the How to Edit interactive guide.
- Ask a question in our forum.
- You can leave a comment below for the author of this tutorial.
This tutorial shows you how to work with the Edit PDFs features in Acrobat X. See what the all-new Acrobat DC can do for you.
Download a free trial of the new Acrobat.
In this tutorial, learn how to edit PDF by adding links to PDF documents using the Link tool in Acrobat X. This summary is excerpted from an article by John Deubert, author of the Adobe Acrobat X for Windows and Macintosh: Visual QuickStart Guide, published by Peachpit Press.
Deubert says "the most significant addition to how we read text in the modern era is the hyperlink, an active area on the page that, when clicked with a mouse or touched with a finger, causes something to happen. Most links send you to somewhere: Another page of the document, another website, but the possible actions a link can invoke are myriad and various."
The tutorial includes a sample PDF document [PDF: 2.2MB] that can be used to follow along and explore applications of the Link tool, found in the Content panel in the Acrobat X Tools pane.
"It's easy to add links to your own PDF document pages," Deubert says. "Your PDF links can send the users to other pages in the document, view a web page, play a movie, and do any of a wide range of other activities. All you need is Acrobat X and--well, that's all you need, really. And a little practice."
Read his complete six-part article, courtesy of Peachpit, to "learn the process by which links are born in Acrobat X" -- including email links and automatic weblinks created from all URLs within a PDF file. The latter can be a real time-saver over manual link creation in a lengthy document!
Products covered: |
Acrobat X |
Related topics: |
Edit PDFs |
Top Searches: |
Edit PDF files convert PDF to Word convert PDF to Excel convert PDF to PowerPoint Rearrange PDF pages Convert PDF to JPEG |
Try Acrobat DC
Get started >
Learn how to
edit PDF.
Post, discuss and be part of the Acrobat community.
Join now >
1 comment
Comments for this tutorial are now closed.
Lori Kassuba
9, 2014-10-09 09, 2014Hi Denise Halbach,
FormsCentral only has the URL capability. You can Save the form as PDF, save a copy, then add the link in Acrobat.
Thanks,
Lori
Denise Halbach
2, 2014-10-08 08, 2014Hi! How do I create a link in a form at Adobe Forms Central, instead of putting the URL?
Thanks!
Comments for this tutorial are now closed.