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Participating Frequently
May 21, 2019
Question

can i delete reader from my computer but have all my files as they were before adobe hijacked them into their format?

  • May 21, 2019
  • 8 replies
  • 5739 views

For some unknown reason I downloaded adobe reader to my computer. I find it confusing and unworkable. It converted all my files to adobe. I want them back in their original forms, and adobe off my computer. Is this possible???

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    8 replies

    Participant
    April 16, 2024

    Same here!! What used to be accessable in Word is now in Adobe PDF and I am not able to edit the forms I need to edit

    Participant
    March 18, 2021

    I'm having the same issue. I purchased the PDF converter to make all my business documents readable for any computer. After purchasing, ALL the PDFs I had on my desktop and in Finder (MAC)  disappeared. I agree with this woman, my PDF files were hijacked. All my documents are only found in Adobe Acrobat Reader. I cannot highlight and "get info" as suggested, that does not come up as an option. I did try this with other documents on my desktop, and it worked, but not in the documents in Reader. I bet that woman did not get an answer here, she just ran out of ways to ask for help. Any suggestions? 

    ~graffiti
    Legend
    May 22, 2019

    No problem. You're not wasting anyone's time. This is what we do.

    So, if you want to go back to using Mac Preview, simply highlight a pdf on your computer, right-click on the file and choose "Get info", choose the "Open with" drop down, select Mac Preview then click the "Change all" button then "Continue".

    Your pdf files should open in Mac Preview after that.

    Participant
    December 18, 2024

    Hello graffiti, I have the same problem but I'm on a PC, Windows 10. I downloaded Acrobat Reader last night as it was suggested online (by Adobe) that my app was possibly out of date. All my PDF files are now opening in Reader. And I am told that I can only make ONE PDF in 24 hours!! Previously I had no limit and no problems.  I want to get rid of Reader and go back to where I was yesterday afternoon. 

    My question is - if I right click a PDF and then click Open with, what option do I choose?

    ~graffiti
    Legend
    May 22, 2019

    I can only take a wild guess as to what is happening.

    If Reader opens the files, they are pdf files and you probably want Reader to open them. They will not open in Word (but you don't want them to either). So I would just let Reader open them.

    If you want to "edit" pdf files and used to be able to do that, there is the possibility that Mac Preview was opening them before you installed reader. That is the default pdf viewer on Mac and can do some editing.

    Open Mac Preview, use file>Open to open a pdf file. Is this what you are used to seeing?

    annfuarAuthor
    Participating Frequently
    May 22, 2019

    Yes, it seems to have been Mac Preview I was using. I want to use that and just dump Reader altogether. I had a workable system before I screwed it up by adding Reader to the mix - I am sure it is a great product for lots of people, but my word processing/documents/etc are so simple and minimal, I just don't need it.

    Learning new systems is difficult for me, so I just like to stick with what I know works. That is why I had someone else create my letterhead for me, as well as my invoices, which are the PDFs I am referring to when I say that they are all Reader now. Somehow he created them for me in a format where I could just duplicate the master,  fill in the highlighted boxes, and "save as" whatever I wanted the document to be called so I could email the invoice to the proper party and have a copy for myself. I don't know why he didn't do that for me for the letterhead, which is what I thought he was doing.

    Again, I am sorry to waste your time with this, and appreciate your patience with my incompetence.

    jane-e
    Community Expert
    Community Expert
    May 22, 2019

    annfuar  wrote

    well as my invoices, which are the PDFs I am referring to when I say that they are all Reader now. Somehow he created them for me in a format where I could just duplicate the master, 

    Hi Ann,

    Adobe does not own PDF technology, and you can open a PDF with several applications. One way is to launch the program, then choose File > Open. When you double-click from the Finder, it opens in the application your Mac has been told to use. In your case, it was Preview and is now Reader. That does not make it a Preview file or a Reader file. It is a PDF.

    It sounds, though, as if your invoice is a form. Does it have calculations? Because Preview won’t do those calculations, and Adobe Acrobat Reader will. Try opening your invoice in Preview. Does it work? Then open it in Reader. Does it work?

    On a Mac, you can open your invoice in both programs at the same time, but close one before you make changes and save.

    ~graffiti
    Legend
    May 21, 2019

    Ok. Still not sure what is happening here. Again, Reader only opens pdf files. It will not open or change any other file type. What are you expecting these files to open in and why?

    annfuarAuthor
    Participating Frequently
    May 22, 2019

    These are PDF files I created for work, and used to open them in...?? Word? I don't know. When I downloaded Reader, it converted all of those PDFs into Reader, so I can now only open them in Reader (as far as I know). It seems like I need a 1:1 tech support person to walk me through this. I am really don't know anything about computers, which is why I"m in this mess to begin with. This is why I use a mac - I don't need anything fancy at all - I just make documents for work sporadically, email, do online banking, school portals, etc, and browse the web - that's it. Thanks for trying to help me : )

    try67
    Community Expert
    Community Expert
    May 22, 2019

    Why did you install Reader if you don't want to open PDF files in it? Your files are not changed in any way. That only thing that changed is what application is used to open them.

    annfuarAuthor
    Participating Frequently
    May 21, 2019

    I'm not good with computers, and I gave it permission to open all my PDFs in adobe. Then, because I edited some of them in adobe (because I couldn't figure out how to do it any other way), are they now irrevocably saved in adobe? So if I dump adobe, will those edits be lost? I had a file on my phone (in "scanner for me") that I kept trying to download to my desktop so I could upload it elsewhere, and it just kept downloading it into adobe (which would not then let me upload it where I wanted to). I know that these are asinine questions, and I tried contacting adobe to ask them to help walk me through it, but they said that type of support is not available, and I should check a forum. Sorry : (

    ~graffiti
    Legend
    May 21, 2019

    As mentioned before, Adobe is a company and not a specific product. What product are you actually using?

    annfuar  wrote

    Then, because I edited some of them in adobe (because I couldn't figure out how to do it any other way), are they now irrevocably saved in adobe?

    And that is why I ask what product you are using. Acrobat Reader (the focus of this forum) cannot open any file that isn't already a pdf file (even if your file associations are incorrect) and cannot "edit" a pdf file (other than some commenting tools, form filling...etc).

    So let's start by telling us exactly which product is opening these files and whether or not the files being opened are actually pdf files already (what is the file name extension?). Then we'll go from there.

    annfuarAuthor
    Participating Frequently
    May 21, 2019

    Adobe Acrobat Reader, yes they are all PDFs. I meant that I edited them in reader, because I could only find the files in reader - they aren't anywhere else on my computer. Every PDF file on my computer is now in acrobat reader.  I am on a mac using MacOS Mojave version 10.14.2

    try67
    Community Expert
    Community Expert
    May 21, 2019

    Yes, you can, but the solution is probably just to change the file extension back. No files were edited, it's just that you somehow associated them with Reader so they look like they were converted. As mentioned, Reader is not technically capable of converting non-PDF files into PDF or edit them in any way.

    Bernd Alheit
    Community Expert
    Community Expert
    May 21, 2019

    Acrobat Reader can't convert files.

    Info: Adobe is a company.