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Participant
May 30, 2022
Answered

Starting point of Acrobat/Reader plugin development

  • May 30, 2022
  • 1 reply
  • 1096 views

Hi to everyone, I am a Delphi(Pascal) developer but I am able write code enough in JS and C, and I would like to develop an Adobe DC / Acrobat Reader plugin that fetchs data from internet and modify/manipulate the pdf content.

First problem is I've never developed any plugin for Acrobat/Reader yet. Second problem is I don't know how to do it? (I am glad to hear your suggestions about IDE(if possible), examples, etc.). 3rd problem is; I don't know is it possible to make this kind of plugin for Adobe DC / Acrobat Reader? I am not sure about OS issues, Adobe DC / Acrobat Reader version problems and Adobe DC / Acrobat Reader SDK capability problems.

I hope this newbie question is in right place. Thanks right now.

This topic has been closed for replies.
Correct answer Test Screen Name

Some thoughts.

1. To develop the plug-in you will need paid-for Acrobat, not Reader.

2. For a free, by negotiation, but anywhere up to $50,000 per year, you can also develop plug-ins for Reader. But there are specific limitations: it cannot modify a PDF for sure.

3. You will need the Acrobat SDK, which has vast amounts of documentation, and a very few samples. Start with a sample and add to it, it is HARD to make a new project that works. Follow the SDK's rules for IDE to use; currently on Windows it is VS2019.

4. Adobe only offer an SDK for use with the current version of Acrobat, but in practice it will work with any version of paid-for Acrobat DC, 2015, 2017 or 2020.

5. To write a plug-in often (and especially if the PDF is to be modified) needs deep study of the PDF Reference, a 1000 page document describing everything about how PDFs are made. You need to understand the graphics and text models in order to use the editing abstractions in the SDK.

1 reply

Test Screen NameCorrect answer
Legend
May 30, 2022

Some thoughts.

1. To develop the plug-in you will need paid-for Acrobat, not Reader.

2. For a free, by negotiation, but anywhere up to $50,000 per year, you can also develop plug-ins for Reader. But there are specific limitations: it cannot modify a PDF for sure.

3. You will need the Acrobat SDK, which has vast amounts of documentation, and a very few samples. Start with a sample and add to it, it is HARD to make a new project that works. Follow the SDK's rules for IDE to use; currently on Windows it is VS2019.

4. Adobe only offer an SDK for use with the current version of Acrobat, but in practice it will work with any version of paid-for Acrobat DC, 2015, 2017 or 2020.

5. To write a plug-in often (and especially if the PDF is to be modified) needs deep study of the PDF Reference, a 1000 page document describing everything about how PDFs are made. You need to understand the graphics and text models in order to use the editing abstractions in the SDK.

try67
Community Expert
Community Expert
May 30, 2022

Re #2. This involves not just paying, but getting Adobe to agree to what your plugin is going to achieve, before getting from them a key number that will allow it to run.

I once applied for such a license and never got a reply. Just FYI...