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I have never used Acrobat Pro (I use many other Adobe products). My wife has been using Acrobat Pro to take PDFs that she uses for her small business, make changes to the document and save as PDFs. At a later date she reopens the PDF and elements have been moved around or regrouped (text from paragraph A will now be associated with paragraph B etc). I am used to Photoshop, Premiere etc where I have a proprietary file format (PSD or Premiere file) with all data living in layers that are exactly as I left them last time I hit save. This doesn't seem to be the case in PDF... elements seem to get crunched (jpgs get compressed etc) so when you reimport a PDF its not like opening up a PSD (which you keep as a master document). Can someone recommend a better way to manage documents that need to be updated from time to time? Is she doing the right thing by re-opening them in Acrobat Pro to manage documents that need to occasionally be managed over time. Is there some application she should be doing her editing in that allows you to manage a business document, and save in a lossless layered format? Right now she is frustrated, because everytime she re-opens a carefully editied PDF in acrobat it doesn't seem to be exactly as she left it. Thanks
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@gigasaurus I am curious why your wife doesn't directly edit the original document and then save or export it as a PDF. For instance, as an instructor, I always work on the original Microsoft Word file of my rubrics, even though I'm not sure why I initially created it in Word instead of InDesign. When I need to make changes, I do so in the original Word file. Similarly, if I create a medical form for a client, I work with the InDesign file and save it as a PDF. This approach ensures that the final document is accurate and maintains its original formatting, as editing PDFs can sometimes lead to unexpected results like text reflow issues.
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