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October 29, 2021
Answered

Convert word document to pdf without losing formatting or hyperlinks on mac

  • October 29, 2021
  • 5 replies
  • 38339 views

Hi,

 

I am so frustrated that there doesn't be a simple solution to my problem, so reaching out ....

 

I have a word document which contains hyperlinks, and I want to convert it to a pdf that retains the same formatting/ font and which still allows the hyperlinks to work.

 

In word I have to option to "save as pdf" BUT .... when I save for electronic sharing the font changes, but the hyperlinks work. When I save for printing the fonts are unchanged, but they hyperlinks can't be clicked on.

 

I thought Acrobat Pro DC would make light work of this, but NO. Same issue, when creating a PDF from the word document, the font changes.

 

HELP - does anyone have a solution to allow me to convert from word to PDF whilst retaining the hyperlinks and the fonts?

 

For info, I'm working on a macbook pro, with Microsoft Word for Mac version 16.54, and with Acrobat Pro DC via the full creative suite.

 

Thanks in advance to any genius who can solve this!!

This topic has been closed for replies.
Correct answer JR Boulay

You must use the Adobe online converter:

https://documentcloud.adobe.com/link/tools/?group=group-convert

5 replies

JR Boulay
Adobe Expert
November 1, 2021

Buying a used PC is often cheaper, because the emulator requires you to license Windows + Office.

😉

Acrobate du PDF, InDesigner et Photoshopographe
JR Boulay
Adobe Expert
October 31, 2021

sadly doing it that way still loses the font I used

You need to find someone who uses Windows to do this for you.

Acrobate du PDF, InDesigner et Photoshopographe
Bevi Chagnon - PubCom.com
Brainiac
November 1, 2021

@Peter5CF9 

I think JR is correct in this case.

Either hire someone with Windows to create the PDF, or set up your Macintosh to run Windows:

  • Via Apple's BootCamp utility — but note that it doesn't run on the new M1 processors from Apple. You'll need to install it on an Intel iCore machine. Works very well: my studio has run Windows this way for about 10 years.
  • Via Parallels software emulator https://www.parallels.com/  Newest version runs on the new Apple M1 processors, as well as older iCore models.

 

|    Bevi Chagnon   |  Designer, Trainer, & Technologist for Accessible Documents ||    PubCom |    Classes & Books for Accessible InDesign, PDFs & MS Office |
JR Boulay
JR BoulayCorrect answer
Adobe Expert
October 31, 2021
Acrobate du PDF, InDesigner et Photoshopographe
Peter5CF9Author
New Participant
October 31, 2021

Thanks @JR Boulay but sadly doing it that way still loses the font I used 🙂

Bevi Chagnon - PubCom.com
Brainiac
October 31, 2021

@Peter5CF9, have you checked to ensure that the font you're using can be embedded into a PDF?

 

This is controlled by the font's manufacturer, not your software. If it's a restricted font, you'll see it on your computer, you'll see it in your documents, but it will be swapped out for another font in PDFs.

 

Check the font's properties and see if you can locate the Information for each weight of the font. If it's embeddable, it will say embedabble, editable, or something similar. https://support.apple.com/guide/font-book/view-and-print-fonts-fntbk1001/mac

 

You can also check the font manufacturer's EULA (end user license agreement) on their website for that font.

 

|    Bevi Chagnon   |  Designer, Trainer, & Technologist for Accessible Documents ||    PubCom |    Classes & Books for Accessible InDesign, PDFs & MS Office |
jane-e
Adobe Expert
October 30, 2021

Hi @Peter5CF9 

 

Unfortunately, it's always been like this.

 

PDFMaker only works on Windows and I've been told by the engineers that Apple is the one who stopped the process. This is the only reason I run Windows on my Mac with Microsoft Office and Acrobat Pro. It's easier now than it was in years past.

  • Windows: you can install it through BootCamp and then boot up in Windows or Mac
    or you can install Parallels or VMWare and run Windows concurrently through one of them.
  • Office: Office 365 can be installed on 5 devices and they can be Mac or Windows. You no longer have to purchase both.
  • Acrobat Pro: can be installed on multiple computers, but activated on two at a time. In you need it on more than Windows and Mac on the same computer (such as your laptop) you will need to sign out on one.

If you want this to change, take it up with Apple, but until then you need to convert from Word to PDF using PDFMaker through Word for Windows.

 

Since you have the full Creative Cloud, consider learning InDesign. You can Export to PDF from there and it will keep the hyperlinks. There is a hyperlinks panel where you can create and confirm them. 

 

~ Jane

 

 

Peter5CF9Author
New Participant
October 31, 2021

Thanks @jane-e. At least now I know that what I want isn't easily achievable. I do know my way around InDesign and hadn't even though of that, so that's the way I'll go. Thanks.

jane-e
Adobe Expert
October 31, 2021

You're welcome, @Peter5CF9 . If you get stuck, ask each question separately in the InDesign forum:

https://community.adobe.com/t5/indesign/ct-p/ct-indesign

 

Jane

Abambo
Adobe Expert
October 30, 2021
quote

 

In word I have to option to "save as pdf" BUT .... when I save for electronic sharing the font changes, but the hyperlinks work. When I save for printing the fonts are unchanged, but they hyperlinks can't be clicked on.


By @Peter5CF9

Save as PDF is a Microsoft menu. Adobe has no influence on how a PDF file is created.

 

You will need to use the Acrobat macros to generate a PDF from the Acrobat tools.

Edit: I know that because of some limitations enforced by Apple, not all the functionality of Acrobat is available to the users. As I have no macOS to test, I have, however, no idea where these limitations jump in.

 

ABAMBO | Hard- and Software Engineer | Photographer
Peter5CF9Author
New Participant
October 30, 2021

Thanks for the reply @Abambo but I don't even have the Acrobat ribbon in word, so no further forward 😞

 

Abambo
Adobe Expert
October 30, 2021

Did you try drag & drop of a Word file to Acrobat? If not, could be worth the try…

ABAMBO | Hard- and Software Engineer | Photographer