Copy link to clipboard
Copied
Hi,
I've been editing a PDF in Adobe Acrobat Pro DC (Windows 10) by adding comments and markup. When I finished and went to save it, I received an error message: "The document could not be saved. There was a problem reading this document (14)." Ctrl+i gives the detail "Expected a dict object."
I've tried searching online for a solution, but it seems they all involve finding another way to open or copy the document; the focus is on making it viewable, not savable. That's not the problem I'm having. I need to know how to save this file without closing it and losing all the comments and markup I've spent hours adding. Can anyone help?
Thank you!
Checking back in with an update. I was able to save it by exporting the comments, which converted it to an FDF file. If you know of another solution based on the info I provided, it could still be helpful, but for now the problem is solved. Thank you for your help!
Copy link to clipboard
Copied
Hi Hannahs,
We are sorry for the trouble you are experiencing. As described above, you are getting the Error 14: Expected a dict object.
This error occurs when there is something internally wrong with the PDF. We need some more information to better understand the situation:
Please try to recreate the PDF by doing 'Save As' with a different file name and run the optimizer on the file.
You may also refer to a similar discussion here (https://answers.acrobatusers.com/Error-Expected-Dict-Object-q55452.aspx)
Let us know how it goes
Regards
Amal
Copy link to clipboard
Copied
Hi Amal,
Thank you for your response. The PDF was sent to me by its author, who says she created it by "saving a Word document as a PDF" and didn't make a lot of changes or insert pages. However, she also stated that she uses Ubuntu and LibreOffice, not Word, and Evince rather than Adobe. Document Properties shows the application as PDFescape Online and the PDF producer as RAD PDF.
I did try to "Save As" with a different filename before I posted here, and it gave me the same result. If I try to optimize the PDF as you recommended, will it delete all the comments and markup?
Copy link to clipboard
Copied
Checking back in with an update. I was able to save it by exporting the comments, which converted it to an FDF file. If you know of another solution based on the info I provided, it could still be helpful, but for now the problem is solved. Thank you for your help!
Copy link to clipboard
Copied
Hi Hannahs
We are glad to hear that the issue got fixed.
Fell free to contact us for any further assistance required in the future.
Regards
Amal
Copy link to clipboard
Copied
I am having the same issue 'expected a dict object.' However I do not know how to remove the warning in order to save the document with a different file name.
Please advise
Copy link to clipboard
Copied
Same issue here - how to remove Expect a dict object so I can try to save the file. Please help as I don't want to lose all my comments!
Copy link to clipboard
Copied
I'm having the same issue. I manage the bylaws for a large LLC; it is presently over 550 pages, and edited almost weekly. The 16 mb file has suddenly refused to save, and I've had no luck finding any corruption. For a while (weeks) if I just closed the file, I would find that it did save anyway. Now when I try to save, I get "Do you want to save changes before closing, Yes/No"; Yes results in a return to Error 14 -- No closes the file, with all updates lost! Saving with a different filename does not work. I'm now desperate to find a solution, as company history is at stake and updates are piling up!
Copy link to clipboard
Copied
Hi there,
We are sorry to hear that. Have you tried the suggestions in the correct answer marked, like exporting the data/comments and converting it as FDF file?
Let us know how it goes
Regards
Amal
Copy link to clipboard
Copied
This file has no data or comments to export. It is all text, and must be able to be uploaded to the web.
Copy link to clipboard
Copied
Hi there,
We are sorry to hear that. There is a huge possibility that the PDF file is corrupt. Plesae check the correct answer marked in the similar discssion https://community.adobe.com/t5/acrobat-sdk/expected-a-dict-object-and-this-document-enabled-extended... and see if that helps.
Regards
Amal
Copy link to clipboard
Copied
Of course the file is corrupt! That's what I'm trying to overcome. I have attempted Karl's fix by using HEX Editor NEO and reverting the file to the previous %%EOF and saving the result with a new filename.The file has a file date shown on its first page, and this file was as of the previous day. But the file was still corrupted and could not be resaved. So I tried another iteration, reverting to the next previous %%EOF. Still corrupted and not re-saveable. I did that three more times, taking the file back to a full month previous. It seems futile to continue. Do you agree, or should I persist? As I said, despite saying it could not be resaved, the file did save when closed for a number of times; I don't know how many. But a month ago, when I believed the issue was that 15 MB was the max file size allowed, I used SmallPDF.com to produce a 4 MB version of the file. I think I should just accept my losses and continue using that file and re-do all updates since then. Ugh.
That begs the question, why doesn't Adobe have a means of reducing file size more significantly than the modest Save as Other...Reduced Size PDF...? The SmallPDF app costs $12/month just to overcome Acrobat's file bloat.
Copy link to clipboard
Copied
I found a sort-of workaround which involves identifying the page(s) that contain the error and removing them:
1. Use the extract pages tool to create individual files from each page. This could take a while if your document is long, and I'd advise making a separate folder to save them to.
2. You'll get the same error message each time Acrobat encounters a page with the error. Click OK to skip it and continue with the others. The number of times it appears will tell you the number of corrupt pages.
3. The numbers at the end of the new file names will show you which pages haven't been extracted (because they were corrupt). You can recombine the non-corrupt pages into a single new file with the 'combine files' tool.
This is obviously not great if you need the bad pages left in, but I've read elsewhere that you can extract and save them separately as TIFF files and then re-insert them into your new PDF.