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When we open a PDF that is already created in Hindi to edit it, as soon as we start editing and write our text in Acrobat Pro, all the Hindi matras (diacritical marks) get scattered, meaning they don't remain in their correct form. The matras that should appear before the letters end up appearing after the letters. When editing Hindi PDFs, the matras that get scattered don't get fixed and ruin the entire sentence. Please detect this problem and fix it. This problem has existed for many years and has not been fixed in any new updates.
This is a well-known issue with Adobe Acrobat Pro where Hindi diacritical marks (vowel signs/matras) become misaligned or displaced when editing existing Hindi PDFs. The matras appear in the wrong position relative to consonants, making the text unreadable. This is typically due to incorrect Unicode rendering or font encoding issues in Acrobat's text editing engine for Devanagari script.
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@Abhishek Ravi I don't know if the 'New Acrobat' interface is one of the culprits, but in the Advancd settings of the Document Properties, is it set to Hindi?
As well, in the preferences, languages, set to Hindi
I would see if it's the 'New Acrobat' is the culprit? Go to View - 'Disable New Acrabt'
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😀My Question is Not Read Hindi PDF or Options and More... it's Editing PDF go to EDIT option and if I Edit Page then All Pearing font Mismatch and Overlapping...
🤔🤔Instead of actually fixing the problem, you just show anything randomly… The real issue is still there — that’s exactly why I sent it. This problem hasn’t started today; it has existed from the very beginning. I was the fool who tried to explain the issue and shared the PDF and video so that someone would understand it, but here, instead of opening and checking the problem on your own system, you’re just giving solutions blindly.
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Even if the suggested solution is not correct you should be a bit more grateful to someone willing to volunteer their time trying to help you. Such a reply will mean no one else will try to do the same, and you'll be stuck with your problem.
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"I’m really sorry for that. I didn’t mean to sound rude — please forgive me."
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