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I am saving a Microsoft Words file which has few tables in the file to a PDF (Sample rows below).
PT | PV | A |
OT | PV | B |
ST | PV | C |
While printing and saving it as PDF, the PDF arranges and shows the tables in right visual order of PT, OT and ST. However, when we select the text and paste details in notepad, the order of tables read is not the same. Like PT is selected first followed by ST and then OT. We do not have missing table rows, just order seems to be disarranged.
Are there any changes needed to word file which will save and select the tables in same order. Due to this issue, PDF to text reading programs are reading table details in different order than as seen in the PDF creating confusion to readers.
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Hi sanjay_1005,
Thank you for reaching out.
It seems that the issue is with the tagging order in the PDF. PDFs have a visual layout and a logical structure (reading order). While the visual layout may look correct, the underlying tagging and reading order might not match, primarily if the PDF was generated from Word without proper structure tagging.
Please try the suggestion below:
In the MS Word application:
- Ensure each table is inserted as a separate table object, not as floating objects or text boxes.
- Do not manually drag tables around. You can use paragraph alignment and spacing instead.
- Apply consistent heading styles to help define document structure.
- Check Reading Order in Word: Use the Accessibility Checker in Word (Review > Check Accessibility) to identify potential issues.
- When converting the file to PDF, ensure “Document structure tags for accessibility” is checked.
In Acrobat, check the reading order using the steps suggested below:
If you are still experiencing the issue, please share the PDF and Word file with us.
Feel free to let us know if you need any help.
Thanks,
Meenakshi
Copy link to clipboard
Copied
Hi sanjay_1005,
Thank you for reaching out.
It seems that the issue is with the tagging order in the PDF. PDFs have a visual layout and a logical structure (reading order). While the visual layout may look correct, the underlying tagging and reading order might not match, primarily if the PDF was generated from Word without proper structure tagging.
Please try the suggestion below:
In the MS Word application:
- Ensure each table is inserted as a separate table object, not as floating objects or text boxes.
- Do not manually drag tables around. You can use paragraph alignment and spacing instead.
- Apply consistent heading styles to help define document structure.
- Check Reading Order in Word: Use the Accessibility Checker in Word (Review > Check Accessibility) to identify potential issues.
- When converting the file to PDF, ensure “Document structure tags for accessibility” is checked.
In Acrobat, check the reading order using the steps suggested below:
If you are still experiencing the issue, please share the PDF and Word file with us.
Feel free to let us know if you need any help.
Thanks,
Meenakshi
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