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Seriously, it's 2020 now and the PDFMaker plugin still requires files to be saved, closed and re-opened when you make a PDF in Excel, Word, etc. Other PDF-saving methods do not require this, they simply "print" a PDF like any rational plugin would do. Saving, closing and re-opening files becomes painful when you're dealing with large, slow files, especially if you are using a remote/VPN connection to files. Please re-write the PDFMaker plugin to take the more sensible approach.
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Hi There,
Thanks for reporting the issue here.
MS Excel and other MS apps have a PDFMaker plugin with Acrobat installed which creates PDF as per the Adobe Acrobat quiality not prints; so they file needs to be saved before converting to PDF.
Also, if one does not want to save the file, can use Adobe PDF Printer; which we provide with every Acrobat's installation on the machine(s).
Open the Excel file > Click on Print Button (or Ctrl+P) > Select Adobe PDF Printer from dropdown > Select a location and Print
Regards,
Swapnil Srivastava
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Hi There,
Thanks for reporting the issue here.
MS Excel and other MS apps have a PDFMaker plugin with Acrobat installed which creates PDF as per the Adobe Acrobat quiality not prints; so they file needs to be saved before converting to PDF.
Also, if one does not want to save the file, can use Adobe PDF Printer; which we provide with every Acrobat's installation on the machine(s).
Open the Excel file > Click on Print Button (or Ctrl+P) > Select Adobe PDF Printer from dropdown > Select a location and Print
Regards,
Swapnil Srivastava
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Just to clarify some of the details...
There are many different types of PDFs made for specific purposes and based on international standards (file requirements). Some are:
Most non-Adobe PDF-making programs don't create PDFs to these standards.
Printing to a virtual PDF printer, whether Adobe's or other PDF company's, is the lowest level of PDF possible; it just records the same data that would be sent to a desktop laser or inkjet printer. Usually that means low-quality graphics and dead, non-editable text.
Sometimes that's all you need, other times it doesn't. When you need a better quality PDF, always use one of these methods:
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Thanks for the information, however I still do not understand why Adobe PDFMaker forces the underlying Excel file to close and re-open. Sure, save it if necessary, but why force it to close? The other options listed (File / Save As with another PDF option, and File / Export) do not require this. Despite everything mentioned above, I still cannot see why the file must be closed. That seems like poor programming design to me.
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That part is wierd!
But I've never had Excel require closing the file when I export a PDF.
Log this as a bug in the UserVoice website, https://acrobat.uservoice.com/ so that Adobe's engineers can look into it.
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Thanks. I've done that. I'm surprised it doesn't close yours though. It has always done that for me for years and on different computers, so I have to assume it's by design rather than an unintentional bug.
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