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Hi all-
Our office recently installed Acrobat DC and we are becoming more familiar with it as we go...
For me, I receive large scanned document files that I have to read, highlight, redact, sometimes edit and comment.
I am able to use the highlight tool fairly easily, but is there a way to highlight in a straight line, rather than to have the shake of a hand make my document look unprofessional? The highlighter gives me a circle for a cursor and it does not hug the text line at all.
Any help is appreciated.
Thanks
Frank
The highlighter tool only works on actual text, it's not a free-form tool. If it allows you to select non-text or moves around when you move the mouse then it's not the highlight tool that you're using, but something else.
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[I am using Acrobat Pro DC]
Hold down the CTRL key while highlighting the text your want marked. If your line is reasonably straight, when you release the mouse and CTRL key, the application will then straighten it out.
Then you can actually select the highlighting as if it was an image, which it actually is, and move it around. I have not figured out how to change its shape.
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Beware of this feature: in some readers the highlighting is opaque, as I learned when I read pdf's on iAnnotate for iPad.
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What about on Mac?
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This tool auto-straightens short or quick strokes. Do NOT attempt to "draw" the highlight line over the entire section of text you are wanting highlighted. Once you have created the short "straight" line, exit out of the highlight tool. Now click the highlight you created and you can stretch it horizontally, vertically, or both and this will keep the line horizontal with the sqiggly effect.
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TRY67's answer is partially right. You must OCR the document so Adobe recognizes the words as "TEXT". If you don't OCR then the Highligher tool says... oh this isn't text... it's actually a picture. So it does the best i can and lets you draw the same color highlighting you have selected over whatever you move the mouse over. It takes a steady hand and it's treated differently by PDF reading programs. So if you really want to properly highlight a document then you need to OCR the document, save it and only then use the highlighter to.
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HOW TO FIX THIS ISSUE:
If you need to highlight text on a PDF but you see a small circle instead of a text cursor icon (looks like " I "), this is how to fix it. Export the PDF as a Word document (trust me, this will work) and save the file. Then, open the Word document and export/publish/save as a PDF. Open this new, updated PDF file. Now when you need to highlight the text, you will see the text cursor icon (" I ").
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OCR-ing the file is simpler and safer.
I now systematically OCR (and sometimes re-OCR*) all texts before I use them. I found it simpler to buy another PDF app with OCR capabilities that I can run simultaneously while working on other texts—it is that important to me (as is my time : ) )
*older OCR'd texts are not always well done (eg JSTOR documents)
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Hello everyone!
Thank YOU JIPJIPNET!! for the image and the example. I do believe you are correct . I would like to do a English 1.0 for those of us that feel as if we are on that level. 🙂
Before I do, I would like to also say that for those who say this is a new tool it is not I have used it for well over 6 years probably twice as long as that. I'd also like to say that this is my opinion and understanding.
I don't know how the document was scanned from the scanner or multifunction machine or other. But with my brother multifunction colored printer I am able to scan a document in as a file, as text (this does OCR automatically), as in image, along with other options. Stands for Optical Character Recognition. If your file was scanned in as a document/PDF or an image your file will have to be scanned, within acrobat, to OCR to use the "cursor" highlighter tool. The one that everybody has been speaking about. Otherwise, an image is what you have on screen/displayed in Adobe. To highlight an image acrobat will display the circular highlighter over the images (if any) and text parts alike. After you have recognize the text using "Scan & OCR" you should be able to highlight it with a "cursor" highlighter. When highlighting this way you might find that the entire word of your text may not be highlighted. You may be missing the punctuation from highlighting or the first/last letter of a word are unhighlighted. As you will see in JIPJIPNET example. The green highlighted portion does not quite clinging to the entire words 100%. This could happened for several reasons......
To help with this a little bit I have attached a link that will show you how to scan a document and recognize the text. In the newest version of Adobe Acrobat DC this can be found by going to "All tools" >> "Scan & OCR". I'm so bored This video walks you through how to use the "Scan and OCR" feature .
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IbxOL9-jH2o
Do not forget it To close out that all through a sidebar otherwise what you doing next may not work right. You can also use edit to fill the text background to highlights or close "All tools" and continue highlighting using the regular tool bar.
This tool also used to draw straight if you held downshift or control If I could only figure out how to do that in the current version!! If you get the wrong cursor you keep it straight ish it will straighten out minor bumps In your line but it will not straighten out if there's big bumps.... if anybody has a resolution to this I would appreciate it 'cause I don't know why I can't get it to happen.
I hope this helps somebody at the very least if maybe put in different language it will help open it to more people the original answer from JIPJIPNET . 🙂
Have a blessed day!!