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1

Aren't there glyphs in Acrobat Pro?

Explorer ,
Jul 17, 2016 Jul 17, 2016

They are a main point in forms & applications. I was amazed that I could not find a menu of characters. Heck, I do in Microsoft word!

How Pro is Acrobat Pro?

[Moved from the general, non-support forum Lounge to a product-specific support forum - Mod]

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Acrobat SDK and JavaScript
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Community Expert ,
Jul 17, 2016 Jul 17, 2016

Acrobat is not an editor, like Word, InDesign

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Jul 17, 2016 Jul 17, 2016

To augment, the response from Bernd Alheit, PDF is a final form file format, not a document format that maintains context of the contents such as articles, columns, words, paragraphs, sentences, and words. The “editing” capabilities of Acrobat are meant primarily for “text touch-up” or minor corrections, not for document composition. As such, most of the tools you would expect in a full-blown document editor are not provided in Acrobat. If you need to access special characters within Acrobat, you could use operating system utilities such as Character Map in Windows (or comparable software on MacOS) to input characters not available from the keyboard.

          - Dov

- Dov Isaacs, former Adobe Principal Scientist (April 30, 1990 - May 30, 2021)
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Contributor ,
Aug 06, 2019 Aug 06, 2019
LATEST

A character palette is a necessary tool for text touch-up. If a PDF was created using a stylistic set of a font – say, one with a single-storey ɑ instead of a double-storey a – and you just need to fix a typo in a single word in Acrobat, you’re SOL. You can’t even copy the glyph from a program that does understand stylistic alternates, because that just ignores the alternate and pastes a regular a.

The notion that letters are inherently a “document composition” thing not suitable for a tool meant to touch up text and add minor corrections is, quite frankly, ludicrous.

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