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New Participant
December 13, 2011
Answered

Animated GIF in interactive PDF

  • December 13, 2011
  • 5 replies
  • 270870 views

Hi all,

I was wondering if someone could help me with the following;

I want to add some animated GIF images to my interactive PDF document in InDesign (also with hyperlinks and video's)

How do I need to save the document, in order to see an animation (instead of just the first layer, without any animation..)

Thank you in advance!

Correct answer Jongware

The PDF format does not support animated GIF: http://forums.adobe.com/message/4056490

5 replies

brente206
Participating Frequently
February 2, 2016

Place a still representation of your animation and link to a hosted file on the web. Use a little play icon ( > ) on your images to indicate there's more to discover.

BobLevine
Adobe Expert
February 2, 2016
anthonym97034036
New Participant
January 21, 2016

I'm a bit late to this thread but have seen it still is unanswered so hopefully this work around i've used will help.

While as far as I am aware you can't add animated GIFs to a PDF what you can do is export your GIFs and then convert them to a movie file (.Mp4, .mov) etc which then can be placed into the PDF

I found this conversion site to be very helpful & it's also free -  upload the GIF and then you can choose what output type you want

Convert video to MP4 - GIF to MP4 - CloudConvert

I would echo what @javierg28549661 had said though, in that this can mean very large file sizes, but it really depends on what the content is.

Hope this helps

April 21, 2016

Converting GIFs to movies doesn't help solve the problem either... Let's say You want 10 animated arrows, you will need 10 little movies that the readers need to click "play" for each icons?! No!!!

I understand that PDF was originally designed for printing purposes.  But now a day people use PDF to send documents meant to display on digital screens --- yet retaining its original apparence as the creators intended regardless if the computers/devices on the readers' ends doesnt have a the same screen ratio/resolution, OS or specific set of fonts...  Very few people send PDFs over emails and such are meant to be printed... Who print anything anymore?  Unlike the International Standard Organization people, they are probably still faxing --- everyone else have a smart phones that they can just open and read whatever it is on their phone screens, NOT PRINTED PAPERS.

Deep down animated icons (not movies) is critical for "interactive" PDF... for example, just because you have an arrow pointing at something within the document doesn't meant that the readers know it's clickable, but an animated arrow that react to the mouse over it screams look at me and click me to go to that page!  Fix that... International Satandard Oldfarts

New Participant
November 28, 2017

Depends on the audience and distribution method. And why does it have to be GIF?


BobLevine​ The reason 2D documents should be able to display GIFs are so graphic/product/industrial designers can show other people (investors, customers, marketing teams) quick and simple physical product features effectively - through GIFs!

I'm with blk36372213​, there doesn't seem to be a 21st century presentation document that can accomplish this and it's really frustrating... Does anyone have other suggestions besides an Interactive PDF? PowerPoint plays looped GIFs. The only problem is I want to use Adobe InDesign, not PowerPoint.

Derek Cross
Adobe Expert
August 9, 2015

You can create documents with animations in InDesign CC2015 and export it as a Fixed Layout ePub.

New Participant
August 8, 2015

Ever wondered why adobe never allowed animated gifs in their pdf documents?
I don’t know, but a very credible hypothesis is that they think of animated gifs as “1980s technology”. Instead, their “brilliant” work-around is to let people add movie players to their pdf documents (Flash files for example).
The results of this “brilliant” piece of thought are:

– A 10 page document with 5 small animations could be as large as 100 MB or more (instead of less than 1 MB using animated gifs).
– Many devices will not be able to run the animations.
– Devices which would normally run animations can’t do so because… the file is too large!! lol.

The irony of all this is that Adobe no longer wants to support flash. Why? is it because there is a technology which can replace flash? well… er… no, not really. HTML 5 will take at least another decade to reach the level of flash. Why then? well… rumour has it that it’s mainly because Steve Jobs said that “Flash sux”, and you know who the best paying customers of adobe are, right? Yeap, apple users.

Animated gifs are perfect for educational documents where a small animation can make life so much easier for a student to understand a concept or idea (not to mention how much more interesting it is to read some documents which include animations).

When a simple html file can offer a better educational experience than a pdf file, you should bloody know that you’ve done something wrong!

Steve Werner
Adobe Expert
August 8, 2015

For several years now, the PDF specification has not been in Adobe's hands. It's controlled by the International Standards Organization (ISO).

Portable Document Format - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Standards organizations move v...e...r...y   s...l...o...w...l...y.....

NLGNLGNAuthor
New Participant
December 13, 2011

PS: I am using Indesign CS5 and CS4

Jongware
JongwareCorrect answer
Adobe Expert
December 13, 2011

The PDF format does not support animated GIF: http://forums.adobe.com/message/4056490

NLGNLGNAuthor
New Participant
December 13, 2011

Thank you for your reply!

Does it support any other animations? Is there an other solution to add (the same) animation in an other format perhaps..