Date: Thu, 23 Apr 2020 16:59:57 +0200 From: Per olof Ljungmark <peo@nethead.se> To: freebsd-questions@freebsd.org Subject: Re: PDF Documents Manipulation Software options Message-ID: <3dabad2c-3716-8f2b-7ed0-0e6e54cae406@nethead.se> In-Reply-To: <CAEJNuHz4p=EHwgby%2BjSuRiv8RJqNquMYUn5Jr_QLhPY8XvnYUw@mail.gmail.com> References: <mailman.31875.1587627873.21074.freebsd-questions@freebsd.org> <3e1efa0d-0b09-8612-d291-fa03b6537926@defert.com> <CAFYkXjnUL-e4EBo6Evq8XP=T54GwxHe6TTW4gp%2Bg3LE9Y=%2BPgg@mail.gmail.com> <CAEJNuHz4p=EHwgby%2BjSuRiv8RJqNquMYUn5Jr_QLhPY8XvnYUw@mail.gmail.com>
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On 2020-04-23 12:16, Ottavio Caruso via freebsd-questions wrote: > On Thu, 23 Apr 2020 at 10:32, Tomasz CEDRO <tomek@cedro.info> wrote: >> >> Also recent versions of LibreOffice can import/export and edit PDF files I >> am using with success and its in the ports :-) > > Yes, but the quality and the rendering of even simple text-only pdf > documents is atrocious! If the document to be edited is text only, > it's just better to convert it to text, edit it and then reconvert it > back to pdf. Otherwise, if there are pictures or multi columns, I > can't see any professional alternatives to Acrobat Pro. > Depending on what one wants to achieve, Inkscape can read and write pdf's, albeit one page at a time. -- Per
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