Author Topic: converting from .pdf to excel and/or word files  (Read 3706 times)

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psmbill

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converting from .pdf to excel and/or word files
« on: Feb 18, 2007, 02:32 pm »
I have some .pdf files that I would like to convert to excel and/or word files.  I would like to do this easily and cheaply.  I am sure the full Adobe has this capability, but I am wondering if there are any freeware on inexpensive shareware programs that will do the trick.  I would also like to make some .pdf files from my Word files.   Any suggestions?  Thanks.

Mac Calder

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Re: converting from .pdf to excel and/or word files
« Reply #1 on: Feb 18, 2007, 02:37 pm »
The free adobe has the ability to select text. If you cannot use that tool, look at using an OCR program. Unfortunatly, PDF's are basically like big images, so all the formatting etc will probably be lost. The commercial adobe has the ability to use OCR to create a word document or text file out of a PDF, and whilst it is quite good, it is no where near perfect.

jwl_868

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Re: converting from .pdf to excel and/or word files
« Reply #2 on: Feb 19, 2007, 09:36 am »
My experience with Adobe (and Adobe Acrobat) is that you can convert many files types (such as Word and Excel) into pdf readily.  (That may have been one of the points of the pdf – it makes it difficult to tamper with the original document, like making a copy on a Xerox machine.  And anyone can open the document up to read it.)

With Adobe (and Acrobat), you can convert a pdf document to a .txt or .rtf file that can be opened in Word, but all of the formatting (returns and page breaks) I believe are lost.

You could attempt to convert a table to .txt or .rtf and then open that in Excel, but all of the formatting (column width, formulas) is gone.  I think you will also end up with a spreadsheet 1 row high and many columns wide, each cell occupied by a single word or single number and blanks (in the original) are lost.   Now you could select and move the cells around to reconstruct the table (excluding the formulas).  If it were just numbers, it could be worth it.  Text however, will probably have been parceled with a word in each cell.


Joe