On 2018-08-29 15:44, Knurpht-openSUSE wrote:
On 08/29/2018 03:21 PM, Carlos E. R. wrote:
Change procedure :-)
These are bills with a longer name than I want. I open them in the reader, select save as and then save with the name I want. What can be simpler? Worked very well in Adobe Reader. In fact, when I save the file, I click on the previous month's file and just change the name as appropriate. For example, I'd click on the July bill, with the name 2018_07 and then change the last digit to 8 and then save to the name 2018_08. OK, the harsh way: Forget about Adobe Reader. They were clear: no maintenance,
Op woensdag 29 augustus 2018 21:30:40 CEST schreef James Knott: their product for linux is dead. Everything done now to keep it alive somehow is going to be more and more problematic.
Whatever. Acroread is the only compliant pdf reader.
@Carlos: complain at the Spanish Government f.e. They are lacking in supporting EU rules, that require governments to make any docs needed accessible to anybody, no matter what OS.
It is not only Spain: ask jdd, for instance. He provided document samples that do not open properly. As far as I know, Adobe defines the standard, the rest have to follow and create equivalent tools. As far as governments are concerned, PDF is open and a standard. If Okular doesn't work, just use Acrobat as we tell you, not half cooked substitutes done by amateurs (not my words).
Anyway, this definitely is not an openSUSE problem, the project has no way to change this, unless Adobe open sources the code, which is, given their statements in the past, not going to happen
The Linux devs can get together and develop a proper PDF reader that really works. There are other proprietary solutions out there that almost work. Why can't Linux devs create one? Signatures and Forms are the two main fields I know that fail. -- Cheers / Saludos, Carlos E. R. (from openSUSE 15.0 (Legolas)) -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse+unsubscribe@opensuse.org To contact the owner, e-mail: opensuse+owner@opensuse.org