Adobe Acrobat Bookmarks

by Lynne Kramer

When we run classes on Adobe Acrobat at our London training centre, one of the first things we cover is the use of bookmarks. Most people agree that PDFs are brilliant but they can sometimes be rather difficult and tedious to navigate. Enter bookmark: they are clickable headings which link to specific parts of the PDF document and allow you to move around a lot more quickly than scrolling or moving one page at a time.

If you distribute PDFs that contain important information about your products or services, you want to ensure that your audience can access key facts as quickly as possible. Adding a few bookmarks to your PDF files can add value to them by making them more attractive to potential clients.

The bookmarks panel is one of Acrobat’s navigation panels normally displayed on the left of the Acrobat Reader screen. To make bookmarks visible, click on the bookmark icon or choose View - Navigation Panels - Bookmarks. Clicking on a bookmark will move you to the page that it links to.

Acrobat Reader cannot be used to create PDFs: you will need either Acrobat Standard or Acrobat Professional, the commercial versions of Acrobat. But then you will also need one of these two bits of software to create your PDF anyway.

To create bookmarks, open the PDF with Acrobat Standard or Professional and make the Bookmarks panel visible. Next, move to the first page that you want to link to, choose New Bookmark from the Options menu in the top right of the Bookmarks panel then enter a name for the bookmark. Repeat this same procedure to create all your bookmarks.

If this all sounds a bit tedious then let’s look at a few ways of speeding things up. Firstly, instead of typing a name for a bookmark, you can use the selection tool (located next to the hand tool on the toolbar) to highlight some text on the page then, when you choose New Bookmark, the highlighted text will be used as the name of the bookmark. Also, you can use the keyboard shortcut for New Bookmark: Control-B.

Some programs can also generate bookmarks automatically. One example is Adobe PDFMaker, a utility for Microsoft Office 97, 2002 and 2003. This is automatically installed along with Acrobat Standard or Professional and creates a new menu in Office programs called “Adobe PDF” and also an “Adobe PDFMaker” toolbar.

When you use the PDFMaker utility to create a PDF, any text formatted with a Word heading style, such as “Heading 1″, “Heading 2″, etc., will be automatically converted to Acrobat bookmarks. The same applies to tables of content and index entries. Similarly, if you use PDFMaker to convert an Excel workbook to PDF, bookmarks to each worksheet will automatically be generated. Even in PowerPoint, a bookmark to each slide in your presentation will be created for you.

The major DTP packages will also automatically create PDF bookmarks based on styles, indexes and tables of content), in much the same way as Word. This applies to QuarkXPress, InDesign and Serif PagePlus. If you own one of these three software applications, you don’t actually need to have a copy of Acrobat to create your PDF files, since this capability is built-in to each of these brilliant programs.

It is also worth mentioning that bookmarks can do more than just link to a particular page within the PDF document. Firstly, by default, they actually link to a view rather than a page. Thus, for example, if a page in your document contains a map, you can zoom in on the map till it fills the screen and then create a bookmark. When your users click this bookmark, they will be taken to the exact zoom level that was current when the bookmark was created.

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