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#11
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Converting to PDF and "mailto:" command
I've used both. When I used the plug-in the emails were made active. When I use
the convert to PDF from the Acrobat toolbar, the emails were made active. If I print to PDF, I had to manually tell Acrobat to find the emails. (Advanced, Links). You have to open the PDF in Acrobat, not the reader. -- Mary Sauer MSFT MVP http://office.microsoft.com/ http://msauer.mvps.org/ news://msnews.microsoft.com "SSK" wrote in message ... This did not work for me. The emails underlined and colored were not read as emails. You used the MS publish as pdf download? and not Acrobat? I read in Acrobat and it does not see the email addresses as email Susan "Mary Sauer" wrote: Hi Susan, I just now saved as a PDF (Microsoft's plug-in) with many email addresses. The PDF automatically made the hyperlinks, I did not have to do anything else. I did underline and re-color them in Publisher. -- Mary Sauer MSFT MVP http://office.microsoft.com/ http://msauer.mvps.org/ news://msnews.microsoft.com "SSK" wrote in message ... I am using Microsoft's pdf converter not a separate one from Adobe. It was a download for Publisher from MS's site. should this do the same? Susan "Mary Sauer" wrote: Type out the email address without the hyperlink, you could underline it and give it color. After you print to PDF, let Acrobat find the hyperlinks and make them active. The command is under the Advanced menu, Links. The address must be typed completely. -- Mary Sauer MSFT MVP http://office.microsoft.com/ http://msauer.mvps.org/ news://msnews.microsoft.com "SSK" wrote in message ... I am having EXACTLY the same problem and cannot find a solution. Have any of you found a solution? I have tried all sorts of things and cannot get rid of the "mailto:: which makes the clicked on link unsendable. Mine won't even send with just 1 mailto: my converting to a pdf does not add a second. Susan "Peg" wrote: I am using publisher 2007. When i am inserting an email address (as a hyperlink) the mailto: preface automatically appears. I cannot add an address without this default appearing which is usually great but When I convert the publisher document to a pdf file, using adobe, it is automatically inserting another "mailto" making the email address invalid. ANy suggestions? |
#12
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Converting to PDF and "mailto:" command
I was just told by a support person that Publisher only works with Outlook
and Outlook express. Could this be true? What about all my clients who want to read pdfs online and may not use these? do I have to buy Adobe Acrobat to convert these so those people who do not use microsoft can access email links from publisher? Susan "Mary Sauer" wrote: I've used both. When I used the plug-in the emails were made active. When I use the convert to PDF from the Acrobat toolbar, the emails were made active. If I print to PDF, I had to manually tell Acrobat to find the emails. (Advanced, Links). You have to open the PDF in Acrobat, not the reader. -- Mary Sauer MSFT MVP http://office.microsoft.com/ http://msauer.mvps.org/ news://msnews.microsoft.com "SSK" wrote in message ... This did not work for me. The emails underlined and colored were not read as emails. You used the MS publish as pdf download? and not Acrobat? I read in Acrobat and it does not see the email addresses as email Susan "Mary Sauer" wrote: Hi Susan, I just now saved as a PDF (Microsoft's plug-in) with many email addresses. The PDF automatically made the hyperlinks, I did not have to do anything else. I did underline and re-color them in Publisher. -- Mary Sauer MSFT MVP http://office.microsoft.com/ http://msauer.mvps.org/ news://msnews.microsoft.com "SSK" wrote in message ... I am using Microsoft's pdf converter not a separate one from Adobe. It was a download for Publisher from MS's site. should this do the same? Susan "Mary Sauer" wrote: Type out the email address without the hyperlink, you could underline it and give it color. After you print to PDF, let Acrobat find the hyperlinks and make them active. The command is under the Advanced menu, Links. The address must be typed completely. -- Mary Sauer MSFT MVP http://office.microsoft.com/ http://msauer.mvps.org/ news://msnews.microsoft.com "SSK" wrote in message ... I am having EXACTLY the same problem and cannot find a solution. Have any of you found a solution? I have tried all sorts of things and cannot get rid of the "mailto:: which makes the clicked on link unsendable. Mine won't even send with just 1 mailto: my converting to a pdf does not add a second. Susan "Peg" wrote: I am using publisher 2007. When i am inserting an email address (as a hyperlink) the mailto: preface automatically appears. I cannot add an address without this default appearing which is usually great but When I convert the publisher document to a pdf file, using adobe, it is automatically inserting another "mailto" making the email address invalid. ANy suggestions? |
#13
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Converting to PDF and "mailto:" command
Not true, PDF's work with any email program. It is an attachment, all you need
is the Reader. Nowadays there are PDF readers that are not Acrobat. http://www.foxitsoftware.com/pdf/rd_intro.php -- Mary Sauer MSFT MVP http://office.microsoft.com/ http://msauer.mvps.org/ news://msnews.microsoft.com "SSK" wrote in message ... I was just told by a support person that Publisher only works with Outlook and Outlook express. Could this be true? What about all my clients who want to read pdfs online and may not use these? do I have to buy Adobe Acrobat to convert these so those people who do not use microsoft can access email links from publisher? Susan "Mary Sauer" wrote: I've used both. When I used the plug-in the emails were made active. When I use the convert to PDF from the Acrobat toolbar, the emails were made active. If I print to PDF, I had to manually tell Acrobat to find the emails. (Advanced, Links). You have to open the PDF in Acrobat, not the reader. -- Mary Sauer MSFT MVP http://office.microsoft.com/ http://msauer.mvps.org/ news://msnews.microsoft.com "SSK" wrote in message ... This did not work for me. The emails underlined and colored were not read as emails. You used the MS publish as pdf download? and not Acrobat? I read in Acrobat and it does not see the email addresses as email Susan "Mary Sauer" wrote: Hi Susan, I just now saved as a PDF (Microsoft's plug-in) with many email addresses. The PDF automatically made the hyperlinks, I did not have to do anything else. I did underline and re-color them in Publisher. -- Mary Sauer MSFT MVP http://office.microsoft.com/ http://msauer.mvps.org/ news://msnews.microsoft.com "SSK" wrote in message ... I am using Microsoft's pdf converter not a separate one from Adobe. It was a download for Publisher from MS's site. should this do the same? Susan "Mary Sauer" wrote: Type out the email address without the hyperlink, you could underline it and give it color. After you print to PDF, let Acrobat find the hyperlinks and make them active. The command is under the Advanced menu, Links. The address must be typed completely. -- Mary Sauer MSFT MVP http://office.microsoft.com/ http://msauer.mvps.org/ news://msnews.microsoft.com "SSK" wrote in message ... I am having EXACTLY the same problem and cannot find a solution. Have any of you found a solution? I have tried all sorts of things and cannot get rid of the "mailto:: which makes the clicked on link unsendable. Mine won't even send with just 1 mailto: my converting to a pdf does not add a second. Susan "Peg" wrote: I am using publisher 2007. When i am inserting an email address (as a hyperlink) the mailto: preface automatically appears. I cannot add an address without this default appearing which is usually great but When I convert the publisher document to a pdf file, using adobe, it is automatically inserting another "mailto" making the email address invalid. ANy suggestions? |
#14
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Converting to PDF and "mailto:" command
Mary,
FWIW I have been following this thread, and it doesn't help to try Foxit either. It does not recognize an email that is written out. I tried it with the Adobe reader version 6, and that doesn't work either. Bottom line there is a bug with the PDF Add-in in Pub 2007. When you insert the email address into a Pub page via the insert hyperlink method, use the PDF add-in to produce a PDF, then the link is still active, but when clicked it opens OE (my default email client) it inserts into the address field, which won't work as the OP suggests. DavidF "Mary Sauer" wrote in message ... Not true, PDF's work with any email program. It is an attachment, all you need is the Reader. Nowadays there are PDF readers that are not Acrobat. http://www.foxitsoftware.com/pdf/rd_intro.php -- Mary Sauer MSFT MVP http://office.microsoft.com/ http://msauer.mvps.org/ news://msnews.microsoft.com "SSK" wrote in message ... I was just told by a support person that Publisher only works with Outlook and Outlook express. Could this be true? What about all my clients who want to read pdfs online and may not use these? do I have to buy Adobe Acrobat to convert these so those people who do not use microsoft can access email links from publisher? Susan "Mary Sauer" wrote: I've used both. When I used the plug-in the emails were made active. When I use the convert to PDF from the Acrobat toolbar, the emails were made active. If I print to PDF, I had to manually tell Acrobat to find the emails. (Advanced, Links). You have to open the PDF in Acrobat, not the reader. -- Mary Sauer MSFT MVP http://office.microsoft.com/ http://msauer.mvps.org/ news://msnews.microsoft.com "SSK" wrote in message ... This did not work for me. The emails underlined and colored were not read as emails. You used the MS publish as pdf download? and not Acrobat? I read in Acrobat and it does not see the email addresses as email Susan "Mary Sauer" wrote: Hi Susan, I just now saved as a PDF (Microsoft's plug-in) with many addresses. The PDF automatically made the hyperlinks, I did not have to do anything else. I did underline and re-color them in Publisher. -- Mary Sauer MSFT MVP http://office.microsoft.com/ http://msauer.mvps.org/ news://msnews.microsoft.com "SSK" wrote in message ... I am using Microsoft's pdf converter not a separate one from Adobe. It was a download for Publisher from MS's site. should this do the same? Susan "Mary Sauer" wrote: Type out the email address without the hyperlink, you could underline it and give it color. After you print to PDF, let Acrobat find the hyperlinks and make them active. The command is under the Advanced menu, Links. The address must be typed completely. -- Mary Sauer MSFT MVP http://office.microsoft.com/ http://msauer.mvps.org/ news://msnews.microsoft.com "SSK" wrote in message ... I am having EXACTLY the same problem and cannot find a solution. Have any of you found a solution? I have tried all sorts of things and cannot get rid of the "mailto:: which makes the clicked on link unsendable. Mine won't even send with just 1 mailto: my converting to a pdf does not add a second. Susan "Peg" wrote: I am using publisher 2007. When i am inserting an email address (as a hyperlink) the mailto: preface automatically appears. I cannot add an address without this default appearing which is usually great but When I convert the publisher document to a pdf file, using adobe, it is automatically inserting another "mailto" making the email address invalid. ANy suggestions? |
#15
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Converting to PDF and "mailto:" command
What the support person was talking about was that sending Publisher
formatted email messages as the message body, in html format, or as an image, only works with OE and Outlook. The PDF is sent as an attachment, and can be emailed with any email client. The email links in Publisher produced PDFs, are active, but as you said, add "mailto:" the address when clicked. It is a bug, and don't know that there is a good workaround. Hopefully this will be fixed in one of the coming SPs. DavidF "SSK" wrote in message ... I was just told by a support person that Publisher only works with Outlook and Outlook express. Could this be true? What about all my clients who want to read pdfs online and may not use these? do I have to buy Adobe Acrobat to convert these so those people who do not use microsoft can access email links from publisher? Susan "Mary Sauer" wrote: I've used both. When I used the plug-in the emails were made active. When I use the convert to PDF from the Acrobat toolbar, the emails were made active. If I print to PDF, I had to manually tell Acrobat to find the emails. (Advanced, Links). You have to open the PDF in Acrobat, not the reader. -- Mary Sauer MSFT MVP http://office.microsoft.com/ http://msauer.mvps.org/ news://msnews.microsoft.com "SSK" wrote in message ... This did not work for me. The emails underlined and colored were not read as emails. You used the MS publish as pdf download? and not Acrobat? I read in Acrobat and it does not see the email addresses as email Susan "Mary Sauer" wrote: Hi Susan, I just now saved as a PDF (Microsoft's plug-in) with many addresses. The PDF automatically made the hyperlinks, I did not have to do anything else. I did underline and re-color them in Publisher. -- Mary Sauer MSFT MVP http://office.microsoft.com/ http://msauer.mvps.org/ news://msnews.microsoft.com "SSK" wrote in message ... I am using Microsoft's pdf converter not a separate one from Adobe. It was a download for Publisher from MS's site. should this do the same? Susan "Mary Sauer" wrote: Type out the email address without the hyperlink, you could underline it and give it color. After you print to PDF, let Acrobat find the hyperlinks and make them active. The command is under the Advanced menu, Links. The address must be typed completely. -- Mary Sauer MSFT MVP http://office.microsoft.com/ http://msauer.mvps.org/ news://msnews.microsoft.com "SSK" wrote in message ... I am having EXACTLY the same problem and cannot find a solution. Have any of you found a solution? I have tried all sorts of things and cannot get rid of the "mailto:: which makes the clicked on link unsendable. Mine won't even send with just 1 mailto: my converting to a pdf does not add a second. Susan "Peg" wrote: I am using publisher 2007. When i am inserting an email address (as a hyperlink) the mailto: preface automatically appears. I cannot add an address without this default appearing which is usually great but When I convert the publisher document to a pdf file, using adobe, it is automatically inserting another "mailto" making the email address invalid. ANy suggestions? |
#16
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Converting to PDF and "mailto:" command
DavidF wrote:
The email links in Publisher produced PDFs, are active, but as you said, add "mailto:" the address when clicked. It is a bug, and don't know that there is a good workaround. Hopefully this will be fixed in one of the coming SPs. I suggest going and validating the bug report at https://connect.microsoft.com/feedba...463&SiteID=227 to make sure that the Publisher team hears about it. -- Ed Bennett - MVP Microsoft Publisher http://ed.mvps.org |
#17
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Converting to PDF and "mailto:" command
My Acrobat is doing the links without the mail to: The add-in works for me too.
I can only go by my system. I do have problems with a period as in mary.sauer@here, Acrobat does not pick up the period and will treat the email address as mary@here -- Mary Sauer MSFT MVP http://office.microsoft.com/ http://msauer.mvps.org/ news://msnews.microsoft.com "DavidF" wrote in message ... Mary, FWIW I have been following this thread, and it doesn't help to try Foxit either. It does not recognize an email that is written out. I tried it with the Adobe reader version 6, and that doesn't work either. Bottom line there is a bug with the PDF Add-in in Pub 2007. When you insert the email address into a Pub page via the insert hyperlink method, use the PDF add-in to produce a PDF, then the link is still active, but when clicked it opens OE (my default email client) it inserts into the address field, which won't work as the OP suggests. DavidF "Mary Sauer" wrote in message ... Not true, PDF's work with any email program. It is an attachment, all you need is the Reader. Nowadays there are PDF readers that are not Acrobat. http://www.foxitsoftware.com/pdf/rd_intro.php -- Mary Sauer MSFT MVP http://office.microsoft.com/ http://msauer.mvps.org/ news://msnews.microsoft.com "SSK" wrote in message ... I was just told by a support person that Publisher only works with Outlook and Outlook express. Could this be true? What about all my clients who want to read pdfs online and may not use these? do I have to buy Adobe Acrobat to convert these so those people who do not use microsoft can access email links from publisher? Susan "Mary Sauer" wrote: I've used both. When I used the plug-in the emails were made active. When I use the convert to PDF from the Acrobat toolbar, the emails were made active. If I print to PDF, I had to manually tell Acrobat to find the emails. (Advanced, Links). You have to open the PDF in Acrobat, not the reader. -- Mary Sauer MSFT MVP http://office.microsoft.com/ http://msauer.mvps.org/ news://msnews.microsoft.com "SSK" wrote in message ... This did not work for me. The emails underlined and colored were not read as emails. You used the MS publish as pdf download? and not Acrobat? I read in Acrobat and it does not see the email addresses as email Susan "Mary Sauer" wrote: Hi Susan, I just now saved as a PDF (Microsoft's plug-in) with many addresses. The PDF automatically made the hyperlinks, I did not have to do anything else. I did underline and re-color them in Publisher. -- Mary Sauer MSFT MVP http://office.microsoft.com/ http://msauer.mvps.org/ news://msnews.microsoft.com "SSK" wrote in message ... I am using Microsoft's pdf converter not a separate one from Adobe. It was a download for Publisher from MS's site. should this do the same? Susan "Mary Sauer" wrote: Type out the email address without the hyperlink, you could underline it and give it color. After you print to PDF, let Acrobat find the hyperlinks and make them active. The command is under the Advanced menu, Links. The address must be typed completely. -- Mary Sauer MSFT MVP http://office.microsoft.com/ http://msauer.mvps.org/ news://msnews.microsoft.com "SSK" wrote in message ... I am having EXACTLY the same problem and cannot find a solution. Have any of you found a solution? I have tried all sorts of things and cannot get rid of the "mailto:: which makes the clicked on link unsendable. Mine won't even send with just 1 mailto: my converting to a pdf does not add a second. Susan "Peg" wrote: I am using publisher 2007. When i am inserting an email address (as a hyperlink) the mailto: preface automatically appears. I cannot add an address without this default appearing which is usually great but When I convert the publisher document to a pdf file, using adobe, it is automatically inserting another "mailto" making the email address invalid. ANy suggestions? |
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