Microsoft Word's built-in PDF converter is generally very good, but always be sure to double-check for formatting changes in your PDF document, and especially check any graphics, illustrations, and tables that were part of your document to make sure they converted properly. In rare instances, you may have to convert lesser-known image formats (for example, those used by proprietary engineering programs) to a more popular format like .tiff or .jpg before doing the conversion to PDF format.

I am converting a word file into a pdf. Word version is 2016. I need to have hyperlinks active (References to sections, figures, etc.)I use Export - Create a PDF/XPS Document and Optimized for Standard. I have references to figures and tables completely working, but references to sections don't work. In the Table of Content, I cannot click on the page numbers. What can be done to have links to sections working?


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The "Recover Text from Any File" converter has limitations. For example, document formatting is lost. Additionally, graphics, fields, drawing objects, and any other items that are not text are lost. However, field text, headers, footers, footnotes, and endnotes are retained as simple text.

After the document is recovered by using the "Recover Text from Any File" converter, there is some binary data text that is not converted. This text is primarily at the start and end of the document. You must delete this binary data text before you save the file as a Word document.

This is adding to Jeremy Thompson's very helpful answer. In addition to the word document body, I wanted the header (and footer) of the word document converted to HTML. I didn't want to modify the Open-Xml-PowerTools so I modified Main() and ParseDOCX() from Jeremy's example, and added two new functions. ParseDOCX now accepts a byte array so the original Word Docx isn't modified.

New version of writer2latex is pretty good. It works with the Open Office, but I think their command line utility should work without the OO. You can set quality of the converted document - from LaTeX as clean as possible, to version which tries to emulate appearance of source word document.

The free open source word processor AbiWord has an MS Word import function, and, if you install it (be sure to check it under install time, or if on Linux, install the necessary plugin package), a LaTeX export function. It works decently well for simple documents.

I am somewhat late to the party, as the question's author has, hopefully, graduated. But, for the sake of completeness of answers, I'd like to mention a universal (and now very popular) format converter pandoc ( ), which is open source and supports an extremely wide variety of document formats, including presentation slides and e-books.

Latex is a type setting language, and through programs such as pdflatex, you can turn this into a pdf file. It is certainly not the only way to create a pdf file. If creating a pdf from your word file is your ultimate goal, then there are much more sensible ways to do this.

If you have completed all the 350 pages in word (man, that should have taken long!), then I'd recommend using one of the paid services available and just get it converted. You could try maybe Word to Latex, Word LaTeX or something similar although I agree it is hard to find one!

word2tex seems like a pretty decent commercial option. Unfortunately, it only runs on Windows OS. It provides a "save as tex" option in the "Save As" dialog box. It also has dialog box that allows a wide range of configuration options.

With a suite of other easy-to-use tools for merging and splitting PDFs, compressing and rotating PDFs, and deleting PDF pages, our PDF converter breaks you free from the typical constraints of PDF files.

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With WordToEPUB you can convert documents from your word processor to EPUB, the modern and popular standard for ebooks. EPUB is a wonderful format for reading publications on laptops, tablets, and smartphones, and it includes features such as rich navigation and great accessibility. The EPUB files created with this tool can be used in a wide variety of reading apps on any platform, with the ability to personalize visual features such as colors, font, text size, and layout. Many reading apps have other useful features such as read-aloud, the ability to add comments and bookmarks, and support for electronic braille.

I prefer TeXsword over Latex in Word (TeXsword download). It has all the features of Latex in Word, plus gives handling of equation references. And it doesn't require the Internet connection, which I see as a feature not a limitation: MikeTeX isn't that big after all, and having the LaTeX locally allows you typing your document when traveling.

The default server for LaTeX in Word appears to no longer be running. If you're forced to use Word (for instance, to collaborate with the less technically oriented) I'd use TeXsword as suggested by Adam already. You'll need to install a standalone MikTex distribution, but it is an easy install these days. It works with my Word 2016. It still doesn't look as good as a real bona fide LaTeX document, but it is easier to use and more malleable than the equation editor in Word.

2nd issue: Exactly which version of Acrobat are you using. Because you state "Save as PDF," I'm going to assume you're on a Mac because on a PC, the wording is a bit different. Please verify. But, are you using Acrobat Reader or Acrobat Pro? (Adobe doesn't help because lately they are just referring to Acrobat, not giving you the full answer without some digging.)

I've created a form where responses populate a word doc template and create a file in SharePoint. This all works fine. The next step should convert the document to a pdf, but I get an error that says --The selected file doesn't exist, please select a valid file and drive. clientRequestId: 0b8924ab-4efe-47c3-991e-a8672fc6386e-- at the 'Convert Word Document to PDF step', However, it does exist. I'm not sure what I'm doing wrong. Below are some pictures of my flow up to that step. Note: in the 'Convert to PDF' step, I've tried, from the 'Create File' step: ID, Name, and DisplayName.

I realize this was a long time ago, but I faced similar issues and really needed to avoid One Drive. My process worked, finally, and here was the solve: In the Convert Word step, in File it should be / then the Name output from the create file in sharepoint step (it wants a path to the file relative to the document library root). I also needed to be sure the filename when I then saved the converted document back to SharePoint wasn't just the Name output, because I just get a word doc because that is the filename when I created the first Word doc. So I needed to ensure the filename is just recreated and instead of .docx on the end of it, place .pdf. Works great. Thanks, Kev

Mine is a little different from @Mike44's, because I am storing the PDF files. 


First, I populate the template and create the word file in sharepoint. Then I convert it to PDF, save it, attach that to the email, and delete the Word file.


Use the Export or Save As feature to convert DOCX to PDF within Microsoft Word. You can also upload your Word document to Google Drive, open it in Google Docs, and then download it as a PDF. Adobe Acrobat Online also offers a web-based Word-to-PDF converter that's free to use.

Its just a limitation of Word Online. There are certain things that just don't format correctly and there is also a functionality deficiency in Online as per the previous posted link. I assume with images it is to do with the layout and the conversion between a word document and HTML.

@AndyTres That doesn't preserve anything. I'm supposed to upload documents for my course and nothing works properly, documents randomly don't show up. Then the formatting is completely different once uploaded, this makes no sense. Why would having pictures in one place in a word document suddenly change to somewhere else in a random jumble of letters and pictures, the moment it's uploaded? Makes it impossible to hand work in.

DOCX is a word processing file format based on open standards, including Extensible Markup Language (XML). DOCX is supported by many popular word processing applications, such as Microsoft Word 2007 or higher, Google Docs, Office Online, LibreOffice and Pages for Mac. As an open standard format, DOCX offers a safe and stable basis for authoring and processing intellectual property documents. Currently, the USPTO is accepting DOCX for these submission types .

If the PDF to Word converter module is corrupt, you also cannot open PDF in Word. In this case, you can repair or reinstall Office to solve the issue. Open Control Panel, click Uninstall a program under the Programs section, right-click on the Office app, and choose Repair or Uninstall. After uninstalling the app, you need to download and install it again.

Google Docs is a web-based word processing tool made by Google. It lets users create and edit documents online, meaning they can access them from any device with an internet connection. No more worrying about losing your work or carrying around physical copies!

To convert a PDF to a word document using Adobe Acrobat, select the file you want to convert and upload it to the software, allow up to ten minutes for conversion and, when ready, download the Word document to your device for viewing and editing.

The Quiz Question Converter allows you to input your questions in a word document (instructions for how to make the word doc follow and are also accessible from inside of the Learning Center), and converts the word document into a CSV file for you. 0852c4b9a8

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