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#Pdf images not displaying pdf#
If you know that the PDF file has multiple pages, you should delete the single page you just inserted and use a workaround. This is particularly true if you are using Word 2007 or Word 2010 but may also apply if you are using a later version of the program. When you try to insert a PDF file in your document, you may only see a single page from that document. Not only can you not display a multi-page PDF file (the topic of this tip), but you cannot even display a single-page PDF file. Well, enough of that rant-the bottom line is that if you see the bland icon, you are sort of out of luck. Yet, it cannot, by default, display a PDF file in your Word document.
#Pdf images not displaying how to#
(More on that a bit later in this tip.) It also knows how to display PDF files, by default, in the Edge browser. It also, beginning with Word 2013, knows how to make a brave stab at opening a PDF document and converting it into a Word document. You see, even if Word doesn't know (by default) how to display PDF files in a document, it knows how to create PDF files from you document. If you don't see an object type listed for PDF files, then Word doesn't know how to open and display PDF files in your documents, and you are stuck with the bland icon. Remember earlier, when you displayed the Object dialog box and you displayed the Create from File tab? If you had, instead, displayed the Create New tab, you would have noticed a nice, scrollable list of object types that Word understands. You can actually tell, ahead of time, if you are going to be able to successfully insert anything from a PDF file. It seems that you need to have a PDF program (such as Adobe Acrobat or Acrobat Reader) installed on your system in order for Word to be able to extract anything from the PDF and display it. Why? Because Word has no idea how to handle the PDF file. If this is the case, you are out of luck when it comes to inserting a PDF file directly. A rather generic object icon in your document. When you try to insert a PDF file in your document, you may only see a simple object icon, like the following. The following sections examine each of these possibilities. Third, it is possible that all the pages of your PDF file are inserted in your document. Second, it is possible that a single page of your PDF file is inserted in your document. First, it is possible that you end up with a rather bland icon in your document.
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#Pdf images not displaying full#
Word closes the Open dialog box and, in the Object dialog box, shows the full path to the PDF file you want to insert.Īt this point, one of three things is going to happen.
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Let's look, first, at the general way that you can go about inserting PDF files into your document: Max wonders if there is a way to display a multi-page PDF in a Word document. If the PDF contains multiple pages, only the first is visible in the Word document.
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If Max tries to insert a PDF file into a Word document, it displays just fine if the PDF is a single page.
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