Well, I've tried Copy and Paste also but I still get this huge leading! All I have is the free Acrobat. Is there no way to adjust the leading? there used to be.
Main Topics
Browse All Topicsi have a text document converted from a PDF file with acrobat reader. Tthe text has excessive leading and I need to reduce this. I believe in older versions, this was possible and easy to do. However, with each new improved version, things get harder. I can't find anything on the web. Is it possible to just select all text and somehow adjust the leadin fo all of it?
Thanks,
Annas
This Question has been solved and asker verified All Experts Exchange premium technology solutions are available to subscription members.
Experts Exchange has been collecting answers to technology questions since 1996…3 million and counting! If you have a question, chances are we already have your answer.
If you can't find the exact answer you're looking for, ask our exclusive community of 50,000 experts. You’ll get a personalized answer from a trusted professional.
Thousands of free tech tips, tricks, how-to’s and tutorials are available in our peer reviewed articles section. See for yourself how smart our experts are, no login required.
Access the answers to your technology questions today.
30-day free trial. Register in 60 seconds.
Members of the expert community talk about why the experience at Experts Exchange is different than what you will find anywhere else.

Try it out and discover for yourself.
30-day free trial. Register in 60 seconds.
Join the community of experts here and help other tech pros by answering question in your area of expertise. You can earn FREE access to all Experts Exchange's premium features and resources.
It's a printing term. Long, long ago, before the late 70's, a printer, operating a letterpress press would insert pieces of lead between the lines of text to adjust the space between lines. It's pronounced "LED-ING" Word processing programs like Wordperfect and Word, did the same for Windows. Leading adjusts the vericle space, kerning the distance between letters.
In Word, body leading is controlled by "line spacing" in the Format Paragraph dialog. The options present multiples of a line, but you can type in whatever value you want using the "at least" or "exactly" parameters. For example, if you were to modify the Body Text's style definition to use "Exactly 13pt" you would have leading of 13pt -- no matter waht the font size is.
Note that if you have character variants (such as super- or subscripts) or use drop caps, formulae or images within the copy, such leading controls can result in clipping.
Depending on how large the document is and how much reformatting you wish to do, a suggestion I have is to first rename the document, then highlight the entire document (Ctrl-a), then in the Style box (which is next to the Font box on your Formatting toolbar) choose Clear Formatting. [Another option, which may be less extreme, is to try setting it to Normal instead.]
That will remove everything regarding fonts, spacing, bullets...sometimes the results are usable, sometimes not...depends what you want to do with the text, and how much time you want to spend re-formatting the document.
Business Accounts
Answer for Membership
by: oswaldofarithPosted on 2009-05-26 at 21:56:58ID: 24479955
I recommend you to copy from the pdf document and paste it in MS Word to edit. If the document is not copy-protected you can do this easily in Acrobat reader.
If you have Acobat Standard or Professional you can export to Word, and then print again to pdf after editing.