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Using Help
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Contents
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Index
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21
Adobe Acrobat Help
Looking at the Work Area
Using Help
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Contents
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Index
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21
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To move down one line, press the Down Arrow key.
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To move up one line, press the Up Arrow key.
Note:
The Down Arrow and Up Arrow keys move you one line at a time when you are not in
Fit in Window view. In Fit in Window view, these keys move you one page at a time.
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To move down one screenful, press Page Down or Return.
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To move up one screenful, press Page Up or Shift+Return.
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To go to the first page, click the First Page button
in the navigation toolbar or status
bar, press the Home key, or choose Document > First Page.
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To go to the last page, click the Last Page button
in the navigation toolbar or the
status bar, press the End key, or choose Document > Last Page.
To jump to a page by its number:
Do one of the following:
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Drag the vertical scroll bar until the number of the page you want to jump to is
displayed.
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Select the current page number in the status bar, type the page number to jump to, and
press Return.
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Choose Document > Go To Page, type the page number, and click OK.
Note:
If the Use Logical Page Numbers option is selected in General preferences, and if
your document’s page numbers are different from the page position in the PDF file, the
page position appears in parentheses in the status bar. For example, if a first page is
numbered “iii”, the numbering might appear as “iii(1 of 10)”. You can double-click inside the
parentheses, edit the page-position number, and press Return to go to that page.
Browsing with navigational structures
Acrobat offers a wide range of navigational structures to help you move to specific places
in PDF documents:
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Bookmarks provide a visual table of contents and usually represent the chapters,
sections, and other organizational items in a document.
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Thumbnails provide miniature previews of document pages.You can use thumbnails to
move pages, to change the display of pages, and to go to other pages. A page-view box
in a thumbnail indicates the area of the page currently showing in the document pane.
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Links take you to specific locations another user (usually the document creator) has
defined; these locations can be in the current document, in other electronic files, or in
Web sites. A link usually points to a titled section or other organizational item.
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Articles are electronic threads that lead you through a document. An article typically
begins on one page and continues on another, just as articles do in traditional
newspapers and magazines. When you read an article, Acrobat zooms in or out so the
current part of the article fills the screen.
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Destinations are links that take you to locations a user has defined. Generally, these
links go to other documents.