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![]() ![]() Be sure you get the one that is specifically made for iPad. One is intened to be used on iPhone and iPod Touch but will also run on the iPad. I test all my interactive PDFs with about a dozen different PDF apps on my iPad. Hello Darius, So is this App allowing you to use the Ipad? I’ve tried several other apps from neu.Pen and they all work very well. It is free and it is the best I’ve found for inserting photos and annotating. One of my favorite PDF apps is neu.Annotate by a company called neu.Pen. There are also separate apps such as Sign It! that do not allow filling out forms but make it easy to insert signatures and photos. Both will allow signing the form directly on the iPad but PDF Forms has separate functions for your signature and the customer’s signature. For form filling the two best I’ve found are PDF Expert and PDF Forms. I have not found any single app that does everything well but it is easy enough to use more than one app to do specific things. It has a few limitations but it does most things very well. So far, PDF Expert is one of the most capable. I try almost every PDF app for the iPad that is posted in the App Store. But Acrobat will set you back several hundred for the software. It is better to design these using Acrobat on your computer and then use them with the App. If you are using an iPad there is an App called PDF Expert that allows you to create forms add photos pages labels annotations and even capture the signature from teh consumer. You can use VBA, VSTO, XML and several other languages all in a single application. Office also supports multiple programming languages. The $149.95 (full retail) Home Edition allows installation on three PCs. The price of Microsoft Office has come down to the point that it can be put on PCs for less than $50 each. I’m talking about major changes that require completely rewriting significant amounts of code. It seems that Star Basic changes so much from one version to another that stuff created on one version will almost never work on the next version. I had used Star Office/ for years but I recently stopped using it. Just out of curiosity, does anyone use open office? You can then make a “clean” PDF of that, then, add the input boxes. It looks like lining up the X boxes was and still is, a problem for you.:mrgreen: :mrgreen:įor page one, where the permit dates are listed, to get the calender right, you need to go back to the original word document and take the diagonals out. ![]()
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