Apr 17, 2018 Microsoft Office stops responding when you try to open or save a file. 2003 Microsoft Office Publisher 2007 Microsoft Office Publisher 2003 Office Word 2007 Microsoft Office Excel 2003 Excel 2010 More. The program still does not respond. Additionally, in 2007 Microsoft Office programs, you may receive the following. When converting a document from MS Publisher 2010 to PDF, the conversion appears to be in a landscape mode cutting - Answered by a verified Software technician.
In many authoring applications,you can use the Print command with the Adobe PDF printerto convert your file to PDF. Your source document is converted to PostScriptand fed directly to Distiller for conversion to PDF, without manually startingDistiller. The current Distiller preference settings and AdobePDF settings are used to convert the file. If you’reworking with nonstandard page sizes, create a custom page size.
I have been trying unsuccessfully to print something that I made in Microsoft Publisher 2010 into an Adobe PDF. I have Adobe Acrobat 9 Pro and Microsoft Publisher 2010.
Note:
(Windows)For Microsoft Office documents, the Adobe PDF printerdoes not include some of the features that are available from PDFMaker.For example, you cannot create bookmarks and hyperlinks using the AdobePDF printer. If you’re creating a PDF from a MicrosoftOffice document and you want to use these features, usePDFMaker.
The Adobe PDF printercreates untagged PDFs. A tagged structure is required for reflowingcontent to a handheld device and is preferable for producing reliable resultswith a screen reader.
- Open the file in its authoring application,and choose File > Print.
- Click the Properties (or Preferences) button to customizethe Adobe PDF printer setting. (In some applications,you may need to click Setup in the Print dialog box to open thelist of printers, and then click Properties or Preferences.)
- Note:Your PDF is saved in the folder specified by the settingof the Adobe PDF Output Folder in the Preferencesdialog box; the default location is My Documents. If you specifyPrompt For Adobe PDF Filename, then a Save As dialogopens when you print.
The method for creating PDFs using the Printcommand changed in Mac OS v10.6 SnowLeopard with Acrobat 9.1 and later. The following proceduredescribes the method in both Snow Leopard and earlier versions of MacOS X.
- Open the file in its authoring application, andchoose File > Print.
- Choose Save As Adobe PDF from the PDF menu at the bottom of the dialog box.
- For Adobe PDF Settings, chooseone of the default settings, or customize the settings using Distiller.Any custom settings that you have defined are listed.For most users, the default Adobe PDF conversionsettings are adequate.
- For After PDF Creation, specify whether to open the PDF.
- Select a name and location for your PDF, and click Save.Note:By default, your PDF is saved with the same filenameand a .pdf extension.
Printing preferences apply toall applications that use the Adobe PDF printer, unlessyou change the settings in an authoring application by using the Page Setup,DocumentSetup, or Print menu.
Note:
The dialog box for settingprinting preferences is named Adobe PDFPrinting Preferences,Adobe PDF Printing Defaults, or Adobe PDFDocumentProperties, depending on how you access it.
- Open the Printers windowfrom the Start menu. Right-click the Adobe PDF printer,and choose Printing Preferences.
- In an authoring application such as Adobe InDesign, chooseFile > Print. Select Adobe PDF as theprinter, and click the Properties (or Preferences) button. (In someapplications, you may need to click Setup in the Print dialog boxto access the list of printers, and then click Properties or Preferencesto customize the Adobe PDF settings.)
PDF-specific options appear on the Adobe PDF Settings tab. The Paper Quality tab and Layout tab contain other familiar options for the paper source, printer ink, page orientation, and number of pages per sheet.
Note:
Printing Preferences are different from printer Properties. The Preferences include Adobe PDF-specific options for the conversion process; the Properties dialog box contains tabs of options that are available for any type of printer.
Select a predefined set of options from the DefaultSettings menu or click Edit to view or change the settingsin the Adobe PDF Settings dialog box.
Waiting For Printer To Respond
![Adobe Adobe](/uploads/1/2/6/3/126383525/983399766.png)
There is a flaw in Publisher 2007 - 2010. If you try to print anything other than certain sizes, 8.5 x 11 on a normal printer, you can not select 'print on one page' as a print option. I have a new Epson workforce that allows me to print up to 7 x 11. The 7 x 11 size will default to 'tiled' but you can at least select 'print on one page', and it will. However, if I try to create a custom page size (in this case 12 x 12) it does not matter how often you go to the print set up page and select custom size, enter the custom dimensions and click OK, go back to print options, it will not allow you to select anything but tiled. I spent HOURS messing with this and finally called my IT guy...he showed me the endless comments by people who have similar problems: http://answers.microsoft.com/en-us/office/forum/office_2010-publish/how-to-change-publisher-one-page-tile-default/ce1a8339-8b6e-4de3-8d41-17acb4995c7b?auth=1
What is aggravating is that this is a KNOWN problem with the windows office software that has wasted a lot of time for people. Yes, you can always select 8.5 x 11 for a normal printer and 'size' whatever you want to print in that format (or in my case I have to use a 11 x 17 paper to print out a 12 x 12 document), but you can't actually create a 'custom' size document and have it print out on one sheet.
Publisher Waiting For Printer To Respond
I think that flaw has been corrected in Publisher 2013, but I'm not sure. Anyone tried it?