Stephen Liu wrote: > All documents on Internet printed as .ps files and/or later converted > to .pdf have problem. Disregarding they can be retrieve and read, > their text can't be highlighted and copy/paste. I don't know what > mistake committed. Any suggestion? Text can be stored in a PDF as a series of numbers (e.g. 65 is A) plus font information, or as a picture of the text. Exactly how this happens depends on how the PDF was created (and in this case, how the PostScript version was created in the first place -- often there'll be an option somewhere in whatever created them to create bitmaps or include font information). Once it's turned into a picture, then there's no easy way to go back to the text it was created from. This isn't a limitation of your program, but of existing technology. There are "OCR" programs that can "read" the text in the same way as you or I would -- they look at the shapes, and try to recognise letters. But they aren't foolproof (or particularly fast). Hope this helps, James. -- E-mail address: james | Helpful Advice from Thames Water: @westexe.demon.co.uk | "If you have difficulty reading this leaflet, | please ask someone to help you." | -- Read on "The News Quiz", BBC Radio 4 -- fedora-list mailing list fedora-list@xxxxxxxxxx To unsubscribe: https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/fedora-list