How To Extract Highlighted Text From A PDF
How To Extract Highlighted Text From A PDF
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PDF users don’t often maximize the features of a PDF and a reader and
that is because they didn’t know about it. No one could actually go
through a manual these days and discover everything about a format and
its applications. Highlighting, as we know, is one of the many annotation
feats that we can freely do with Adobe Acrobat. But did you know that
you can actually extract these highlighted texts and create a new file that
only includes the highlighted ones? This process can actually be useful
for a lot of things, including writing, instructions, departmentalization,
segmentations, and can help groups focus on what is important on a long
document.
Extracting highlighted text can be done in two ways – 1. You use a PDF
editor to copy the highlighted or remove the remaining texts that are not
annotated. 2. You extract using Adobe PDF reader’s features.
Step two: Upload your PDF file. When the preview of your digital
document is on-screen, select the texts that you wish to edit. You can
delete the texts unwanted by clicking or highlighting them with your
cursor and click backspace on your keyboard.
Step three: Once done, you can click apply changes then download your
PDF.
Step two: Click the three dots on the top right corner of the annotation
pane. This will reveal the options you can do. Then click Export all to
the data file and save the .fdf file to the location you prefer.
Not exactly what you’re looking for? Well, if you’re trying to get the
highlighted text in a separate PDF format instead of an fdf format, you
should look into using Adobe Pro. If you already have a subscription,
here’s how to maximize that tool to extract the highlighted text:
Step two: On the comments pane, click more options (the small square
with an arrow) then click Create Comment Summary on your options.
Step three: On the dialogue window, select Documents and comments
with sequence numbers on separate pages and click all comments. Then
click Create Comment Summary at the bottom.
This should create another PDF file that extracts and summarizes all the
comments and highlights. It will more likely look like a content outline
or a bullet list of comments since it removed all the other content that has
no comments.
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