I work for the Soda PDF team. The main use case is text editing. Hereâs the thing about PDF, while the pages look like DOC pages, t are better compared against PowerPoint slides. Each page of a PDF is a unique container, where different elements such as text boxes and images are added and arranged. So letâs say you have a contract, or a multi page document thatâs text heavy. There is no way to drag the content across pages. Microsoft Word by contrast has text reflow across pages. Some PDF editors will do what t can to add text reflow, but youâll find that formatting across pages is a nightmare. It can take a lengthy period of time in PDF to do some reformatting that would literally require you hitting the Enter key in word. PDF is effectively the end point of many projects. Youâll do the bulk of the document preparation in a tool like Word. Where formatting 50 pages of text is easy peasy. Youâll move it to PDF to keep it secure and manage control over the file. So conversions are a matter of moving the PDF into a format better suited for your specific task, in the case of Word, text editing.
Here is the result after printing: The first round of this has seen more than 100 readers, which is quite remarkable for just using PowerPoint and the iPhone camera function. One thing we've learned is there are two separate issues here. Firstly is just the size of your deck. There is an optimal size, with the PDF size being determined by this. Secondly, is the aspect ratio of the card. If it is a regular card, you could reduce this aspect ratio by changing the size. However, the most foolproof method is to increase its height. The reason for this is the following. The width of the card represents the horizontal. Adding the height will increase the height of the deck meaning it is less likely to be cropped in any photo, however the card itself will be cropped in the resulting image. If there is no optimal card.