Delphi 7 klyuch aktivacii. In Adobe Acrobat X Pro (not for free), you can use the Edit Document Text tool to find out about the font: • Click Tools on the documents menubar in the top right corner to show the side menu of tools. • Open the Content area in the right sidebar and locate the Edit Document Text tool. • Select some text • Right-click and select Properties.
Feb 2, 2018 - Sberbank now benchmarks its performance against technology. It also foresees a shift away from physical cards, ultimately to facial,. To reset your password, please enter your username below. Instructions to create a new password will be sent to your email address.
• The Text tab of the properties dialog shows the font (you can also change it) In Adobe Acrobat 9 Pro, you can use the TouchUp Text Tool which is found under ( Tools > Advanced Editing > TouchUp Text Tool). This might also work in other Acrobat versions, but the Tool might be buried somewhere else in Acrobat's menus. I don't know of any way to do what you want other than using some very expensive commercial PDF processing software (such as Enfocus' PitStop or callas' pdfToolbox4). The closest you can get is the pdffonts.exe commandline utility. That is contained in the XPDF-based tool collection, available here: (Download: ). If you run pdffonts.exe -f 22 -l 22 c: path to some pdf.pdf the result will show all fonts used on page 22. To see all fonts used in the complete document, just run pdffonts.exe c: path to some pdf.pdf.
Meanwhile I found a different method to list fonts used in a PDF (and indicate wether they're embedded or not), which uses Ghostscript only (no need for additional third party utilities). Unfortunately this also does NOT satisfy your requirement to learn about a font used for highlighted text. This method uses a little utility program, written in PostScript, shipping with the source code of Ghostscript. Look in the toolbin subdir for the pdf_info.ps file. The included comments say you should run it like this in order to list fonts used, media sizes used gs -dNODISPLAY ^ -q ^ -sFile=____.pdf ^ [-dDumpMediaSizes] ^ [-dDumpFontsUsed [-dShowEmbeddedFonts]] ^ toolbin/pdf_info.ps I did run it on a local example file.
Here is the result: C: > gswin32c ^ -dNODISPLAY ^ -q ^ -sFile=SHARE.pdf ^ -dDumpMediaSizes ^ -dDumpFontsUsed ^ -dShowEmbeddedFonts ^ C: pa gs gs8.64 lib pdf_info.ps SHARE.pdf has 12 pages.