In the text box, highlight the text, and hit CTRL+E. Chose size, font, bold, etc...
You can then click out of the text box, and right click on it - and hit MAKE CURRENT PROPERTIES DEFAULT. Then it will use the same properties next time you use a text box.
I found this on YouTube - http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1nH-LJt475k
hope that helps.
you use the green circle above the text box.
How can i rotate our text
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How do you rotate text box in Adobe Acrobat Professsional 8?" I ran into this problem recently. I was trying to edit a pdf with a number of schematics. One of the schematics was rotated 90 degrees. I wanted to inserted text box labeling the drawing but needed to rotate the text box so it faced the same way as the drawing did. I don't believe you can rotate a text box in Adobe Pro 8.0. However, you CAN rotate a page and then insert a text box once the page orientation is the same as the orientation of the text you want to insert. My solution: instead of rotating the text box (like you would do in MSWord), rotate the page. Once you have finished making changes, you can re-rotate it back to its original orientation and the text box will move right along with the page. Hope this helps!
The text will rotate 90 degrees to the right. The beginning of the text will be at the top. If you rotate another 90 degrees, the text will display upside down.
The Windows Vista versions of Adobe Acrobat work on Windows 7. According to Adobe's web site, Adobe Acrobat versions 8 and above are Vista compatible. Adobe Acrobat versions 7 and previous versions are NOT compatible with Vista/Win7. However, I currently use Adobe Acrobat 5 under Windows 7 with the "compatability mode" set to XP service pack 2. I don't have any problems at all. Install your older version of Acrobat, open the "program files" folder then open the "adobe x.0" folder, then the "acrobat" folder. Right click the "acrobat.exe" icon, choose "properties", then click the "compatability" tab. Click/check the box for "run this program in compatability mode for" and select xp service pack 2 or 3. Click "apply" and then "OK".
I've got V6 Pro and none of these work. But I found that if you do this it works a treat.create a text box, leave it blankthen go to MS Word,write whatever text you want then change the font to that fontcopy and paste it into the Adobe text boxset the default text box properties to the those of that boxthen all further text boxes will have that format/size text.For people who don't have Adobe Acrobat you can use a PDF editor to modify the font size:Import your file into it.Drag a box to cover and highlight your text which needs to change font size.Click font size settings and select a size from drop-down menu.Save your file and reserve the changes.
Here is one way to do it, in CS4 at least: 1) In "Acrobat" - "Preferences", select the "General" category and check the box that says "Use single-key accelerators to access tools" 2) Choose "OK" to save the changes 3) Now in the document, you just need to press "U" on the keyboard to enable the highlight text tool. Pressing "H" will switch you back to the hand.
To cause type that overfills one box to runs into a subsequent box. Boxes in which text can flow from one to the next are connected by "threads."
You need to have the professional version of Acrobat to have that capability. There are other factors in the creation of a PDF that will prevent any edits or changes. A work around for this is to place the PDF in a text editing program like InDesign, add the text box and export a new PDF.User:Studiokshould have said "I don't know.", because the answer is NOT an answer. The question was "HOW DO YOU DO IT", not "Why can't I do it."Therefore, the answer MUST contain the steps to show the process.User:Studiokmisunderstood, and thought the person wanted to know why it wasn't working.I HAVE Adobe Acrobat PROFESSIONAL 7.0, and even THEY don't tell you how to do it, so even after looking at this page, I'm STILL looking for an answer after having paid several hundred dollars for the "privilege" of being able to do so.Studiok needs to stop answering questions he/she doesn't know the answers to.I wrote this as a note to others to avoid wasting time thinking that Stuidok has a meaningful answer here. Seek an answer elsewhere.
Yes. Go to Format Cells, but pressing Ctrl - 1. Then pick the Alignment and you can type in the amount of degrees that you want the text rotated. Alternatively text can be put into a text box instead of a cell and manually rotate it that way.
Rotating Text
You can put a box outside with ADOBE in it so it can harden.
It is Text Box or Text Boxes :)
On the View menu, click Print Layout.Click the object that you want to rotate or flip, and then, depending on the kind of object that you clicked, click the Format tab or the Format Picture tab.Under Arrange, click Rotate(To rotate an object to any degree, on the object, drag the rotation handle).