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  • Links For Mac
    카테고리 없음 2020. 3. 22. 17:50
    1. Create Symbolic Link Mac
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    When I wanted to create a flyer this week for an event I’m co-organizing, I ran into a very practical problem. I’d done a very basic design in Microsoft Word including some links that I wanted to make into a PDF. But no matter what I tried, I couldn’t get the links to work in my Mac’s Preview. They worked just fine if I opened the PDF in Acrobat Reader, but not in Preview where they transformed into static text instead of clickable links. A little research revealed this was a well-known problem. So, here’s how to create clickable PDF links for Mac Preview: How to Do It Since ChurchMag no doubt has many Mac fans like me, chances are you will run into this same issue sooner or later, if you haven’t already.

    So I thought I’d share the two easiest solutions I found to create a PDF with clickable links on a Mac: Use Pages Much to my surprise, Pages does the job just fine. Just open your Word document in Pages, click the ‘Print’ button and choose ‘Save as PDF’. It will preserve your clickable links without any problem, provided you entered them correctly in the first place (using the full address is important). This is the solution I finally used and it worked perfectly. Use Open Office It’s free and it works, what more do you want? Just download and your problems are over.

    Well, maybe not all of them, but at least you will be able to get working links in your PDF! Have you ever come across this problem? If so, what solution do you use?

    Links For Mac

    Hi everyone, Let me first point out that I am using Excel for Mac 2011. I created a Powerpoint presentation that contains charts linked to my Excel document. Because the files are linked, I can open the Powerpoint, right click on a chart, and select 'Edit Data.' This will open the source file in Excel, from where I can change the data, which will then update the chart in Powerpoint.

    I have noticed that when I change the file path of the Excel file, then perform the same right click 'Edit Data' from Powerpoint, I get the error message 'The linked file is not available.' Ultimately, what I want to do is share the Powerpoint with colleagues-some of whom use Macs, some PCs-so that they too can edit data through the linked Excel file. When I send the Powerpoint file by email, they aren't able to edit the data. I thought that if I put both the Excel file and the Powerpoint file in dropbox, perhaps this would be a solution. But when I move the Excel file, the link to the Powerpoint file is broken. Does anyone know where the 'Edit Links' command is located in Excel for Mac?

    Or does someone have a potential workaround? Thanks so much for your help! Given that you have the link(s) from PowerPoint to Excel: 1) You won't find any links from within Excel. You have to open the PPT presentation in PPT. 2) FWIR, when you first create the link: if the source (Excel file) is in the same folder as the PPT presentation, PPT only inserts a relative reference (i.e., just the filename and no folder information).

    In this scenario, and assuming it is true for Mac Office 2011, you can simply refresh the data - you never have to adjust the links. Just make sure the source file (the Excel workbook) is in the same folder as the PPT presentation. Hi everyone, Let me first point out that I am using Excel for Mac 2011. I created a Powerpoint presentation that contains charts linked to my Excel document. Because the files are linked, I can open the Powerpoint, right click on a chart, and select 'Edit Data.'

    This will open the source file in Excel, from where I can change the data, which will then update the chart in Powerpoint. I have noticed that when I change the file path of the Excel file, then perform the same right click 'Edit Data' from Powerpoint, I get the error message 'The linked file is not available.' Ultimately, what I want to do is share the Powerpoint with colleagues-some of whom use Macs, some PCs-so that they too can edit data through the linked Excel file. When I send the Powerpoint file by email, they aren't able to edit the data. I thought that if I put both the Excel file and the Powerpoint file in dropbox, perhaps this would be a solution.

    But when I move the Excel file, the link to the Powerpoint file is broken. Does anyone know where the 'Edit Links' command is located in Excel for Mac? Or does someone have a potential workaround?

    Thanks so much for your help!

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