xlsx, etc.) format to retrieve and rename. More important to my mind, however, is the information contained in Zaphod_Beeblebrox's post that explains that Mac users aren't even able to access an embedded PDF without diving into Office's pseudo-zip (.docx. This thread in the Microsoft forums-says it can't be done. All techniques sort of work, but all also destroy the PDF-as a PDF-to replace it with something that Mac Word can handle. conversion function to "fuse" the discrete image files into one long, continuous image-then inserting into Word exporting PDF from QuickTime 7 Pro as a self-contained movie-then inserting into Word etc. ![]() tiff-then inserting into Word and shifting the tiff's layers so that they're not directly on top of each other using Automator to export the PDF's pages as separate image files, then using GraphicConverter's Concat. I toyed with several roundabout approaches to stay within Mac Word's embed limitations: exporting PDF from Preview as multipage. ![]() But the OP's problem sparked my interest. I've never encountered an Office file with embedded PDFs.
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