

PDF documents are essentially one document overlying another, one simple text, the other a picture. There is a risk that the information won't be retrievable at all. ), then you will have to combine all pages back in one "PDF" file. *Download only if you do not have XPS installed.ĭo similar, but save as image (png, tiff.



But that might be the explanation - that the file was mangled somehow in an effort to reduce the file size. So, this is not totally helpful in your case, presuming that your PDF file was received from elsewhere and you can't get to the original version, if it was indeed compressed in some way. However running that same original PDF through Adobe Acrobat Pro's Document > Reduce File Size function, the resulting compressed PDF can successfully copy and paste text. I found that I am able to easily copy and paste text from the original (uncompressed) PDF file, but after running that PDF through a Reduce File Size filter I created, the resulting compressed PDF doesn't copy paste clearly (comes out looking like the strings you posted). I had created some Quartz filters using Colorsync Utility to compress images in PDFs to reduce the overall file size of PDFs with images. I discovered this problem with PDFs I created, and I believe I tracked down the source of the problem: using Mac OS X's Preview to reduce the PDF file size.
