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Re: Excess tags in acrobat?
From: Jonathan Avila
Date: Mar 29, 2019 6:07PM
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Making changes to the tags in the past would cause the size of the PDF file to increase. There are some tools in Acrobat to help -- as mentioned new versions have the delete empty tags and the "print production" features have a number of hidden tools for clearing up clutter in the document, syntax checking, and PDF/UA checking that you may find helpful.
Jonathan
Jonathan Avila
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-----Original Message-----
From: WebAIM-Forum [mailto: <EMAIL REMOVED> ] On Behalf Of Ryan E. Benson
Sent: Friday, March 29, 2019 6:56 PM
To: WebAIM Discussion List
Subject: Re: [WebAIM] Excess tags in acrobat?
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> I remove them from the document it clears up the memory leaks
The only thing I could think of causing a memory leak is if there were
thousands of them. I'd weigh something like embedded fonts as more probable
to cause a leak.
> The tags also do not follow logical reading order, so instead of the
document tags running 1 2 3 4 5 6 7, they come out like 5, 2, 1, 4, 3, 7, 6
(as an example).
Go to the pages pane, select all, properties > there should be three
options, choose tags (I don't have access to Acrobat this minute). In
short, the tag order is key, not what the order pane says.
--
Ryan E. Benson
On Fri, Mar 29, 2019 at 2:15 PM Laurie Kamrowski-Lamb < <EMAIL REMOVED> >
wrote:
> I have been going over some legacy content for my school's pdfs, and I've
> been noticing that some of the larger documents are causing memory leaks in
> acrobat, and upon inspection I've been finding a lot blank tags that
> apparently have nothing in them, and once I remove them from the document
> it clears up the memory leaks and I'm able to get the rest of the document
> running smoothly. Has anyone else encountered this issue?
>
> The tags also do not follow logical reading order, so instead of the
> document tags running 1 2 3 4 5 6 7, they come out like 5, 2, 1, 4, 3, 7, 6
> (as an example).
>
> Could this be because these documents are older? I've also noticed that
> they had some tables scanned in (not original electronic format, a scan of
> a table printed out). My boss is asking for the nature of these issues and
> I just wanted to have a more solid answer than just a hunch.
>
> Thank you for your time,
>
> Laurie
> > > > >
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