WebAIM - Web Accessibility In Mind

E-mail List Archives

Re: Excess tags in acrobat?

for

From: Jonathan Avila
Date: Mar 29, 2019 6:07PM


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
Chief Accessibility Officer
Level Access
<EMAIL REMOVED>
703.637.8957 office

Visit us online: Website | Twitter | Facebook | LinkedIn | Blog



The information contained in this transmission may be attorney privileged and/or confidential information intended for the use of the individual or entity named above. If the reader of this message is not the intended recipient, you are hereby notified that any use, dissemination, distribution or copying of this communication is strictly prohibited.


-----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?

CAUTION: This email originated from outside of the organization. Do not click links or open attachments unless you recognize the sender and know the content is safe.


> 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
> > > > >