

Or.another way, not to easy I must say, is to use this plug-in for InDesign, that allows you to import PDF into InDesign. So if you are trying to add a link in the upper left hand corner, maybe just look for something that writes text in a batch process for PDF files(I dont know of any such thing.) but there must be one, , or just After you save and open the PDF the link is there, you will notice the cursor turning into the pointing hand thingy and you can click it.īut the downside to links in PDF files is that people are not quite used with them, to make it more noticeable I would underline the text and maybe make it Bold or something to suggest that it is a link, not just normal text.Īnd another issue is that, usually when you click a link in a PDF file, you(the user) get some kind of security warning that you must "Allow" before the link actually works. I think Acrobat does this by default by just writing the URL. You can use acrobat to make a link and copy and paste the invisible rectangle on each page, while tedious, it's another option. I'm sorry I don't have as elegant a solution in Acrobat, but this will hopefully help you more than just a simple "no" to your question. You can then set this up as a master page, and apply it easily and quickly. many of these options are IDENTICAL to the Adobe acrobat pro dialogues. To do this in inDesign make an object, like a rectangle and right click or CTRL+click the item.Ĭhoose interactive, and choose the type of interaction, like convert to button, new hyperlink etc. It's possible to import an entire PDF into InDesign and apply this template to the whole doc and then resave as a PDF. This template can be a transparent rectangle and overlay your existing design. If you create a template or "Master page" layout in indesign with this, this template can be applied to all pages immediately. If you build your doc in InDesign you can create links for PDF export. if you have a graphic in your doc and want to make it a "button", you may want to try this :

So if you have a typed URL of editable text in your PDF, you can go that route and check it, save, done.
FREEWAY PRO LINK TO PDF MANUAL
Acrobat pro doesn't have a lot of manual or interface based batch operations for links, other than scanning a document's text and making text based URLs, or at least whatever it thinks are URLs, and making them into live links.
