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Print annotations

Either GoodReader or iAnnotate will allow you to markup PDF documents and print them.



There is a program that most all iPad users have called GoodReader. It's the 'Swiss Army Knife' for the iPad and it can store files all together and in folders - or however you want them - and can transfer files to and from your PC using either WiFi or USB without the need for iTunes. It's built in web-browser can download files too, something that Safari doesn't offer - except for PDF format. From within GoodReader you can open those files in any app that supports that type of file. Having said that, though, when a compatible app does open that file it makes a local copy that it works on, so the original copy in GoodReader is left untouched. If you want to store the modified file in GoodReader you have to transfer it back there by some means.

GoodReader can also attach several files to an email and then send them using the iPad's native Mail app - something you can't do from within Mail itself. It also gives you the opportunity to annotate PDF files and save the resulting file so that it can be read on a PC or Mac.

Tim
 
Depends on exactly how you want them to print.

Preview on the Mac will print the annotations if they are showing. If you use the View menu to show Notes it will print those next to the PDF as well.

Preview must be the most under appreciated program on the Mac. It does all kinds of stuff you'd never expect it would, until you need it.
 
Thank you for the replies...
Actually i would like to print only the annotations not the rest of the text...
I need it as a summary of the text...
 
Good ereader summary

Hi, is there a way to get a summary of the annotations, without the time and how it was annotated? I wanna use this summary to study, but the program puts a useless line between everything I highlighted such as : highlighted yellow at 4
4pm on Jan 06 2011
 

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