![]() ![]() Good luck! And Acrobat better come up with a permanent solution - not right that they haven't fixed this yet.The Adobe PDF plug-in provides you the ability to view PDFs in Internet Explorer. If you "lose" the scroll-bar while working on the document, just repeat the "click mouse pointer over area where scroll-bar used to be/keep pointer hovered in that area/press & release right arrow key/and select scroll-bar with mouse pointer." The same process applies when using the left-side Page Thumbnails (where I really really was going crazy not having access to the scroll-bar!!!!). Then, for the arrow key/hovering mouse pointer step, it's a quick-key workaround each time a document is opened - like using "command-R" to get rulers to appear on a document (despite having "Show rulers when opening documents" checked under Preferences/Units & Guides - grrrr!)ġ) Mac System Preferences/Appearance/Show Scroll Bars = check "Always"Ģ) Acrobat Preferences: a) General - Touch Mode = "Never" b) General - "Make Hand Tools." (top section of General) = make sure all 3 boxes are uncheckedģ) Acrobat View (menu bar) - go to Page Display, select "Enable Scrolling"Ĥ) in the main pasteboard window, move mouse's pointer to the far right where the scroll-bar used to always be click that area of the pasteboard (to make sure the main pasteboard is active) & KEEP mouse's pointer hovering in that area press & click the keyboard's right arrow key (the 4 arrow keys located to the right of keyboard's "return" key) - the scroll-bar should appear & once you click on the scroll-bar with your mouse it should hold & scroll as long as you're working on the main paste-board. Steps 1-3 are done first, quit Acrobat after completing all within Steps 2-3. ![]() These are the steps I've set-up/use to get the scroll-bars to be available when I'm working on multi-page documents. ![]()
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