Use preview open pdf default




















Sorry this didn't help. Thanks for your feedback. The PDF that appears in the preview pane is zoomed in, such that the page being previewed is cropped. Only the upper left of the page is visible. There are no scroll bars, so the only way to see the whole first page is to open the document in Acrobat or some other viewer. This is, of course, a cumbersome workaround when you need to scroll through a number of files, perhaps renaming them to the text title of the document that you're previewing.

I have multiple monitors. In the preview pane of Windows Explorer on my smaller monitor my laptop monitor the preview works fine.

On my larger monitor, it's incorrect and has the problem. I can drag a window of Windows Explorer between the monitors to the same result: it resizes the preview to be incorrect zoomed in on the larger monitor, but appears correctly on the smaller laptop screen.

I have almost exactly the same problem but with me it's the other way round - works find on my peripheral monitor which is what I have set as my main screen - but on the laptop monitor the pdf view is too big so I can't see the whole thing and there are no scroll bars - if I resize the window the preview resizes too and still cuts the preview off at exactly the same place.

Very frustrating - always worked perfectly for me on Windows 7. Did you manage to find a solution? I think we're onto something here. If I match the monitor 2 scale setting to that of monitor 1, then the PDF page preview width problem is fixed. I had to reboot between changes.

So for those following this thread, right-click on the desktop and choose Display Settings. Then select monitor 1, scroll down and make note of the "scale and layout" setting. Monitor 1 is my laptop's built-in display. While the stuff on Monitor 1 is now quite a bit too large the original problem is fixed: PDF's in the preview pane appear correctly on either monitor.

The software defect is somewhere between Microsoft Windows or Adobe. The scale factor for Monitor 1 seems to be used regardless of which Monitor that the Windows Explorer window appears on. If the scale factor is the same, the software defect is not apparent. If the scale factors are different, the preview pane of Monitor 2 will render PDF's that are cropped based on the difference in scale factor settings.

I have uninstalled and reinstalled Adobe reader. This thread is locked. This is great because it eliminates the need to install a third-party PDF viewer that could potentially bog down your computer. However, those who frequently use the PDF file format may find Microsoft Edge a little bit limited in its capabilities. Therefore, if you have more dynamic software that you prefer to use instead, you will be happy to know that you can change the default PDF viewer on Windows 10 so that your PDF documents will automatically be opened in the software.

Both are easy to do if you follow these steps:. A pop-up window will prompt you to choose your preferred software. Tick the "Always use this app" check box and click "OK". If your preferred software does not appear in the pop-up window, click on "More apps" to expand the list.

Scroll down until you see the "Look for another app in this PC" link and click on it. Find and select your preferred software to set it to the default PDF viewer in Windows Then choose an app from the pop-out list. Like so:. If you want to make your choice permanent, Get Info and change it there. Trust me. Note: on occasion, you may receive a PDF that has to be filled in, like a form.

If the form was created with Acrobat, you may be forced into filling in the form with Acrobat as well, because Adobe has their own way of doing things, and Preview might not know how to handle it. Those are the times that you reach for the Control key and open it with ugh Acrobat Reader.

So sometimes you have to use Acrobat after all. PDF is an open standard, but I think Adobe takes some liberties with it. When they make an app that looks the same on two different platforms they dumb it down to the lowest common denominator. I knew there would be a simple answer for this — just had to find you. Thank you!!

You might also like this article: Four ways to control which app opens for a given document. This article was a godsend. Nasty adobe acrobat wasted my entire afternoon yesterday. Thank you for making it so simple! The only downside is that the fillable areas will still be highlighted. Well that is very interesting. How did you figure that out?



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