This is a good feature that I didn't know about as a Firefox user, can't they get a little bit aggressive, just like MSFT when you want to use Edge to download Chrome, and put a big arrow near the edit button the first time you open a PDF in Firefox? or something similar so people would know about it.
Their largest donor is Google, so I assume there are some strings attached to that money. Firefox is also the only browser that doesn't support "Add to Home Screen" for web apps, which you wouod think would be a no-brainer.
I appreciate there is good PDF support in Firefox now, but "Edit PDFs" is a bit misleading because it's only annotations. You cannot, for example, remove or edit existing text.
I tried this feature in somewhat recent past and some added text was printing in different positions than shown in the editor. Actually I discovered it was in the wrong position already in the "preview" (not sure what that meant, there's probably some preview feature). Also when opening the edited PDF in Sumatra, Polish characters (ąęółśćżń) were bugged.
So beware before you spend a lot of time on a single document just to discover it doesn't quite work!
I used this today but then I had to delete a page and couldn't do that in the browser so I had to do it with python code. I'm not a fan of the browser becoming the everything app but pdf software feels particularly shitty to have to install so I'd welcome more pdf features in firefox.
The “PDF software” is great for basic tasks like these — you don't even need to write any code, just use pdftk or mutool. It's the Web that is full of junk semi-malware tools that prevent people from finding the right solution.
The Firefox PDF reader is atrocious. Opening any non-trivial PDF causes it to crash even on an i9 with 32GB of RAM. I guess this is because it's rendering the pdf to HTML.
Huh, I guess “non-trivial PDF” is so wide a spectrum as to become meaningless, but FWIW I’ve never had any such problems on much lower hardware specs. I am, however, only talking about whole books, long-ish forms, brochures with print-quality images and graphs and that sort of thing. Since PDFs can theoretically contain anything under the sun, are you perhaps talking about more exotic use cases (interactivity, animation, idk)? Or just more excessive file sizes?
I use Firefox by default, but I open PDFs with large organization charts very regularly. I have Edge open for this because Firefox renders everything in these documents far too slowly.
So beware before you spend a lot of time on a single document just to discover it doesn't quite work!
Can you save the edited PDF locally?
The page is kind of light on details.
1. Open a PDF in Firefox (this can be a remote or local file)
2. Make edits
3. Click the save button to save it locally
No, in the past my options were the same as in the now - use an app to fill the form