Do the printed book and the downloadable PDF file contain the same content?
Yes. In fact, both are produced from the same file. Both the printed book and the downloadable PDF file contain all of the recipes, plus related content (all the introductions and commentary, excerpts from historic texts, and African proverbs) that appears on the website.). The printed book and PDF file contain no advertising (no banner ads, no text ads) and also no images. PDF files support hypertext links, so the PDF file contains all of the internal (page to page) links in the recipe texts, making it easy to navigate, just like the website. (It does not have the “navigation column” links seen on the side of the webpages.) PDF file? Portable Document Format. Once you have the PDF file saved on your computer’s hard-drive you can use the Adobe Reader to view it at any time (without being connected to the Internet). You can also print all, or part, of it, and search it by keyword. To view and print PDF files you must have the free Acrobat Reader installed on your computer. If you don’t
Related Questions
- Can I retain within-document hypertext links if they were present in a Word or PDF file of content labeling (e.g., clickable cross-references)?
- All the recipes are available on The Congo Cookbook website for free, so why should anyone pay for the PDF file or the printed book?
- Can I make the PDF writer save the PDF file in the same folder as the printed document?