About the built-in help features
Using Help for vision- and motor-impaired users
Opening the Help documentation
Using the How To pages
About the built-in help features
Adobe® Reader® 7.0 offers many built-in features to assist you while you work, including the Help window you're using right now: q q q q
Help documentation.
How To pages. (See Using the How To pages.)
Tool tips, which identify the various buttons, tools, and controls in the work area by name.
These labels appear when you place the pointer over the item you want to identify. Tool tips are also available in some dialog boxes.
Help buttons in some dialog boxes. When you click these Help buttons, the Help window opens with the related topic.
You can also consult online resources. Choosing Help > Online Support leads to links for software downloads, product information, support documents, and more. The Help menu also contains links to various online resources and references.
Note: There is no printed user manual for this product. Overviews, explanations, descriptions, and procedures are included in Help.
Using Help for vision- and motor-impaired users
Vision- and motor-impaired users can use the Accessibility Setup Assistant to change how
PDF documents appear on-screen and are handled by a screen reader, screen magnifier, or other assistive technology. The first time you start Adobe Reader, the Accessibility Setup
Assistant starts if Adobe Reader detects that assistive technology is running on your system. (See Setting accessibility preferences.)
Single-key accelerators and keyboard shortcuts make document navigation simpler. Some of the more common keyboard shortcuts are described here. For a complete list of keyboard shortcuts, see About keyboard shortcuts. For additional information on how
Adobe products enhance electronic document accessibility, visit the Adobe website at http://access.adobe.com. To activate single-key accelerators:
1.