I need to take every number in this document and add ten percent of it to make sure each one gets bigger by that amount.
I need to take every number in this document and add ten percent of it to make sure each one gets bigger by that amount.
Hello! I am working on a price list and need to increase the cost of each item by ten percent. Right now, it takes me forever to add this 10% boost to every single line one after another because my PDF has ninety-eight pages. Is there any way to make all these prices go up automatically instead? I also have other Adobe apps like Creative Cloud that I can use besides Acrobat Pro DC Image1 Image2 Image3
More details are needed. For instance: https://answers.acrobatusers.com/How-I-c...77358.aspx https://answers.acrobatusers.com/How-mas...34135.aspx Are the prices shown as actual numbers or just text? Is there a specific box where I can see today's rates? What other programs do you have handy and know how to use: Excel, Access, Python, etc... Or does anyone recommend someone who can help? The main point is finding a consistent spot to mark price (maybe in a field) so we can multiply it by 1.10 to get the new cost and put that back into the box. Most importantly, be...
More details are needed. Here are some links that might help: https://answers.acrobatusers.com/How-I-c...77358.aspx and https://answers.acrobatusers.com/How-mas...34135.aspx Are the prices shown here real numbers or just plain text? Is there a specific spot where I can see the current price? What other tools do you have handy, like Excel or Python, and know how to use them? Or maybe you know someone who could help me out? The main thing is finding one place that always shows the same kind of price (probably in a box) so we can multiply it by 1.10 to get a new price, then put that back into the spot where the old price was. Most importantly, be sure to save your original data safely and copy the old PDF price list somewhere you can test before trying anything big or global. Keep the old data separate from everything else. Only after we are sure everything works perfectly should we switch in the new prices. It's good to keep the old list just in case something goes wrong later...