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Before you begin
We're rolling out a new, more intuitive product experience. If the screen shown here doesn’t match your product interface, select help for your current experience.
Use the Content panel to correct reflow problems in a PDF that can’t be corrected by using the Reading Order tool. Because you can damage a PDF by editing content objects, make sure that you’re familiar with PDF structure before you change anything. For comprehensive information about PDF structure, see the PDF Reference Sixth Edition: Adobe Portable Document Format Version 1.7, on the PDF reference page (English only) of the Adobe website.
The Content panel provides a hierarchical view of the objects that make up a PDF, including the PDF object itself. Each document includes one or more pages, a set of annotations (such as comments and links), and the content objects for the page. The content objects consist of containers, text, paths, and images. Objects are listed in the order in which they appear on the page, like tags in the logical structure tree. However, PDFs don’t require tags for you to view or change the object structure.
Choose the hamburger Menu (Windows), or the View menu (macOS) > Show/Hide > Side Panels > Content.
Drag it to the location that you want.
Choose Cut from the Options menu, select the tag above the location you want to paste the cut tag, and choose Paste from the Options menu.
Container elements can’t be pasted directly to page elements. To move a container to another page, cut the container you want to move. Then select a container on the page that you want to move the container to and choose Paste from the Options menu. Then, drag the container out one level to the location that you want.
In the Content panel, use the Options menu or right-click an object to choose from the following options:
New Container
Adds a container object at the end of the selected page or container.
Edit Container Dictionary
Specifies the dictionary for the container. Errors in this dialog box may damage the PDF. Available only for containers that include dictionaries.
Cut
Cuts and copies the selected object (not the related page content).
Paste
Pastes content directly below the selected object at the same hierarchical level.
Paste Child
Pastes content into the selected object as a child content item.
Delete
Removes the object (not the related page content) from the document.
Find Content From Selection
Searches for the object in the Content panel that contains the object selected in the document pane.
Find
Searches for unmarked (untagged) artifacts, content, comments, and links. Options allow you to search the page or document, and to add tags to found items.
Create Artifact
Defines selected objects as artifacts. Artifacts are not read by a screen reader or by the Read Out Loud feature. Page numbers, headers, and footers are often best tagged as artifacts.
Show In Tags Panel
Switches automatically to the Tags panel, and selects the tag corresponding to the content element.
Remove Artifact
Removes the artifact definition from the selected object.
Highlight Content
When selected, highlights appear in the document pane around content that relates to a selected object in the Content panel.
Show Metadata
Allows viewing and editing of image or object metadata.
Properties
Opens the Touch Up Properties dialog box.
The Tags panel allows you to view and edit tags in the logical structure tree, or tags tree, of a PDF. In the Tags panel, tags appear in a hierarchical order that indicates the reading sequence of the document. The first item in this structure is the Tags root. All other items are tags and are children of the Tags root. Tags use coded element types that appear in angle brackets (< >). Each element, including structural elements such as sections and articles, appears in the logical structure ordered by type. It's followed by a title and the element’s content or a description of the content. Structural elements are typically listed as containers (parent tags). They include several smaller elements (child tags) within them.
For more information on logical structures, see the PDF Reference Sixth Edition: Adobe Portable Document Format Version 1.7, on the PDF reference page (English only) of the Adobe website.
Though you can correct most tagging issues by using the Reading Order tool, you must use the Tags panel to address detailed tagging of tables and substructure items, such as paragraphs, lists, and sections that require multiple languages. Add tags manually to a document in the Tags panel only as a last resort. First consider using the Add Tags To Document command.
Choose the hamburger Menu (Windows), or the View menu (macOS) > Show/Hide > Side Panels > Tags.
Expand the tag for the section that you want.
Ctrl-click the plus sign (Windows) or Option-click the triangle (macOS) next to the Tags root to show all tags in the logical structure tree.
You can edit a tag title, change a tag location, or change the tag type for an element. All page content must be tagged, marked as an artifact, or removed from the logical structure tree.
Drag the tag to the location that you want. As you drag, a line appears at viable locations.
Choose Cut from the Options menu, and select the tag that appears above the location you want to paste the cut tag. From the Options menu, choose Paste to move the tag to the same level as the selected tag. Or choose Paste Child to move the tag within the selected tag.
In the Tags panel, use the Options menu or right-click a tag in the logical structure tree to choose from the following options:
New Tag
Creates a tag in the logical structure tree after the currently selected item. Specify type and title of the new tag.
Cut
Removes the selected tag from its current location and puts it on the clipboard.
Paste
Places the tag that’s on the clipboard into the location specified, replacing the selected tag.
Paste Child
Places the tag that’s on the clipboard into the location specified, as a child of the selected tag.
Delete Tag
Removes the selected tag.
Find Tag From Selection
Searches for the tag in the Tags panel that contains the text or object selected in the document pane.
Create Tag From Selection
Creates a tag in the logical structure tree after the item selected in the document pane. Specify type and title of the new tag.
Find
Searches for artifacts, OCR suspects, and unmarked (untagged) content, comments, links, and annotations. Options allow you to search the page or document and add tags to found items.
Change Tag To Artifact
Changes selected tags to artifacts and removes the tagged content from the structure tree.
Copy Contents To Clipboard
Copies all content contained within the selected tags.
Edit Class Map
Allows you to add, change, and delete the class map, or style dictionary, for the document. Class maps store attributes that are associated with each element.
Edit Role Map
Allows you to add, change, and delete role maps for the document. Role maps allow each document to contain a uniquely defined tag set. By mapping these custom tags to predefined tags in Acrobat, custom tags are easier to identify and edit.
Tag Annotations
When selected, all new comments and form fields are added to the tag tree after the selected tag element. Existing comments and form fields aren’t added to the tag tree. Highlight and Underline comments are automatically associated and tagged with the text that they annotate and don’t require this option.
Document Is Tagged PDF
Flags the PDF as a tagged document. Deselect to remove the flag.
This option doesn’t necessarily indicate that the PDF conforms to PDF guidelines and should be used judiciously.
Highlight Content
When selected, causes highlights to appear around content in the document pane when you select the related tag in the Tags panel.
Show Metadata
Opens a read-only dialog box that contains reference information about the selected tag.
Properties
Opens the Object Properties dialog box.
Some tagged PDFs might not contain all the information necessary to make the document contents fully accessible. For example, if you want to make a document available to a screen reader, the PDF should contain alternate text for figures. It should also include language properties for portions of the text that use a language that is different from the default language for the document and expansion text for abbreviations. Designating the appropriate language for different text elements ensures that the correct characters are used when you repurpose the document and that it's spell-checked with the correct dictionary.
You can add alternate text and multiple languages to a tag from the Tags panel. (If only one language is required, choose the language with File > Properties instead.) You can also add alternate text by using the Reading Order tool.
Keep alternate text descriptions as concise as possible.
To add alternate texts to your document, make sure that the document is tagged. Learn how to Autotag a document.
Open a PDF. From the Global bar in the upper-left select All tools.
From the left panel, select Prepare for accessibility > Add alternate text.
You will receive a dialog with the message Acrobat will detect all figures in this document and display associated alternate text. Select OK.
In the Set Alternate Text dialog box, enter the alternate text and select Save & Close.
Screen readers can read the URLs of web links out loud, but adding meaningful alternate text to links can help users immensely. For example, by adding the alternate text you can have a screen reader tell a user to “go to the Acrobat accessibility page of adobe.com” rather than “go to http://www.adobe.com/products/acrobat/solutionsacc.html.”
You add alternate text to the <Link> tag of a link.
Add alternate text only to tags that don’t have child tags. Adding alternate text to a parent tag prevents a screen reader from reading any of that tag’s child tags.
Choose the hamburger
To find a tag more easily, use the Reading Order tool to select the figure or text near the figure in the document pane. Then, choose Find Tag From Selection from the Options menu in the Tags panel.
Expand the tag tree as needed to see the elements that contain the abbreviation.
Use the Touch Up Text tool or the Select tool to select the abbreviation in the document, and then choose Find Tag From Selection from the Options menu to locate the text in the tag tree.
If the abbreviation includes additional text, cut the additional text and place it in a new <Span> child tag within the same <Span> parent tag.
When you tag a PDF that includes comments, the comments are tagged as well. However, if you add comments to a PDF that’s already tagged, your comments are untagged unless you enable comment tagging first.
To Enable comment tagging in a PDF, in the Tags panel, choose Tag Annotations from the Options menu. Comments or markups that you add to the PDF are tagged automatically.
If a document contains untagged comments, find them in the logical structure tree and tag them using the Find command in the Tags panel.
Use the Reading Order tool to make sure that tables are tagged correctly. To fit figures and text within the table cells, re-create the table in the authoring application before converting it to an accessible PDF. Adding tags on a cell level in Acrobat is a labor-intensive procedure.
Before you change any table elements, use the Reading Order tool to determine that the table is tagged correctly.
Table Rows, each of which contains Table Header <TH> or Table Data<TD> cells.
<THead>, <TBody>, and <TFoot> sections, each of which containsTable Rows. (The Table Rows contain <TH> cells, <TD> cells, or both.)
If the tag for the table doesn’t contain these elements, but rows, columns, and cells appear in the table in the document pane, use the Reading Order tool to select and define the table or individual cells.
If the table contains rows that span two or more columns, set ColSpan and RowSpan attributes for these rows in the tag structure.
Re-create the table in the authoring application, and then convert it to a tagged PDF.
Select Attribute Objects, and then select New Item to create an Attribute Object Dictionary.
In the Add Key And Value dialog box, type ColSpan or RowSpan in the Key box. Enter the number of columns or rows in the Value box, choose Integer from the Value Type pop-up menu, and select OK.
This section describes the standard tag types that apply to tagged PDFs. These standard tags provide assistive software and devices with semantic and structural elements to use to interpret document structure and present content in a useful manner.
The PDF tags architecture is extensible, so any PDF document can contain any tag set that an authoring application decides to use. For example, a PDF can have XML tags that came in from an XML schema. Custom tags that you define (such as tag names generated from paragraph styles of an authoring application) need a role map. The role map matches each custom tag to a standard tag here. When assistive software encounters a custom tag, the software can check this role map, and properly interpret the tags. Tagging PDFs by using one of the methods described here generally produces a correct role map for the document.
You can view and edit the role map of a PDF by choosing Options > Edit Role Map in the Tags panel.
The standard Adobe element tag types are available in the New Tag dialog box. They are also available in the Touch Up Properties dialog box in Acrobat Pro. Adobe strongly encourages using these tag types because they provide the best results when tagged content is converted to a different format. These formats include HTML, Microsoft Word, or an accessible text format for use by other assistive technologies.
Block-level elements are page elements that consist of text laid out in paragraph-like forms. Block-level elements are part of a document’s logical structure. Such elements are further classified as container elements, heading and paragraph elements, label and list elements, special text elements, and table elements.
Container elements are the highest level of element and provide hierarchical grouping for other block-level elements.
Document
Document element. The root element of a document’s tag tree.
Part
Part element. A large division of a document; may group smaller units of content together, such as division elements, article elements, or section elements.
Div
Division element. A generic block-level element or group of block-level elements.
Art
Article element. A self-contained body of text considered to be a single narrative.
Sect
Section element. A general container element type, comparable to Division (DIV Class=“Sect”) in HTML, which is usually a component of a part element or an article element.
Heading and paragraph elements are paragraph-like, block-level elements that include specific level heading and generic paragraph (P) tags. A heading (H) element should appear as the first child of any higher-level division. Six levels of headings (H1 to H6) are available for applications that don’t hierarchically nest sections.
Label and list elements are block-level elements used for structuring lists.
L
List element. Any sequence of items of similar meaning or other relevance; immediate child elements should be list item elements.
LI
List item element. Any one member of a list; may have a label element (optional) and a list body element (required) as a child.
LBL
Label element. A bullet, name, or number that identifies and distinguishes an element from others in the same list.
LBody
List item body element. The descriptive content of a list item.
Special text elements identify text that isn’t used as a generic paragraph (P).
BlockQuote
Block quote element. One or more paragraphs of text attributed to someone other than the author of the immediate surrounding text.
Caption
Caption element. A brief portion of text that describes a table or a figure.
Index
Index element. A sequence of entries that contain identifying text and reference elements that point out the occurrence of the text in the main body of the document.
TOC
Table of contents element. An element that contains a structured list of items and labels identifying those items; has its own discrete hierarchy.
TOCI
Table of contents item element. An item contained in a list associated with a table of contents element.
Table elements are special elements for structuring tables.
Table
Table element. A 2D arrangement of data or text cells that contains table row elements as child elements. It may have a caption element as its first or last child element.
TR
Table row element. One row of headings or data in a table; may contain table header cell elements and table data cell elements.
TD
Table data cell element. A table cell that contains nonheader data.
TH
Table header cell element. A table cell that contains header text or data describing one or more rows or columns of a table.
Inline-level elements identify a span of text that has specific formatting or behavior. They are differentiated from block-level elements. Inline-level elements may be contained in or contain block-level elements.
BibEntry
Bibliography entry element. A description of where some cited information may be found.
Quote
Quote entry element. An inline portion of text that is attributed to someone other than the author of the surrounding text. It's different from a block quote, which is a whole paragraph or multiple paragraphs, as opposed to inline text.
Span
Span entry element. Any inline segment of text; commonly used to delimit text that is associated with a set of styling properties.
Similar to inline-level elements, special inline-level elements describe an inline portion of text that has special formatting or behavior.
Code
Code entry element. Computer program text embedded within a document.
Figure
Figure entry element. A graphic associated with the text.
Form
Form entry element. A PDF form annotation that can be or has been filled out.
Formula
Formula entry element. A mathematical formula.
Link
Link entry element. A hyperlink that is embedded within a document. The target can be in the same document, in another PDF document, or on a website.
Note
Note entry element. Explanatory text or documentation, such as a footnote or endnote, that is referred to in the main body of text.
Reference
Reference entry element. A citation to text or data that is found elsewhere in the document.