How to make a good PDF résumé without purchasing Adobe Acrobat?

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How to make a good PDF résumé without purchasing Adobe Acrobat (or anything else)?

metal gear solid

Posted 2010-07-16T22:10:01.197

Reputation: 7 796

Use the trial version of Adobe Acrobat. – rizzz86 – 2014-06-16T14:18:36.697

Answers

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I use Word for formatting and CutePDF Writer to print it to PDF.

steve.lippert

Posted 2010-07-16T22:10:01.197

Reputation: 1 970

1Been using CutePDF for years. It's free, it works, and you can send ANYTHING you can print to a PDF with this tool. – Kara Marfia – 2010-07-17T01:26:31.700

PrimoPDF or CutePDF all the way. – Lunatik – 2010-07-17T16:51:39.593

2newer versions of Microsoft Words allow "save-as PDF" natively, now. – mveroone – 2013-08-20T12:37:24.933

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Try LaTeX -- it would also look better then.
Start with http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/LaTeX and http://miktex.org/

mbq

Posted 2010-07-16T22:10:01.197

Reputation: 727

2If you'll find LaTeX a bit though, search for LyX (same syntax, but more easy at first sight). – dag729 – 2010-07-17T01:04:58.230

1@dag And LyX has a couple of pre-made example files for a CV, which look pretty good when the PDF is generated. – sblair – 2010-07-17T01:47:59.770

Having dabbled in Latex, I can't recommend this. If he said "hey I need to make a document with lots of maths" then yes. For a resume learning Latex is far too much work. – jcollum – 2010-12-06T22:06:02.870

@jcollum Learning how to make a reasonably non-ugly document in WYSIWYG editor in a finite time is much harder than learning basic LaTeX. – mbq – 2010-12-06T22:56:25.360

2Having done both, I disagree. Everybody and their brother has opened a WYSIWYG editor at some point. And there must be hundreds of templates out there in the world. – jcollum – 2010-12-07T18:22:48.713

This is kind of a non-answer. Writing a good looking resume in LaTeX is much harder than doing it in WYSIWYG editor, if you are a non-programmer, which I assume OP is (given he uses Adobe Acrobat). Answers like this is akin to "Hardware XY doesn't work well on windows XP. What to do?" - "Install linux." – Karel Bílek – 2012-12-02T12:03:10.583

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I use OpenOffice.org's word processor to create the resume and then export it as a PDF - it works quite well. If you are used to Microsoft Word, it should be fairly easy to adopt OpenOffice.org - it's very similar to old versions of Word (before the Ribbon). A few things are in different places, but it's not that bad to get used to.

Since you are using Windows, if you have Microsoft Word installed, that should also have a way to export to PDF (or you can obtain a PDF printer, which allows you to create PDFs in the same manner that you would print a document to a regular printer).

Another option would be to learn and use LaTeX. However, I wouldn't recommend this if you just want to write and maintain your resume. It's far more useful for things like scientific and engineering publication writing (although OO.org and Word are getting better at that).

Thomas Owens

Posted 2010-07-16T22:10:01.197

Reputation: 3 663

Why learn LaTeX - or any other project, for that matter - when you can use free tools, or the built-in functionality in Office 2007? – TFM – 2010-07-16T23:11:32.593

1I just proposed it as an option. Would I recommend it? Not for most people. OpenOffice.org or Microsoft Office and some form of PDF export tool (if it's necessary, depending on the version you are using) would be a far easier choice. However, all options should be presented so the OP can choose what he feels is best. – Thomas Owens – 2010-07-17T00:49:31.733

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MS Word 2007 has a built-in PDF exporter

tide

Posted 2010-07-16T22:10:01.197

Reputation: 51

Exactly what I was going to say. For Office 2007, you need to download the PDF export package separately. Word 2010 (as of the beta) has it built in.

http://www.microsoft.com/downloads/details.aspx?FamilyID=4d951911-3e7e-4ae6-b059-a2e79ed87041&displaylang=en

– nhinkle – 2010-07-17T00:53:17.587

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LaTeX is a great choice for resumes and cover letters, or anything that you want to look neat and professional.
If you use a premade template (like the ones here), then it becomes very simple. No need to learn a ton of complicated new syntax - all the pieces you are likely to use already exist in the examples, just replace their text with yours and you are ready to go. Of course, learning LaTeX can be very helpful in other areas as well. Some folks who recognize documents created with LaTeX may also take you more seriously if the position is computer- or math-related.

If you don't feel like using LaTeX, lots of pdf printers exist. There is CutePDF, as mentioned by steve, but the one that I usually use is Bullzip.

Larry Wang

Posted 2010-07-16T22:10:01.197

Reputation: 133

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For extra geek cred, write your resume in XML, format it with XSL-FO and output a PDF. ;-)

Chris Nava

Posted 2010-07-16T22:10:01.197

Reputation: 7 009

or asciidoc -> docbook -> xsl-fo -> pdf :) – akira – 2010-07-17T05:32:39.607

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Scribus has always served me well for this purpose and many others.

SleighBoy

Posted 2010-07-16T22:10:01.197

Reputation: 2 066

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There is PDF Creator. It installs as a printer, and can quickly generate a PDF from most any program you can print from.

Grant Palin

Posted 2010-07-16T22:10:01.197

Reputation: 1 102

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Office 2007 and Office 2010 allows you to save as PDF without the need of things like PDF printer drives with the added benefit that it makes for "search/copy/paste-able" PDF's with even the option to generate table of contents.

I believe for 2007 you have to download the Addin but 2010 has it by default: http://www.microsoft.com/downloads/details.aspx?FamilyId=4D951911-3E7E-4AE6-B059-A2E79ED87041&displaylang=en http://office.microsoft.com/en-us/word-help/save-a-file-in-pdf-format-HA010064992.aspx

Carlos Aguilar Mares

Posted 2010-07-16T22:10:01.197

Reputation: 141

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I would also recommend OpenOffice since it's free and supports multiple file types. You could also visit http://en.pdf24.org/ and have them convert it for you. Or you could download and install their program which makes pdf24 appear as a printer on your machine. This allows you to "print" out a pdf version of your resume which you can then save.

TeeOh

Posted 2010-07-16T22:10:01.197

Reputation: 333

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Its called pdfCV it will help you create your Resume(CV) online as a PDF in minutes, where ever you are or on whichever computer you are using.

http://pdfcv.com/

Simon

Posted 2010-07-16T22:10:01.197

Reputation: 4 193

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Install a PDF printer, like:

doPDF,

PrimoPDF,

BullZip PDF

Use your favorite word processor, like Microsoft Word, and then select your PDF Printer that you just installed. It would print and ask you to name the resulting PDF file.

Personally, for simple PDF creations, I use doPDF.
If I need to embed the font that I am using in my document, I prefer to use BullZip PDF.

J. Chin

Posted 2010-07-16T22:10:01.197

Reputation: 213