Developer Name | Adobe Systems Incorporated |
Operating System | Windows |
Adobe Acrobat is a popular PDF viewer. It offers document fidelity, support annotations, drawings, and text highlighting. Acrobat features a sandbox function for viewing documents in a isolated, secured environment. Adobe Acrobat also allow users to prong opened documents.
The primary purpose of our website is to provide the user with a list of software programs that support a particular file extension, as well as that help to convert them to another format. Adobe Acrobat supports 112 different file extensions, that's why it was found in our database. The following tables provide information about the association of Adobe Acrobat with file extensions. If the Adobe Acrobat program can be used to convert the file format to another one, such information will also be provided.
This information is especially useful when looking for a way to open a specific file. If you already have Adobe Acrobat installed on your computer, you can check which file extensions it supports and look for the data you need in this specific format (or to what format you should convert the data so that you can open them in the Adobe Acrobat).
By far the most safe way is to download Adobe Acrobat directly from the developers's website. If you are going to download the Adobe Acrobat from a website that offers a database of downloadable software, you have to reckon with the fact that when you install it on your computer, you will also install the unwanted extras. Please, pay special attention to this.
File extensions are not normally displayed to users. To change this, go to Control Panel, select Appearance and Personalization and Folder Options. Next, select the View and find the option "Hide extensions for known file types". The option should be deselected (cleared) and confirmed with OK.