Can I uninstall Acrobat Reader X if I buy Acrobat Standard X?

I need to make space on my drive C, Can I uninstall Acrobat Reader X if I buy Acrobat Standard X?

yes, you should uninstall and clean before install acrobat, Download Adobe Reader and Acrobat Cleaner Tool - Adobe Labs

Similar Messages

  • I can not uninstall Adobe Reader 10.1.1. Whenever I try to uninstall is interrupted:

    I can not uninstall Adobe Reader 10.1.1. Whenever I try to uninstall is interrupted by thefollowing message:
    "Could not open key:
    UNNKNOWN\Installer\Patches\68AB67CA7DA700005205A7C804A00111\SourceList\Media
    I use win7 with Avira Anti-virus.

    You may want to try try running this fix from Microsoft:
    http://support.microsoft.com/mats/Program_Install_and_Uninstall

  • There is a problem with Adobe Acrobat/Reader. Please exit Adobe Acrobat/Reader and try again.

    We have Adobe Reader 8.1.3 set to open in the browser.
    We are trying to open PDF files within IE Browser. While opening multiple documents in the IE Browser, we get "There is a problem with Adobe Acrobat/Reader. Please exit Adobe Acrobat/Reader and try again." error, once we click on the "OK" button, PDF file opens in the Adobe reader. This happens randomly while some files open up in IE Browser and some files get the above mentioned error message and open in the Adobe Reader.
    We need to open all the PDF files in the IE Browser. Any input is greatly appreciated.

    I may be better off without the tool bar, but I have found anohter solution;
    .  Open Adobe Reader,
                go to edit menu,
                under Preferences
                go to Internet, uncheck "Display pdf in browser"
    The pdf files then open, but not in the browser

  • LOADED ACROBAT READER X and my old ACROBAT 7 PROFESSIONAL BECAME DEFAULT+MY PRINTING WITH 7 IS BLURR

    I have downloaded ACROBAT READER X.  I previously had IX which worked well and prior to that ACROBAT 7 PROFESSIONAL which I have kept and upgraded. Prior to downloading READER X READER 9 had been my default reader.
    Upon loading Reader X, 7 PROFESSIONAL became my default reader.  It seemed to work OK but for printing.  Printing with 7  resulted in blurred unreadable words and black patches.  When using READER X for printing printing is fine and clear.
    Any words of encoragement?

    Not counting Reader X, Adobe didn't recommend having Reader and Acrobat on the same system. It would cause problems. Moreover when you uninstalled one, it would break the other. When you installed Reader X, it uninstalled your old version of Reader and broke Acrobat 7. If you want Reader and Acrobat upgrade both to X. If you want to keep your old version of Acrobat, uninstall Reader X and re-install Acrobat 7.

  • How can I uninstall adobe Reader on my macbook/Mavericks, how can I uninstall adobe Reader on my macbook/Mavericks

    I tried already all ways that i found in the internet to uninstall adobe from my mac (through Library and with a downloaded uninstaller) still the pdfs open with adobe, what's wrong?

    1. Adobe Reader is in the Applications folder. You can trash it from there.
    2. If you want a pdf to be opened by a different App, you can set that using a .pdf file. Control click on a .pdf and then click Open With. Next identify the App in the list that appears that you want to use. If you do not see what you want in the drop down list, select Other and navigate to the App.

  • How can i uninstall adobe reader 7 if it is'nt located in control panel?

    I'm tring to install adobe 11, but it says to uninstall adobe 7. when i go into control panel to uninstall therein no uninstall listed for adobe 7.

    You can try using this tool to remove all traces of previous versions of Reader:
    http://labs.adobe.com/downloads/acrobatcleaner.html
    Then, download the full offline Reader installer from
    http://get.adobe.com/reader/enterprise/
    and run it immediately after restarting your computer.

  • Can I run Adobe Reader 7 or later with Acrobat 6 Pro?

    I currently have Acrobat Pro 6 installed, which works fine. But I am now getting a message appearing prior to opening some pdf's that the document may not display or format properly as they were made by a later version - these aren't the exact words but hopefully you get the idea.
    Rather than upgrade to Acrobat Standard or Pro 9 I was going to install Adobe Reader 7 or later. Will Adobe Reader 7 or later work alright with Acrobat Pro 6 or will I get conflicts?
    Operating system: Windows XP Pro - SP3

    Adobe does not reccomend to have both Acrobat and Reader installed in a same Win machine, as they share some files and are most likely to conflict.

  • How can I uninstall if reader is not in Win 8 Programs and Features

    I am running Win 8.1
    Adobe reader is installed, but not showing up in Programs and Feature
    How do I uninstall it if it does not show up there

    http://labs.adobe.com/downloads/acrobatcleaner.html

  • How can I force Excel hyperlinks to open Acrobat Pro rather than Acrobat Reader?

    My Excel (2010) hyperlinks to PDF file always open the Reader...but I want these files to open in Acrobat Pro (X) so I can use all the tools.
    Is this possible?
    Can I uninstall the reader? Will that force Pro to be the default file opener?
    Thanks.
    SS

    Open Acrobat -> Click to 'Edit' menu -> Preferences -> General (Category)
    Now click on "Select Default PDF Handler" button choose Acrobat X from the drop-down and then click apply.
    It will reset Acrobat X as a default viewer and your all link will open in Acrobat then.

  • Acrobat Reader can not print to Xerox on Snow Leopard

    I have a specific problem with Acrobat Reader. I can print PDFs with Preview, but not with Acrobat Reader to our Xerox printers. (Xerox Workcentre 7328)
    It seems similar problems exist: http://discussions.apple.com/thread.jspa?threadID=2155025 (that thread is however archived)
    As I have the default file system, the solutions in that thread are not applicable.
    Acrobat Reader version 9.3.1
    Snow Leopard 10.6.2
    Preview, Word, OpenOffice, and others print without a hitch. It's just Acrobat Reader that refuses to print, even though the print queue tool gets activated and everything seems normal there. I can't see if there are any errors on the printer itself.

    Adriaan Renting wrote:
    I have a specific problem with Acrobat Reader. It's just Acrobat Reader that refuses to print...
    Getting warmer...
    So why do you need to use Acrobat? Acrobat for OS X is full of bugs and security issues...there is no reason to use Acrobat over Preview.
    Message was edited by: musicwind95

  • Can't get Adobe Reader to print statement from Scottrade on-line

    I have Vista 64 bit Home Premium , Adobe Reader 9, version 9.3. When online with Windows Internet Explorer at www.scottrade .com, I go to my account, account history, account statements and select January 2010 statement to view and a popup screen which should show my statement, but the screen is blank. This screen usually shows the selected statement in PDF and I can print it out. If I wait a minute or so a popup massage comes up that says: Adobe PDF Document. "There is a problem With Adobe Acrobat/Reader. Please exit Adobe Acrobat/Reader and try again."  I exit try again and the same thing happens again. I have uninstalled/reinstalled Adobe Reader, restarted the computer and cannot get it to work.  I did not have this problem several weeks ago.

    I don't have the printing problem but I do have a very similar situation that I believe is a closely tied to your printing problem.  I think the problem is in the way Internet Explorer or Win 7 processes the Adobe button action/script that calls for it to print or save the displayed PDF.
    I have a problem with saving Adobe PDF files from inside Internet Explorer 8.  I'm running Windows 7 Pro, IE 8, Adobe Reader 9.3, and Acrobat 9.3 Pro.  Reader is my IE 8 Add-On.  I can open the PDF file, click on "save a copy" either the icon button or go thru the File menu, but don't ever see the dialogue window that asks where I want to save it to, and of course the PDF file is not saved to my computer.  I click and it just goes null.  I've also tried the CTRL+Shift+S hotkey combo to no avail.
    I once saw a dialogue window that popped up that alluded to "going outside the protected mode to save it" and did I want to continue.  I've only seen that message window once and it was for just a split second.
    I experimented with Protected Mode.  I can open, read, and save the pdf file if I DISABLE Protected Mode.  ENABLING Protected Mode to come back ON resets and reproduces the problem.
    So, thinking it had to do with the Internet Security level, I cranked that setting down to the minimum but kept Protected Mode enabled.  The problem was still there.
    The workaround I use (until someone gives me a better fix) to get the "SAVE a copy to my computer or other location" button of the PDF to actually work is to:
    Double-click Internet|Protected Mode: On at the bottom of the window or tab displaying the PDF file.  This brings up the Internet Security settings panel.
    Uncheck Enable Protected Mode.  You are putting your computer at a bit of a risk... but you aren't going web surfing with Protected Mode turned Off.  Do not leave the site where you turned it off.
    Click Apply and OK.  Close your browser window with the PDF and reopen it to the PDF you need to Save.  If you are on a pop-up window or a second tab, you only have to close that one window or tab and reopen it.
    You may have to log back on if you are working with an online statement of account.
    Your browser should also show that it is "Internet | Protected Mode: Off".  A yellow bar at the top of the page warns you the Protected Mode is turned Off.
    Save the PDF as you've been doing all along until our software (Win 7 Pro U/G with IE8) started belching.
    After saving, repeat steps 1, 2, and 3 above with rechecking Enable Protected Mode, setting it to On.  Clicking the yellow bar at the top of your browser gets you right back into the security settings panel to reset the mode.
    Close your browser and reopen it.  Verify Protected Mode is reset to On.
    It's risky to disable the Protected Mode, but if I need to save a copy of a pdf file, such as a statement of an online account, this is the only way I've discovered how to save a copy of it short of printing a hard copy, then scanning the hard copy to a pdf (a digital file) for storing/disseminating it.  My workaround may also work for your printing needs.  Try it once and don't forget to reset the Protected Mode back to On.
    It's a nuisance, a real pain in the ol' sphincter, to have to do these steps but until Microsoft and Adobe have a meeting of minds and solve the problem... well, I gotta do what I gotta do.
    I've only had Win 7 Pro for about a week. It was working great when I first upgraded from Win XP Pro (clean install) and a day or so ago without any significant changes or alterations on my part it just started acting up.
    I posted this in Microsoft's Win 7 Forum as well so maybe one side or the other will fix it.

  • There is a problem With Adobe Acrobat/Reader.

    I have XP professional, IE 8, and Adobe Reader 9.3.  When I try to open any pdf files from a web page I see the following error: "These is a problem With Adobe Acrobat/Reader. Please exit Adobe Acrobat/Reader and try again. "
    Although, the web pdf rendering returns an error, I'm able to open pdf files locally.
    Any assistance would be appreciated.
    Thanks,
    Mike

    I had similar problems with Windows XP SP3 and Adobe Reader 9.3 and I uninstalled AR 9.3 and went to:
    http://get.adobe.com/reader/otherversions/  and installed Adobe Reader 8.3.  No problems after that. However,
    ʇɐb ɹəuəllıʍ  posted this reply to one of my earlier posts. So, I don't know what to think...
    3. Feb 15, 2010 7:45 PM in response to: cbuzz1
    Re: Can you help me access PDF files via Adobe Reader?
    cbuzz1 wrote:
    I just discovered that Internet Explorer 8 is not supported by Adobe Reader 9.3 or that they just don't interface properly.
    Reader 9.3 works perfectly fine in IE8.

  • I need the proper settings for Acrobate Reader 9.3 to be backward compatable to open PDF 6.0.

    I have a full license for Adobe Acrobat Professional 9. I just got off the phone with Acrobat technical support about once you install Acrobat Reader 9 to read documents online using Internet Explorer and Firefox. That it would make documents that were scanned in with CapturePerfect3.0 and a Cannon document scanner using Adobe Acrobat Professional 6.0 saved in PDF format and stored as images with records stored with Access Database front-end and SQL Server backend. Simple 6.0 PDF documents stored scanned documents in a database. O.K.! The problem is once you upgrade to read newer version of Acrobat PDF documents that our staff must read online, it makes reading saved database 6.0 PDF documents unreadable. Technical support informs me that it is a settings fix in Acrobat Reader 9 but because the Acrobat Reader 9 is a free download that can't tell me how to fix the settings.
    So here I am trying to find out the proper settings in Acrobat Reader 9 to read new Acrobat documents online and old 6.0 Acrobat PDF documents on Windows XP Pro workstations and one Windows 7 workstation of the CEO's assistant. So please help me with the proper setting for Acrobat Reader 9 to work online reading newer PDF documents and still read Acrobat 6.0 documents stored in a database.

    Adobe Reader 9 can open old and new pdf files.

  • How to open pdf in Acrobat Reader in Firefox window/Tab when both Acrobat Pro and Acrobat REader are

    I would like to open pdf files in firefox using Adobe Acrobat Reader.
    I have both Acrobat Pro or whatever its called and Acrobat Reader installed.
    Presently going to firefox's tools, options, then selecting the file types option I cannot select any plugin to open my pdf's besides what's labeled as "adobe acrobat" but which executes an in-tab instance of Adobe Acrobat Pro, despite the ambiguous language on the plugin which I suspect stems from Adobe's evolving and confusing conventions regarding just what Adobe Reader, Adobe Acrobat, Adobe Acrobat Reader, and Adobe Acrobat Pro really is.
    Anyways, how to make pdfs open in-tab instances of Adobe Acrobat Reader while I have both the Reader and the Pro installed?
    Is there a sepperate plugin I need or something?
    Any help is very Appreciated

    eh,
    The problem w/ acrobat is that it takes forever to load
    I was going to just use reader to read documents, and acrobat to edit, so I could gut reader of all the plugins worthless for 99.9999 of pdfs I use and it'll load fast.
    foxit is nice, but won't open in-browser despite their continuing claims of supporting this feature.
    That's so bizarre that adobe won't allow you to choose which one you want to run. Its installed as sepperate programs on the uninstall list, on the "open with" context menu, and w/ file associations, so why would it not be possible to only open pdf links w/ one?
    Maybe its time to abandon acrobat and just use reader. There's much cheaper programs w/ all the same functionality as acrobat, so I guess I'll move on to those.
    If anyone else has suggestions feel free to make em.

  • Acrobat Reader 9.5.1 'Internal Error' [solved]

    Hello, everybody.
    To come quickly to the point, here is the problem / issue (hopefully, in the most concise and useful formulation).
    OS: openSUSE Linux 12.1 with kernel v. 3.1.10-1.9 and (just for the report - even if I don't think it matters) Qt libraries v. 4.7.4-19.6.1. I say I don't think it matters, because I've already experienced this very same issue with openSUSE 11.0 (kernel 2.6.25.5 and Qt 4.4.0, with Acrobat Reader 8.1.3).
    Acrobat Reader v. 9.5.1 (the release included with the distro).
    The issue: when I try to overwrite an existing PDF document (i.e.: save 'foo.pdf' OVER a pre-existing copy of 'foo.pdf') I systematically get caught into the sequence 'the document already exists. Do you want to overwrite it?' -> yes -> 'An internal error has occurred' -> the document can't be overwritten.
    Attempts to fix: I've already tried - suspecting I had possibly missed something during the installation process - to change the permissions of the '.adobe' preferences folder under my /home directory by issuing the usual 'chown -R xxx:yyy .adobe' command: with no result.
    Any idea about the possible causes and workarounds?
    BTW, while I was trying to recover the exact information about the program's version in the 'Help -> about Adobe Reader' menu, I've stumbled into another issue (which looks very much like a bug): that is, the program freezes if I try to read the 'Credits' information by pushing the suitable button in the red 'Adobe Reader 9' banner. Possible causes and remedies (aside from upgrading to the most recent version)?
    Thank you very much in advance
    Mario Grilli
    Message was edited by: jaygrey
    Reason: solved

    I add this one to my previous message, which solves the issue (and closes the thread).
    The issue has been solved (on another system, though: that is, Fedora 17) by installing the original Acrobat Reader 9.5.1 from Adobe. With "original" I mean: not the .rpm archive enclosed in the OS DVD, but the one which can be downloaded directly from Adobe.
    The method:  one has to open a terminal and simply do the following:
    # rpm -Uvh http://linuxdownload.adobe.com/adobe-release/adobe-release-i386-1.0-1.noarch.rpm
    [as root] # yum install AdobeReader_enu
    The version of Acrobat Reader which is installed by this method is complete with all the GTK suitable libraries: and actually works with no hassle, allowing to overwrite previous versions of the same file.
    Now, however, I have to find some equivalent procedure under openSUSE: because it's a fact that even the AdbeRdr9.5.1-1_i486linux_enu.rpm file one usually downloads from here installs a copy of Acrobat Reader which shows the aforementioned issue, despite all the necessary graphical libraries being already installed in the system. Now, since this one is probably the .rpm archive a user finds in the main .rpm-based Linux distros, I add that it might be interesting if some Adobe engineer would try to dig a little deeper into this issue...

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