Problema con PDF
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Problema con PDF
Hola!
Tengo un problema con PDF. Al copiar el contendido de un libro electronico a Word, los numeros y las ÜÖÄ no me aparecen, y en su lugar aparecen cuadrados como este=
¿Alguna solucion?
¿Es falta de fuentes?
Saludos!
Tengo un problema con PDF. Al copiar el contendido de un libro electronico a Word, los numeros y las ÜÖÄ no me aparecen, y en su lugar aparecen cuadrados como este=
¿Alguna solucion?
¿Es falta de fuentes?
Saludos!
- rd12686950
- Preferencial
- Mensajes: 867
- Registrado: Mié Dic 08, 2004 2:00 am
- Contactar:
- rd12686950
- Preferencial
- Mensajes: 867
- Registrado: Mié Dic 08, 2004 2:00 am
- Contactar:
Hola!
No, no tengo el Writer.
Si alguien quisiera, puede bajarse el libro en PDF, y ver si ocurre lo que me pasa a mi.
Gracias, el enlace es este:
http://www.focal.org/books/hitler/HW1.pdf
Probar a copiar a Word la pagina 856, por ejemplo.
MUCHAS GRACIAS!!!!!
No, no tengo el Writer.
Si alguien quisiera, puede bajarse el libro en PDF, y ver si ocurre lo que me pasa a mi.
Gracias, el enlace es este:
http://www.focal.org/books/hitler/HW1.pdf
Probar a copiar a Word la pagina 856, por ejemplo.
MUCHAS GRACIAS!!!!!
- rd12686950
- Preferencial
- Mensajes: 867
- Registrado: Mié Dic 08, 2004 2:00 am
- Contactar:
Pues no, a mi no me pasa.
Te transcribo lo que dice la pagina 856 del .PDF (en el Word se crea otra numeracion).
Si quieres la version completa, escribe a mi email persona, rd126869502yahoo.es
P.S.:
VIII: Endkampf
advice was that it was more seemly to die there than in his weekend cottage
on the Obersalzberg, that is, if the Führer attached any importance to the
verdict of history. Hitler, unaware that Speer had secretly arranged with
General Heinrici for Berlin to be abandoned, agreed.
after the war conference, Bormann brought to Hitler a startling telegram
just received from Göring at Berchtesgaden. Göring, it seemed, was seizing
power. ‘Mein Führer,’ this began:
In view of your decision to remain in the fortress of Berlin, are you
agreed that I immediately assume overall leadership of the Reich as your
Deputy, in accordance with your decree of June , , with complete
freedom of action at home and abroad?
Unless an answer is given by ten p.m. I will assume you have been
deprived of your freedom of action. I shall then regard the conditions
laid down by your Decree as being met, and shall act in the best interests
of the people and Fatherland.
You know my feelings for you in these the hardest hours of my life. I
cannot express them adequately.
May God protect you and allow you to come here soon despite everything.
– Your loyal Hermann Goring
Ribbentrop had received from Göring a telegram asking the foreign
minister to y down and join him immediately. Keitel had also heard from
Göring. Hitler immediately cabled Göring that he alone would decide when
the Decree of June , , took eect; Göring was forbidden to undertake
any steps in the direction he had hinted at. The Führer then ordered
Göring placed under house arrest. Thus with characteristic hesitancy Hitler
took the decision with which he had been grappling since September
, dismissing Göring. He telegraphed the Reichsmarschall: ‘Your actions
are punishable by death, but because of your valuable services in the
past I shall refrain from instituting proceedings if you will voluntarily relinquish
your oces and titles. Otherwise steps will have to be taken.’
This was not drastic enough for Martin Bormann, as the handwritten
telegrams found three months later on his desk in the bunker’s ruins show.*
* These were rst published in this author’s biography of the Reichsmarschall,
Göring (William Morrow, New York & Macmillan, London, ).
Te transcribo lo que dice la pagina 856 del .PDF (en el Word se crea otra numeracion).
Si quieres la version completa, escribe a mi email persona, rd126869502yahoo.es
P.S.:
VIII: Endkampf
advice was that it was more seemly to die there than in his weekend cottage
on the Obersalzberg, that is, if the Führer attached any importance to the
verdict of history. Hitler, unaware that Speer had secretly arranged with
General Heinrici for Berlin to be abandoned, agreed.
after the war conference, Bormann brought to Hitler a startling telegram
just received from Göring at Berchtesgaden. Göring, it seemed, was seizing
power. ‘Mein Führer,’ this began:
In view of your decision to remain in the fortress of Berlin, are you
agreed that I immediately assume overall leadership of the Reich as your
Deputy, in accordance with your decree of June , , with complete
freedom of action at home and abroad?
Unless an answer is given by ten p.m. I will assume you have been
deprived of your freedom of action. I shall then regard the conditions
laid down by your Decree as being met, and shall act in the best interests
of the people and Fatherland.
You know my feelings for you in these the hardest hours of my life. I
cannot express them adequately.
May God protect you and allow you to come here soon despite everything.
– Your loyal Hermann Goring
Ribbentrop had received from Göring a telegram asking the foreign
minister to y down and join him immediately. Keitel had also heard from
Göring. Hitler immediately cabled Göring that he alone would decide when
the Decree of June , , took eect; Göring was forbidden to undertake
any steps in the direction he had hinted at. The Führer then ordered
Göring placed under house arrest. Thus with characteristic hesitancy Hitler
took the decision with which he had been grappling since September
, dismissing Göring. He telegraphed the Reichsmarschall: ‘Your actions
are punishable by death, but because of your valuable services in the
past I shall refrain from instituting proceedings if you will voluntarily relinquish
your oces and titles. Otherwise steps will have to be taken.’
This was not drastic enough for Martin Bormann, as the handwritten
telegrams found three months later on his desk in the bunker’s ruins show.*
* These were rst published in this author’s biography of the Reichsmarschall,
Göring (William Morrow, New York & Macmillan, London, ).