Good Thin Client PDF Reader For CentOS 6.4

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Any suggestions for a good lightweight pdf reader for my CentOS servers?

Thanks,

13 thoughts on - Good Thin Client PDF Reader For CentOS 6.4

  • Dan Hyatt wrote:
    evince, that I think is installed by default?

    Oh, and here’s a neat one that’s *not* a lightweight reader, that my manager introduced me to last year: xournal. It lets you *edit* .pdfs, including the ones that don’t intend for you to edit them. It was *really*
    nice to have that when we did our (US) state taxes – the federal forms are editable, but not the state, except I could with xournal.

    mark

  • writes:

    Nice find – but it lacks a ‘Find’ function unless I’m going blind.

    okular is another KDE one that I like – rpm is 703186 bytes

    epdview is another – rpm is 416642 bytes

    Bob

  • servers?
    *really*
    are

    I don’t think that the rpm size has much to do with a lightweight process. Shared libs, bad programming, … can all easily cause a small rpm to cause more disk space, memory and CPU usage than a larger one.

    If I have to do something remotely or just want a quick glance at something, I still use xpdf. Old interface but just like vi, once you got used to it, it’s just quicker and easier than most modern alternatives.

    Peter.

  • Both xpdf and mupdf are pretty lightweight.

    EPEL has xpdf, I think I had to build mupdf from source, or else used a Fedora 13 rpm.

  • +1 for evince

    Awesome!
    Thanks for sharing this one, Mark.

    You might be going the slightest bit blind… :-D
    On my version of evince there’s a magnifying glass in the top right (plus Ctrl+F keyboard shortcut works).

    Someone mentioned a reason or another why to switch away from xpdf. I seem to think it was that development was slow or nearly non-existent, but the recent release is from May 2014 [0]. Eh, I’m probably thinking of something else…

    [0] http://www.foolabs.com/xpdf/download.html

  • SilverTip257 wrote:

    To you, and whoever else, you’re very welcome. When my manager introduced me to it, my *instant* reaction was those state tax forms, but I know there’s lots of other forms out there that the ignorant don’t make fill-outable.

    mark

  • Do you have any suggestions for a good program to create PDF forms
    (linux or MS)? I have a PDF document here that we have our customers fill out. I looked into making it a form a while back, but I couldn’t find any reasonable way to do it (there are a LOT of fields and check-boxes on this form). All of the things I tried wanted to add visual elements to the form along with the fields and I don’t have room on the form for that. I just want to be able to say “allow typing here, here, here, …”.

  • SilverTip257 writes:

    Nope – I was talking about xournal. The mag glass there is for zoom.

  • hehe Thanks for clarifying. I too did not find a search feature in xournal’s menus or gui.

  • SilverTip257 wrote:
    Please note that I was *not* suggesting it for a lightweight .pdf reader, which was what the OP asked for. I was sharing the information that xournal exists, and deals with .pdfs, and not just cool but useful.

    mark