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Downloading PDFs on iPhone
Guide to Downloading and Managing PDFs on iPhone
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Supports PDF and image file formats (maximum 100MB)
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Frequently Asked Questions
To download PDFs on your iPhone, open the PDF in Safari or another browser and tap on the share icon. Save it to 'Files' or open it in your chosen app.
PDF downloads can be stored in the Files app under your chosen location, such as iCloud Drive or On My iPhone. You can also open them directly in compatible apps.
Yes, you can use apps like the Files app or third-party PDF editors to write on PDFs. Open your PDF, tap the markup icon, and select the text tool.
To work with downloaded PDFs, open them in a PDF reader app where you can view, annotate, or share them. Use markup tools for annotations.
Yes, select your images in the Photos app, tap the share icon, and choose 'Save to Files' as a PDF. Alternatively, use an app that supports PDF conversion.
Open the PDF in Safari and tap the share button. You can save it to your Files app or open it in apps like Books or a PDF reader.
Use the Files app to organize and store your PDFs. You can create folders, move files, and open them in various apps for reading or editing.
Yes, you can use markup tools in the Files app or other PDF editing apps to add text, drawings, and notes to PDF files on your iPhone.
Use the markup function in the Files app or a dedicated PDF annotation app to add drawings, text, or highlights to your PDF documents.
While the iPhone doesn't support direct export, you can upload the annotated PDF to Evernote through their app, saving your changes beforehand.
Yes, once downloaded in the Files app or an appropriate app, PDFs are viewable offline, allowing access without internet.
No, the web-based annotation tool is desktop-only. For mobile annotations, use iPhone apps like Evernote with PDF features.
No, our tool supports one file per session. For batch annotations, use desktop software. On iPhone, manage each PDF individually in your app.
No, the tool doesn't support text extraction from images (OCR). You need a separate app for OCR functions on your iPhone.
Most iOS apps can handle typical PDF sizes, but our online tool limits files to 100 MB. For larger files, you may need other storage or editing methods directly on your iPhone.