![]() Now go to he "Appearance" tab and set both the fill color and the stroke color to "transparent" - you already have a box in your document, there is no need to draw another one. right-click and select Properties, or double-click on the box in the editor). Do that and put it on top of the box in your PDF file. You will probably have to resize the first one. Once you are in the form editor mode, just add checkboxes to your document. If you don't have too many checkboxes, I would make sure that this setting is set to "OFF" - it makes your life a bit easier, trust me :) ![]() If it's not, click on the "Change" button and change it in Acrobat's preferences. ![]() If you want Acrobat to try to detect you fields (which is very unreliable), then the "Form field auto detection" should be set to "ON". At the bottom of that dialog you will see something like this: On the next dialog, you will select which document you want to process. ![]() In Adobe Acrobat DC (this will not work in the free Reader), select the "Prepare Forms" option in the panel on the right side, or click on "Tools" and then select "Prepare Forms" from the list if icons. An interactive Word document does not convert to an interactive PDF document - you will have to add the interactive elements manually (or let Acrobat do it for you).
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