This is a two-fold question. I'm new to this so bear with me!
First question - I have the full Adobe 9 package and have created an interactive form from a PDF, with a submit button, and would like to post to our website. The purpose is to have the form fillable, attach files (sketches) to it, and then when they click on the "submit" button, the filled in form will forward to my department's e-mail address mailbox. This works fine and dandy for me when I play around with it but when I had my supervisor give it a shot, he got as far as being able to fill in the blanks. When he clicked on the "submit button" he received an error message that said, "This operation is not permitted." I know I'm very close to having this work for any outside individual but am missing a small step somewhere and so far I've not been able to figure it out.
Second question - also, how do I set up the form so that when they click on the "submit" button they have the ability to return the full adobe form filled in to us AND be able to attach other documents with it? On our website we do have free versions of Adobe Reader that they can download but I'm not sure which version it is.
Any help you can provide would be greatly appreciated!!
How, exactly, are you attaching files to the document?
For what you want to work with Reader, the document has to be Reader-enabled, which means giving the document certain usage rights. This allows Reader to do things it normally cannot. You can Reader-enable a document with Acrobat (8/9) and this allows a filled-in form to be saved and the complete document emailed.
But there are licensing restrictions that come with Reader-enabling a document with Acrobat. In short, if you deploy an enabled (aka extended) document to more than 500 recipients, you may use data from no more than 500 returned forms (including hardcopies). If fewer than 500 recipients, you may use data from an unlimited number of returned forms.
You can also Reader-enable a document using Adobe's LiveCycle Reader Extensions product. This is a significantly more expensive option, but it does allow the setting of more usage rights than is possible with Acrobat, such as embedded files.
George