Hey all,
First time post-er from the St. Louis area....
I was approached to recreate some forms for an insurance company. They are a potential new client and I am excited about future prospects.
I don't want to drop the ball - so I am leaning on the expertise of this forum to give product advice.
Honestly - I am confused as to what version of Acrobat does what.
1 - The client wants me to recreate existing forms and make them PDFs.
2 - They want the fields to be filled in from a keyboard.
3 - The forms also have some simple calculations that need to be done after the fields are filled in (adding field values to give a total).
4 - Ideally - they would like the user filling out the form to #1: Be able to save the filled out electronic PDF and #2: (ideally) Be able to email it back.
5 - Again - a luxury that is not necessary - electronic signatures...
I currently use CS3 (Mac) and was planning on building the forms in InDesign.
But - are the above functions LiveCycle functions? Or can all this be accomplished with CS3? Or do I need to upgrade to CS9?
I'm a small 1 person shop and any costs I can avoid - I try too - BUT if I have to make a prudent move based on one of the above conditions I will.
Sometimes deciphering the Adobe web site can be a bit daunting. It looks like Acrobat Pro could do some of these functions. just don't understand about the save-ability of filled out forms.
Thank you for taking the time to answer - I really appreciate it.
cB
LiveCycle Designer is not necessary for this and is not available for the Mac.
For forms that need to be saved with Reader and returned, you will have to Reader-enable the forms, which is possible with Acrobat Pro 8, but there are licensing restrictions that apply. In short, if you will be deploying a form to more than 500 recipients, then you are only allowed to extract information from no more than 500 returned forms (including hardcopies). To avoid this limitation, you can use Adobe's LiveCycle Reader Extensions product to create an enabled document without limitations, but this can be expensive. An alternative is to use an authorized service such as the one FormRouter (http://www.formrouter.com) offers, which will enable individual documents for a reasonable fee.
If you will be deploying an extended document to fewer than 500 recipients, there is no limit to the number of times you may extract information from a particular form.
George