Answered
Hi,
Im trying to follow the example outlined in http://forms.stefcameron.com/2007/05/21/connecting-to-a-web-service/
but the options seem to be different with Acrobat Pro X, given that LCD
has been integrated into Acrobat Pro X. Would anyone happen to know how
I can go about acheving the same thing as outlined in the example above
using Acrobat Pro X? I installed it but dont see a seperate LCD program
installed...
LiveCycle Designer is not integrated into Acrobat. It is a separate software application package included with each Acrobat purchase. In Acrobat 9, 8, and I think 7 too, Adobe had a hook in Acrobat that automatically opened LiveCycle Designer when you selected the Create New Form menu item- BUT all that really happened was that the LiveCycle Designer program opened. Now in Acrobat X, Adobe decided to remove that hook(menu item). When you use Create New Form in Acrobat X you are provided with the Acrobat form tools (which have been there for many years/versions). It is totally possible to create a PDF form for most uses without ever using LiveCycle Designer at all. The differences between the two programs and why to use one or the other has been discussed in the forums here a lot, and there are blog posts and articles about it as well.
If you want to use LiveCycle Designer to create your form you should be able to open it from the Start menu- it should have been installed when you installed Acrobat.
Since Stefan's tutorial has a 2007 date it was probably using Acrobat 8.
Hope this helps,
Dimitri
WindJack Solutions
www.pdfscripting.com
www.windjack.com
Dimitri Munkirs
WindJack Solutions
pdfscripting.com