mogwai93 Posted September 19, 2003 Share Posted September 19, 2003 Après avoir afficher un fichier pdf avec Internet Explorer, je remarque que, après avoir fermé IE, le processus d'Acrobat (acrord32.exe) ne se termine pas automatiquement. En plus, il prend pas mal de ressources (> 10 Mo) Que faire pour que le processus se supprime de lui-même dès qu'il n'est plus utilisé ? (biensûr sans utiliser le Gestionnaire des tâches ) Merci Testé avec : Windows 2000 PRO IE 5.50 Acrobat Reader 5.0 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
harlock_99 Posted September 26, 2003 Share Posted September 26, 2003 n'ai trouvé ça sur le net ! "PDF" BLUES - The Annoyance: Don't you just hate it when you try to read a Portable Document Format file on a Web page, and Adobe Acrobat Reader 5 insists on opening right in your browser. On top of that, a small Acrobat applet loads into memory, taking up your system resources. Still more grating, that applet doesn't unload when you close the reader. THE FIX: It's simpler, more efficient, and just as fast to open Acrobat Reader separately. First, launch the reader from your Start menu, select "Edit", "Preferences", choose "Options", and uncheck "Display PDF in Browser". Now when you select a PDF file while browsing, you'll see a File Download Box. The Reader starts automatically when you choose "Open". On the other hand, if you use the reader integrated with your browser, you can unload the applet after closing your browser by pressing (Ctrl)-(Alt)-(Delete), choosing "Accord32", and clicking "end task". In Windows XP and Windows 2000, choose the "Process" tab in Task Manager; then select "AcroRd32.exe" and click "End Process". J'espère que cela roulera... Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
mogwai93 Posted September 29, 2003 Author Share Posted September 29, 2003 n'ai trouvé ça sur le net !"PDF" BLUES - The Annoyance: Don't you just hate it when you try to read a Portable Document Format file on a Web page, and Adobe Acrobat Reader 5 insists on opening right in your browser. On top of that, a small Acrobat applet loads into memory, taking up your system resources. Still more grating, that applet doesn't unload when you close the reader. THE FIX: It's simpler, more efficient, and just as fast to open Acrobat Reader separately. First, launch the reader from your Start menu, select "Edit", "Preferences", choose "Options", and uncheck "Display PDF in Browser". Now when you select a PDF file while browsing, you'll see a File Download Box. The Reader starts automatically when you choose "Open". On the other hand, if you use the reader integrated with your browser, you can unload the applet after closing your browser by pressing (Ctrl)-(Alt)-(Delete), choosing "Accord32", and clicking "end task". In Windows XP and Windows 2000, choose the "Process" tab in Task Manager; then select "AcroRd32.exe" and click "End Process". J'espère que cela roulera... En fait, - soit tu lis les PDF avec IE, donc tu as acrobat chargé en mémoire. - soit tu télécharges le fichier PDF que tu lis avec Acrobat Donc je choisis l'option que je veux. C'est bien ce que je faisais. Je pensais qu'il y avait un correctif ou une manip à faire. Merci Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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