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Tahuri Excel Tuhinga o mua PDF

Tahurihia Tō Excel Tuhinga o mua PDF kōnae ngawari

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Me pēhea te huri Excel Tuhinga o mua PDF

Hipanga 1: Tukuatu tō Excel ngā kōnae mā te whakamahi i te pātene i runga ake nei, mā te tōia me te whakataka rānei.

Hipanga 2: Pāwhiritia te pātene 'Tahuri' hei tīmata i te tahuritanga.

Hipanga 3: Tikiake i tō mea kua tahurihia PDF kōnae


Excel Tuhinga o mua PDF Ngā Pātai Auau mō te Tahuritanga

How do I convert Excel to PDF for sharing or printing?
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Upload the Excel file and the converter renders it onto PDF pages with sensible defaults: A4 / letter size, 1-inch margins, embedded fonts. Multi-page sources (DOCX, EPUB, XLSX) preserve their natural page breaks; single-asset sources (images) get one page each, auto-fit to the page.
Yes for text-bearing Excel (DOCX, ODT, HTML, TXT) — fonts are embedded into the PDF so the output looks identical on every viewer. Image-only Excel (JPG, PNG) just centres the image on the page; layout is N/A.
Yes — drop multiple Excel files into the upload zone and choose the "merge into one PDF" option. They appear as sequential pages in the PDF in upload order; drag-to-reorder is supported before conversion. Useful for stitching a folder of scans into a single archival PDF.
Defaults: A4 portrait (international) or letter portrait (US). The advanced options expose page-size (A3, A4, A5, letter, legal, tabloid, custom) and orientation (portrait / landscape). For image Excel, the "auto-fit" choice picks orientation to match the source aspect ratio.
Yes for Excel formats that carry real hyperlink metadata (DOCX, ODT, HTML, EPUB). Image-based Excel (JPG, PNG, TIFF) have no hyperlinks to preserve. The PDF file uses the standard PDF anchor model so links work in every reader (Acrobat, Preview, Chrome, Edge).
Yes when the Excel contains real text layers (DOCX, ODT, HTML, TXT, EPUB). Image-based Excel produces an image-only PDF — to make it searchable, follow up with /pdf-ocr/ to run optical character recognition over the page bundle.
Not in this same step — convert Excel to PDF first, then use /pdf-protect/ to add an open password, owner password, or print / edit restrictions. Splitting the steps lets each conversion stay focused and fast.
Depends on the Excel. A 10-page DOCX with embedded fonts produces a 200-400 KB PDF. A 10-image JPG batch at full resolution produces a 5-20 MB PDF. The advanced "compress images in PDF" toggle re-encodes embedded images at JPG quality-85 to shrink the PDF aggressively.
Yes — same privacy model: isolated workers, automatic deletion within minutes, no human review of content.
Defaults are RGB / 72 DPI (screen-optimized). For commercial print, switch the advanced options to CMYK / 300 DPI and the converter re-renders text at print resolution and converts embedded images into CMYK colourspace, producing a PDF that passes most preflight checks.
Yes — a scanned-page Excel (JPG, PNG, TIFF) converts straight to PDF. If you need the resulting PDF to be text-searchable, follow up with /pdf-ocr/ to run OCR over the scanned pages and build a real text layer.
Not from the converter UI itself. After download, attach the PDF to your usual email client. The PDF file is portable and works with every modern PDF reader (Acrobat, Preview, Chrome, Edge, Firefox).

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