Click Browse. Locate a PDF on your computer, select it, and then click Open. Browser and browser-settings solutions. Use a different web browser. Switch to Compatibility View Internet Explorer. Restart your computer and try opening the PDF again. Firefox Clear All History dialog box lets you delete only the browser cache. For instructions on clearing the browser cache, refer to these articles: Firefox: Delete browsing, search, and download history Chrome: Delete your cache, history, and other browser data Internet Explorer 8 through 11 : Viewing and deleting your browser history Internet Explorer 7 : Delete webpage history.
Try resetting the display preference in your browser to clear up the viewing issue. From the list at left, select Internet. Try to open the PDF again from the website. This procedure applies only to Windows Vista users with Internet Explorer 9 or earlier. To make sure you're using a bit version of Internet Explorer, follow these steps:. If you see "bit Edition" next to the version, then go on to step 2. Reader and Acrobat solutions.
Repair Reader or Acrobat. Repair from within Reader or Acrobat. Repair using Control Panel Windows. Close Reader or Acrobat. Do one of the following in Control Panel, depending on your version of Windows:. In the list of programs, select Adobe Reader or Adobe Acrobat. Click Change and follow the instructions to repair the application.
When the process is complete, click Finish. Advanced solutions. Make sure that the Adobe PDF browser add-on is enabled. Under Add-on Types, select Toolbars and Extensions. In the Show menu, choose All add-ons. Click the Enable button. Disable turns off the add-on so it does not open PDFs in the browser. Make sure that the Adobe PDF browser add-on nppdf In the Firefox address bar, type about:plugins.
Scroll down to a section named Adobe Acrobat. You can also edit the file the browsers handles PDF files and tell it to save it, instead of opening it inline.
However, I suspect this is not really a PDF, but some kind of presentation of it in another format. Not sure why you say you are using Chrome, FyTg. Thanks for the help, i could solve the problem doing a different thing.
By clicking show thumbnails, then print, then save as PDF i can now download it. You don't need to do all that. If you're using FireFox, just use the download button, that's what it's for! Apparently there are ways to lock down the download feature. I've attached the example I am currently struggling with for your information. I am sorry the right click menu is in German, but trust me when I say that there is no download option there either.
Let me know if you have any other ideas. That doesn't look at all like that. And Chrome doesn't allow any other PDF viewer. From this we can conclude that this is not a PDF at all. It's a web site designed to offer something in pages, and so it's easily mistaken for a PDF.
It might have been a PDF back on its web site in China, but that isn't what is delivered to you. Hence, this discussion does not apply. I have no idea if you can save it, because I don't know what facilities you have for saving something on a secure web site that isn't a PDF. Thank you for clarifying! I still don't believe that "just hit the download button" is a good answer to the question "[how can I] download [a] PDF from a website that has no such option to download that PDF".
Obviously FyTg is not a "techie" user and getting into the intricacies of how that PDF file he is viewing is not being served to him a PDF is not gonna solve his problem. I never use Chrome, but I just opened it and checked settings. To set Chrome to download pdf files rather than opening them in the Chrome viewer, open Settings, click on Privacy and security, then Site Settings.
Find Permissions and click on Additional permissions at the bottom of that section. Scroll way down the page to Additional content settings where you'll find PDF documents as the fourth entry.
For example, you visit a secure website such as a bank or other financial institution and try to download or view a PDF file. The file does not appear in Internet Explorer and you may see an error message similar to the following:. This problem occurs if the Do not save encrypted pages to disk option in Internet Explorer is selected. To download files, Internet Explorer must create a cache or temporary file. In Internet Explorer 9 or a later version, if the file is delivered over HTTPS, and any response headers are set to prevent caching, and if the Do not save encrypted pages to disk option is set, a cache file is not created.
To proceed, select your browser from the list below and follow the instructions. To change the name of a PDF file you want to download, right-click the download link and select Save As. However, downloading a PDF is still possible.
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