How to save PDFs from web for offline reading on an iPad?iOS 11 how to prevent iBooks from moving my books to the cloud?How to view Adobe Photoshop PDFs on my iPadReading PDFs on iPad without iTunes syncingOffline webpages reader/browser for iPad iPhone?App for offline bookmark reading on iPadWhat's a good PDF score reading app for iPad?Reading App for iPad with build-in translatorDownload offline web page and view on iPadReading pdfs on iPad without storing them permanentlyApp for Reading - iPad & PDFReading text on iPad from a distance
Can I cast Sunbeam if both my hands are busy?
Might have gotten a coworker sick, should I address this?
Where does the expression "triple-A" comes from?
What is the purpose of libraries like Pyomo and Google OR tools?
How to stabilise the bicycle seatpost and saddle when it is all the way up?
Long list of Hit and Get from sudo apt update
How seriously should I take a CBP interview where I was told I have a red flag and could only stay for 30 days?
Why did they ever make smaller than full-frame sensors?
How can I fix a framing mistake so I can drywall?
Do ibuprofen or paracetamol cause hearing loss?
Do all humans have an identical nucleotide sequence for certain proteins, e.g haemoglobin?
How can I maximize the impact of my charitable donations?
How to help my 2.5-year-old daughter take her medicine when she refuses to?
Does a gnoll speak both Gnoll and Abyssal, or is Gnoll a dialect of Abyssal?
How is the Team Scooby Doo funded?
Why would "an mule" be used instead of "a mule"?
Seized engine due to being run without oil
My research paper filed as a patent in China by my Chinese supervisor without me as inventor
Are Democrats more likely to believe Astrology is a science?
How to split a string by the third .(dot) delimiter
Which ping implementation is Cygwin using?
Why did it become so much more expensive to start a university?
Sol Ⅲ = Earth: What is the origin of this planetary naming scheme?
Do any aircraft carry boats?
How to save PDFs from web for offline reading on an iPad?
iOS 11 how to prevent iBooks from moving my books to the cloud?How to view Adobe Photoshop PDFs on my iPadReading PDFs on iPad without iTunes syncingOffline webpages reader/browser for iPad iPhone?App for offline bookmark reading on iPadWhat's a good PDF score reading app for iPad?Reading App for iPad with build-in translatorDownload offline web page and view on iPadReading pdfs on iPad without storing them permanentlyApp for Reading - iPad & PDFReading text on iPad from a distance
.everyoneloves__top-leaderboard:empty,.everyoneloves__mid-leaderboard:empty,.everyoneloves__bot-mid-leaderboard:empty margin-bottom:0;
I bought an iPad Air to use in my airplane for flight guidance (secondary screen from panel mounted GPS). I'd like to download the manuals for my various avionics, and stop carrying a flight bag that is full of paper manuals.
I can browse the web and open the documents, generally PDFs.
How do I save them and open later when I'm airborne and not online? There doesn't seem to be a right-click, Save as kind of function. I have an Apple keypad for it also, but I don't see how one does mouse-type functions like I'd do in Win7 or Win10.
ios ipad pdf web-browser
New contributor
add a comment |
I bought an iPad Air to use in my airplane for flight guidance (secondary screen from panel mounted GPS). I'd like to download the manuals for my various avionics, and stop carrying a flight bag that is full of paper manuals.
I can browse the web and open the documents, generally PDFs.
How do I save them and open later when I'm airborne and not online? There doesn't seem to be a right-click, Save as kind of function. I have an Apple keypad for it also, but I don't see how one does mouse-type functions like I'd do in Win7 or Win10.
ios ipad pdf web-browser
New contributor
add a comment |
I bought an iPad Air to use in my airplane for flight guidance (secondary screen from panel mounted GPS). I'd like to download the manuals for my various avionics, and stop carrying a flight bag that is full of paper manuals.
I can browse the web and open the documents, generally PDFs.
How do I save them and open later when I'm airborne and not online? There doesn't seem to be a right-click, Save as kind of function. I have an Apple keypad for it also, but I don't see how one does mouse-type functions like I'd do in Win7 or Win10.
ios ipad pdf web-browser
New contributor
I bought an iPad Air to use in my airplane for flight guidance (secondary screen from panel mounted GPS). I'd like to download the manuals for my various avionics, and stop carrying a flight bag that is full of paper manuals.
I can browse the web and open the documents, generally PDFs.
How do I save them and open later when I'm airborne and not online? There doesn't seem to be a right-click, Save as kind of function. I have an Apple keypad for it also, but I don't see how one does mouse-type functions like I'd do in Win7 or Win10.
ios ipad pdf web-browser
ios ipad pdf web-browser
New contributor
New contributor
edited 5 hours ago
ankiiiiiii
2,3271 gold badge7 silver badges26 bronze badges
2,3271 gold badge7 silver badges26 bronze badges
New contributor
asked 10 hours ago
CrossRoadsCrossRoads
1211 bronze badge
1211 bronze badge
New contributor
New contributor
add a comment |
add a comment |
2 Answers
2
active
oldest
votes
You can technically install one of the many PDF viewers for iOS from the App Store, save the PDFs within the app, and you are good to go. As long as the PDF is saved locally, you won't need an active Internet or Wi-Fi connection.
One of the most popular and and 1st party app is Apple Books. If you couldn't find it installed, you can open the referred link on your iPad and install it.
Once installed, you can export the desired PDFs into Apple Books app, either by syncing with iTunes, or wirelessly via AirDrop from another Mac. Once you have the app installed, you can also open a PDF file in a web browser on your iPad (such as Safari, or a 3rd party browser) while online, and export the PDF file into Apple Books. Once exported, the PDF remains available for offline viewing.
There are also a variety of other ways to get the PDF into Apple Books and a variety of other apps (such as Amazon Kindle) that lets you do the same. Totally depends on your preferences, availability and your use of other devices and services etc.
Step by step instructions to save a PDF file open in a Web browser to Apple Books app
Make sure you have the Apple Books app installed on your iPad. If not, open this link on your iPad to go directly to the App Store page of the Apple Books app.
Open the desired PDF file in the Web browser of your choice. Here I have opened a PDF file in Safari.
Tap on the share icon in the browser toolbar (shown just next to the address bar) to reveal the share sheet. Once the sheet is shown, tap on Copy to Books item. If the option is not shown, you can enable it by tapping on More button shown at the end.
Voila! the PDF file is downloaded behind the scenes and copied into the Apple Books app. It can be viewed under Collections → Downloaded in the Apple Books app.
You now have access to PDF file in offline mode.
You are only limited by the amount of available storage space on your iPad when it comes to number of PDF files that can be saved for offline viewing. Apple Books can also save and open ePUB books.
How does one save it locally? I have a document open on a Garmin website for example, I don't see any Save or Save As kind of thing anywhere, there's no File:Save feature. Are you suggesting to open websites from within the PDF viewer and save from there?
– CrossRoads
9 hours ago
@CrossRoads I'lll update the answer in some time with clear and visual instructions.
– Nimesh Neema
8 hours ago
Cool, thank you. This device is not as clear as I thought it was going to be. i have 2 apps for interfacing with, and for simulating/training with, that work well.
– CrossRoads
8 hours ago
@CrossRoads I think it's going to be open document in Safari, tap share or create pdf and then save it to files in on my iPhone. then you can find it in Files app. Also, Native pdf reader won't be a great reading experience, I suggest acrobat. Cannot speak about iBooks. Also consider having a look at the related questions in the sidebar(or bottom)
– ankiiiiiii
7 hours ago
1
@CrossRoads Updated the answer.
– Nimesh Neema
6 hours ago
|
show 1 more comment
Another option is an app and browser extension called Pockets, Pocket was developed for just what you want to do. It's changed some since I first used it but you can read about it at the link above. You get an extension for your browser and every time you come across something you want to read later just click the Pocket extension and the page or location is saved. Doesn't have to be PDF but works fine with PDFs. Also works on iOS. Opening the Pocket app shows everything you have saved and you can read it from there.
The link I included has a link on the first page that will describe Pocket in more detail. it turns out the Pocket extension is being changed to be loaded on the Mac App Store and is currently unavailable. In the meantime, you can load the Pocket Bookmark which allows you to save any site to Pocket by clicking on the bookmark. This site allows you to load the bookmark app.
add a comment |
2 Answers
2
active
oldest
votes
2 Answers
2
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
You can technically install one of the many PDF viewers for iOS from the App Store, save the PDFs within the app, and you are good to go. As long as the PDF is saved locally, you won't need an active Internet or Wi-Fi connection.
One of the most popular and and 1st party app is Apple Books. If you couldn't find it installed, you can open the referred link on your iPad and install it.
Once installed, you can export the desired PDFs into Apple Books app, either by syncing with iTunes, or wirelessly via AirDrop from another Mac. Once you have the app installed, you can also open a PDF file in a web browser on your iPad (such as Safari, or a 3rd party browser) while online, and export the PDF file into Apple Books. Once exported, the PDF remains available for offline viewing.
There are also a variety of other ways to get the PDF into Apple Books and a variety of other apps (such as Amazon Kindle) that lets you do the same. Totally depends on your preferences, availability and your use of other devices and services etc.
Step by step instructions to save a PDF file open in a Web browser to Apple Books app
Make sure you have the Apple Books app installed on your iPad. If not, open this link on your iPad to go directly to the App Store page of the Apple Books app.
Open the desired PDF file in the Web browser of your choice. Here I have opened a PDF file in Safari.
Tap on the share icon in the browser toolbar (shown just next to the address bar) to reveal the share sheet. Once the sheet is shown, tap on Copy to Books item. If the option is not shown, you can enable it by tapping on More button shown at the end.
Voila! the PDF file is downloaded behind the scenes and copied into the Apple Books app. It can be viewed under Collections → Downloaded in the Apple Books app.
You now have access to PDF file in offline mode.
You are only limited by the amount of available storage space on your iPad when it comes to number of PDF files that can be saved for offline viewing. Apple Books can also save and open ePUB books.
How does one save it locally? I have a document open on a Garmin website for example, I don't see any Save or Save As kind of thing anywhere, there's no File:Save feature. Are you suggesting to open websites from within the PDF viewer and save from there?
– CrossRoads
9 hours ago
@CrossRoads I'lll update the answer in some time with clear and visual instructions.
– Nimesh Neema
8 hours ago
Cool, thank you. This device is not as clear as I thought it was going to be. i have 2 apps for interfacing with, and for simulating/training with, that work well.
– CrossRoads
8 hours ago
@CrossRoads I think it's going to be open document in Safari, tap share or create pdf and then save it to files in on my iPhone. then you can find it in Files app. Also, Native pdf reader won't be a great reading experience, I suggest acrobat. Cannot speak about iBooks. Also consider having a look at the related questions in the sidebar(or bottom)
– ankiiiiiii
7 hours ago
1
@CrossRoads Updated the answer.
– Nimesh Neema
6 hours ago
|
show 1 more comment
You can technically install one of the many PDF viewers for iOS from the App Store, save the PDFs within the app, and you are good to go. As long as the PDF is saved locally, you won't need an active Internet or Wi-Fi connection.
One of the most popular and and 1st party app is Apple Books. If you couldn't find it installed, you can open the referred link on your iPad and install it.
Once installed, you can export the desired PDFs into Apple Books app, either by syncing with iTunes, or wirelessly via AirDrop from another Mac. Once you have the app installed, you can also open a PDF file in a web browser on your iPad (such as Safari, or a 3rd party browser) while online, and export the PDF file into Apple Books. Once exported, the PDF remains available for offline viewing.
There are also a variety of other ways to get the PDF into Apple Books and a variety of other apps (such as Amazon Kindle) that lets you do the same. Totally depends on your preferences, availability and your use of other devices and services etc.
Step by step instructions to save a PDF file open in a Web browser to Apple Books app
Make sure you have the Apple Books app installed on your iPad. If not, open this link on your iPad to go directly to the App Store page of the Apple Books app.
Open the desired PDF file in the Web browser of your choice. Here I have opened a PDF file in Safari.
Tap on the share icon in the browser toolbar (shown just next to the address bar) to reveal the share sheet. Once the sheet is shown, tap on Copy to Books item. If the option is not shown, you can enable it by tapping on More button shown at the end.
Voila! the PDF file is downloaded behind the scenes and copied into the Apple Books app. It can be viewed under Collections → Downloaded in the Apple Books app.
You now have access to PDF file in offline mode.
You are only limited by the amount of available storage space on your iPad when it comes to number of PDF files that can be saved for offline viewing. Apple Books can also save and open ePUB books.
How does one save it locally? I have a document open on a Garmin website for example, I don't see any Save or Save As kind of thing anywhere, there's no File:Save feature. Are you suggesting to open websites from within the PDF viewer and save from there?
– CrossRoads
9 hours ago
@CrossRoads I'lll update the answer in some time with clear and visual instructions.
– Nimesh Neema
8 hours ago
Cool, thank you. This device is not as clear as I thought it was going to be. i have 2 apps for interfacing with, and for simulating/training with, that work well.
– CrossRoads
8 hours ago
@CrossRoads I think it's going to be open document in Safari, tap share or create pdf and then save it to files in on my iPhone. then you can find it in Files app. Also, Native pdf reader won't be a great reading experience, I suggest acrobat. Cannot speak about iBooks. Also consider having a look at the related questions in the sidebar(or bottom)
– ankiiiiiii
7 hours ago
1
@CrossRoads Updated the answer.
– Nimesh Neema
6 hours ago
|
show 1 more comment
You can technically install one of the many PDF viewers for iOS from the App Store, save the PDFs within the app, and you are good to go. As long as the PDF is saved locally, you won't need an active Internet or Wi-Fi connection.
One of the most popular and and 1st party app is Apple Books. If you couldn't find it installed, you can open the referred link on your iPad and install it.
Once installed, you can export the desired PDFs into Apple Books app, either by syncing with iTunes, or wirelessly via AirDrop from another Mac. Once you have the app installed, you can also open a PDF file in a web browser on your iPad (such as Safari, or a 3rd party browser) while online, and export the PDF file into Apple Books. Once exported, the PDF remains available for offline viewing.
There are also a variety of other ways to get the PDF into Apple Books and a variety of other apps (such as Amazon Kindle) that lets you do the same. Totally depends on your preferences, availability and your use of other devices and services etc.
Step by step instructions to save a PDF file open in a Web browser to Apple Books app
Make sure you have the Apple Books app installed on your iPad. If not, open this link on your iPad to go directly to the App Store page of the Apple Books app.
Open the desired PDF file in the Web browser of your choice. Here I have opened a PDF file in Safari.
Tap on the share icon in the browser toolbar (shown just next to the address bar) to reveal the share sheet. Once the sheet is shown, tap on Copy to Books item. If the option is not shown, you can enable it by tapping on More button shown at the end.
Voila! the PDF file is downloaded behind the scenes and copied into the Apple Books app. It can be viewed under Collections → Downloaded in the Apple Books app.
You now have access to PDF file in offline mode.
You are only limited by the amount of available storage space on your iPad when it comes to number of PDF files that can be saved for offline viewing. Apple Books can also save and open ePUB books.
You can technically install one of the many PDF viewers for iOS from the App Store, save the PDFs within the app, and you are good to go. As long as the PDF is saved locally, you won't need an active Internet or Wi-Fi connection.
One of the most popular and and 1st party app is Apple Books. If you couldn't find it installed, you can open the referred link on your iPad and install it.
Once installed, you can export the desired PDFs into Apple Books app, either by syncing with iTunes, or wirelessly via AirDrop from another Mac. Once you have the app installed, you can also open a PDF file in a web browser on your iPad (such as Safari, or a 3rd party browser) while online, and export the PDF file into Apple Books. Once exported, the PDF remains available for offline viewing.
There are also a variety of other ways to get the PDF into Apple Books and a variety of other apps (such as Amazon Kindle) that lets you do the same. Totally depends on your preferences, availability and your use of other devices and services etc.
Step by step instructions to save a PDF file open in a Web browser to Apple Books app
Make sure you have the Apple Books app installed on your iPad. If not, open this link on your iPad to go directly to the App Store page of the Apple Books app.
Open the desired PDF file in the Web browser of your choice. Here I have opened a PDF file in Safari.
Tap on the share icon in the browser toolbar (shown just next to the address bar) to reveal the share sheet. Once the sheet is shown, tap on Copy to Books item. If the option is not shown, you can enable it by tapping on More button shown at the end.
Voila! the PDF file is downloaded behind the scenes and copied into the Apple Books app. It can be viewed under Collections → Downloaded in the Apple Books app.
You now have access to PDF file in offline mode.
You are only limited by the amount of available storage space on your iPad when it comes to number of PDF files that can be saved for offline viewing. Apple Books can also save and open ePUB books.
edited 6 hours ago
answered 10 hours ago
Nimesh NeemaNimesh Neema
24.8k9 gold badges63 silver badges96 bronze badges
24.8k9 gold badges63 silver badges96 bronze badges
How does one save it locally? I have a document open on a Garmin website for example, I don't see any Save or Save As kind of thing anywhere, there's no File:Save feature. Are you suggesting to open websites from within the PDF viewer and save from there?
– CrossRoads
9 hours ago
@CrossRoads I'lll update the answer in some time with clear and visual instructions.
– Nimesh Neema
8 hours ago
Cool, thank you. This device is not as clear as I thought it was going to be. i have 2 apps for interfacing with, and for simulating/training with, that work well.
– CrossRoads
8 hours ago
@CrossRoads I think it's going to be open document in Safari, tap share or create pdf and then save it to files in on my iPhone. then you can find it in Files app. Also, Native pdf reader won't be a great reading experience, I suggest acrobat. Cannot speak about iBooks. Also consider having a look at the related questions in the sidebar(or bottom)
– ankiiiiiii
7 hours ago
1
@CrossRoads Updated the answer.
– Nimesh Neema
6 hours ago
|
show 1 more comment
How does one save it locally? I have a document open on a Garmin website for example, I don't see any Save or Save As kind of thing anywhere, there's no File:Save feature. Are you suggesting to open websites from within the PDF viewer and save from there?
– CrossRoads
9 hours ago
@CrossRoads I'lll update the answer in some time with clear and visual instructions.
– Nimesh Neema
8 hours ago
Cool, thank you. This device is not as clear as I thought it was going to be. i have 2 apps for interfacing with, and for simulating/training with, that work well.
– CrossRoads
8 hours ago
@CrossRoads I think it's going to be open document in Safari, tap share or create pdf and then save it to files in on my iPhone. then you can find it in Files app. Also, Native pdf reader won't be a great reading experience, I suggest acrobat. Cannot speak about iBooks. Also consider having a look at the related questions in the sidebar(or bottom)
– ankiiiiiii
7 hours ago
1
@CrossRoads Updated the answer.
– Nimesh Neema
6 hours ago
How does one save it locally? I have a document open on a Garmin website for example, I don't see any Save or Save As kind of thing anywhere, there's no File:Save feature. Are you suggesting to open websites from within the PDF viewer and save from there?
– CrossRoads
9 hours ago
How does one save it locally? I have a document open on a Garmin website for example, I don't see any Save or Save As kind of thing anywhere, there's no File:Save feature. Are you suggesting to open websites from within the PDF viewer and save from there?
– CrossRoads
9 hours ago
@CrossRoads I'lll update the answer in some time with clear and visual instructions.
– Nimesh Neema
8 hours ago
@CrossRoads I'lll update the answer in some time with clear and visual instructions.
– Nimesh Neema
8 hours ago
Cool, thank you. This device is not as clear as I thought it was going to be. i have 2 apps for interfacing with, and for simulating/training with, that work well.
– CrossRoads
8 hours ago
Cool, thank you. This device is not as clear as I thought it was going to be. i have 2 apps for interfacing with, and for simulating/training with, that work well.
– CrossRoads
8 hours ago
@CrossRoads I think it's going to be open document in Safari, tap share or create pdf and then save it to files in on my iPhone. then you can find it in Files app. Also, Native pdf reader won't be a great reading experience, I suggest acrobat. Cannot speak about iBooks. Also consider having a look at the related questions in the sidebar(or bottom)
– ankiiiiiii
7 hours ago
@CrossRoads I think it's going to be open document in Safari, tap share or create pdf and then save it to files in on my iPhone. then you can find it in Files app. Also, Native pdf reader won't be a great reading experience, I suggest acrobat. Cannot speak about iBooks. Also consider having a look at the related questions in the sidebar(or bottom)
– ankiiiiiii
7 hours ago
1
1
@CrossRoads Updated the answer.
– Nimesh Neema
6 hours ago
@CrossRoads Updated the answer.
– Nimesh Neema
6 hours ago
|
show 1 more comment
Another option is an app and browser extension called Pockets, Pocket was developed for just what you want to do. It's changed some since I first used it but you can read about it at the link above. You get an extension for your browser and every time you come across something you want to read later just click the Pocket extension and the page or location is saved. Doesn't have to be PDF but works fine with PDFs. Also works on iOS. Opening the Pocket app shows everything you have saved and you can read it from there.
The link I included has a link on the first page that will describe Pocket in more detail. it turns out the Pocket extension is being changed to be loaded on the Mac App Store and is currently unavailable. In the meantime, you can load the Pocket Bookmark which allows you to save any site to Pocket by clicking on the bookmark. This site allows you to load the bookmark app.
add a comment |
Another option is an app and browser extension called Pockets, Pocket was developed for just what you want to do. It's changed some since I first used it but you can read about it at the link above. You get an extension for your browser and every time you come across something you want to read later just click the Pocket extension and the page or location is saved. Doesn't have to be PDF but works fine with PDFs. Also works on iOS. Opening the Pocket app shows everything you have saved and you can read it from there.
The link I included has a link on the first page that will describe Pocket in more detail. it turns out the Pocket extension is being changed to be loaded on the Mac App Store and is currently unavailable. In the meantime, you can load the Pocket Bookmark which allows you to save any site to Pocket by clicking on the bookmark. This site allows you to load the bookmark app.
add a comment |
Another option is an app and browser extension called Pockets, Pocket was developed for just what you want to do. It's changed some since I first used it but you can read about it at the link above. You get an extension for your browser and every time you come across something you want to read later just click the Pocket extension and the page or location is saved. Doesn't have to be PDF but works fine with PDFs. Also works on iOS. Opening the Pocket app shows everything you have saved and you can read it from there.
The link I included has a link on the first page that will describe Pocket in more detail. it turns out the Pocket extension is being changed to be loaded on the Mac App Store and is currently unavailable. In the meantime, you can load the Pocket Bookmark which allows you to save any site to Pocket by clicking on the bookmark. This site allows you to load the bookmark app.
Another option is an app and browser extension called Pockets, Pocket was developed for just what you want to do. It's changed some since I first used it but you can read about it at the link above. You get an extension for your browser and every time you come across something you want to read later just click the Pocket extension and the page or location is saved. Doesn't have to be PDF but works fine with PDFs. Also works on iOS. Opening the Pocket app shows everything you have saved and you can read it from there.
The link I included has a link on the first page that will describe Pocket in more detail. it turns out the Pocket extension is being changed to be loaded on the Mac App Store and is currently unavailable. In the meantime, you can load the Pocket Bookmark which allows you to save any site to Pocket by clicking on the bookmark. This site allows you to load the bookmark app.
edited 4 hours ago
answered 4 hours ago
jmhjmh
5,4592 gold badges7 silver badges33 bronze badges
5,4592 gold badges7 silver badges33 bronze badges
add a comment |
add a comment |