I haven't tried that procedure and I doubt if it works.  When you scan a printed document, it gets saved as a graphic image--not as a text document that can be edited.Originally Posted by techwizz
Compare a PDF file composed from scanned graphics images and a PDF from text-based source.  The file of the former is bigger than that of the latter.
Why do I say that the procedure you described won't work?  I've tried downloading PDF copies of Republic Acts from the government portal.  Almost all of the files are PDF composites of scanned documents.  In short, the pages are actually just graphic images lumped into one PDF file.  The text highlighting doesn't work.  It's just like you're trying to highlight the text on a JPG or BMP image and then pasting the text onto a wordprocessing document.  It just doesn't work.
In contrast, try exporting an OpenOffice Writer document into PDF.  Run your PDF reader.  Open the PDF that you just exported from OpenOffice. Highlight the text you wish to copy.  Hit Ctrl+C, and then hit Ctrl+V in a blank text editor or wordprocessing window.  Guess what?  It works!  Like magic.  Why does it work?  It's because the PDF is text, not graphic.




