Feature request: Create bookmarks in the integrated PDF viewer
First of all, congratulations on the release of version 6.0! The intergrated PDF viewer is quite the improvement, and I see myself using it a lot in the future. I miss one feature that made me go back to the system PDF viewer: As far as I can tell, it is not possible to create new bookmarks in the viewer, but only open those already present. In the long PDF files I use, this is something I need quite frequently.
Thanks in advance!
Thanks in advance!
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Zotero's reader does remember the last page opened and, of course, you can use notes as literal bookmarks.
In other words, they would have nothing to do with official ‘PDF-standard’ TOC or Bookmark data structures.
These could function as simple page bookmarks (a-la Amazon Kindle and other e-readers) without a title for simplicity, at least in an initial incarnation, toggled in the Zotero PDF reader with a ‘bookmark’ flag-type icon.
IMHO, what is very badly missing is a way to see recently opened pdfs, or much better, as I and others have suggested, a session manager for the reading of pdfs. That would enhance the usability of the pdf reader for research by an order of magnitude in my opinion.
PDF bookmarks are named a bit misleadingly and are principally used to reflect document structure/ToC.
It'd be cool if those could be added to via Zotero, but as I say above, that's a significant update
There are some acrobat plugins that claim to do this even in the absent of a heading structure, but not sure how well they work/how possible that is -- never tried. I've never been inclined to add bookmarks by hand, personally, but clearly some people here are looking for that (as mentioned above, I'd generally discourage unintended use of bookmarks as actual 'bookmarks': they should reflect document structure in some way).
I am very confused by this claim. The Mac Preview app, for instance, has distinct Bookmarks and Table of Contents tabs, and adding a bookmark does not change the Table of Contents. Moreover, bookmarks created by Preview do not show up in other apps. That’s all we’re asking for here!
If all you want are literal bookmarks, I don't understand why just picking an annotation color wouldn't work.
If you look at the comments above, the one you reference is the only one that clearly indicates a desire for the ability to edit/create TOC entries. Others clearly want what I’m referring to, such as those from JimGrisham, kmtao, and (I’m pretty sure) chuyang.chen.
Zotero I believe, picks up both heading levels and Bookmarks in it's ToC (not sure of the details here of how it does this and I believe added after my comment about this), so you can have a ToC without Bookmarks, but that's a custom feature. pdf.js in Firefox, e.g., only picks up Bookmarks for its document outline and I think that's fairly standard (but haven't researched that part).
As I say above, I think the PDF feature is poorly named and as a consequence, the requests here are very much mixed between the two. jonschulz, murreyeinlarson, aarondeng are clearly talking about document structure; others are clearly talking about "bookmarks" as the word is conventionally used, yet others say too little for us to know either way.
I think the annotations feature (which can be tagged or color coded for easy identification of bookmarks) works great for the latter use and adding yet another thing to add to PDFs seems like a poor UX choice. I also think adding a feature called Bookmarks that works different from Bookmarks in Acrobat is a terrible idea (from your description it sounds like that's what Preview did?). OTOH I think allowing people to manually add a document outline is a very reasonable, albeit not trivial, request.
I can use Acrobat or PDF Expert to add a TOC. Using them to add temporary bookmarks would be counterproductive; I might as well just read it there.
I agree with you that the naming is problematic and ambiguous. But the *feature* in pretty much every PDF app is not; you click a button and a little ribbon appears, which is quite distinct from the TOC.
Frankly the *ideal* feature would be like a “page point”, where you click *next to a line* in the PDF to show exactly where you left off reading. Again I agree that you can use Zotero’s highlighting feature for this, but that’s a kludge.
https://github.com/windingwind/zotero-actions-tags/discussions/586
It should be nearly invisible in the reader (in light modes), can be added from a simple configurable shortcut, can be filtered directly from your library and contains the time of adding the annotation.
If that does not work for you, simply explain the features that you would need.