Is there Any Way to Write Comments against a PDF?

Upload and start working with your PDF documents.
No downloads required

How To Write on PDF Online?

Upload & Edit Your PDF Document
Save, Download, Print, and Share
Sign & Make It Legally Binding

Easy-to-use PDF software

review-platform review-platform review-platform review-platform review-platform

Is there any way to write comments against a PDF/Word doc file? I wanted to see a list of files with comments next to each file. The said document must be shareable like Google Docs.

Unless you restrict it, a PDF is always editable. You can save your DOCs as PDFs. Anyone with a PDF editor like Soda PDF can then edit the content. If you want a form, I’d just use Google Forms.

PDF documents can be cumbersome to edit, especially when you need to change the text or sign a form. However, working with PDFs is made beyond-easy and highly productive with the right tool.

How to Write On PDF with minimal effort on your side:

  1. Add the document you want to edit — choose any convenient way to do so.
  2. Type, replace, or delete text anywhere in your PDF.
  3. Improve your text’s clarity by annotating it: add sticky notes, comments, or text blogs; black out or highlight the text.
  4. Add fillable fields (name, date, signature, formulas, etc.) to collect information or signatures from the receiving parties quickly.
  5. Assign each field to a specific recipient and set the filling order as you Write On PDF.
  6. Prevent third parties from claiming credit for your document by adding a watermark.
  7. Password-protect your PDF with sensitive information.
  8. Notarize documents online or submit your reports.
  9. Save the completed document in any format you need.

The solution offers a vast space for experiments. Give it a try now and see for yourself. Write On PDF with ease and take advantage of the whole suite of editing features.

Customers love our service for intuitive functionality

4.5

satisfied

46 votes

Write on PDF: All You Need to Know

You can have a PDF that is only printable if I've put up a form that makes it printable. Once you edit a PDF, that PDF is “in the public domain,” meaning that it is free to use. (That is, once you stop using a copy of an article for any reason, it'll no longer require permission to use.  So you are in effect giving permission so long as you never put the article back up on the Web.) And, remember, this is true even if you delete it. After you print, you can take the PDF and paste it in a new document, making it printable without permission. If you take screenshots of an article, a PDF of the article as it appeared in the article viewer, or a scanned copy of the original article, you can edit the information and paste it in a new document made.