emacs/var/elfeed/db/data/d4/d4a53fb829762e70a035110b3c2f12a5d124a320
2022-01-03 12:49:32 -06:00

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<!-- SC_OFF --><div class="md"><p>I was recently forced to spend significant time (months!) in the purgative desolation that is MS Windows.</p> <p>In this hellscape, your options for PDF readers amount to:</p> <p>&quot;<em>1: No bloat. 2: No spyware/adware. 3: Good UX -- Choose any two.</em>&quot;</p> <p>It made me appreciate just how great Okular is. In my experience, it has a low memory footprint, is snappy and responsive even with large files, and the UX is a dream. Seriously; you wouldn&#39;t expect a document viewing utility to <em>look good</em> in and of itself, but Okular does.</p> <p>But my favorite parts are the little touches you don&#39;t even notice, but that just make the whole experience... &quot;luxurious&quot; is the best word I can think of. Some examples of what I love in this regard:</p> <ul> <li>When you resize the application window, the sidebar resizes proportionally. This doesn&#39;t sound too exciting <em>prima facie</em>, but I love using the sidebar&#39;s &quot;Thumbnails&quot; tab to navigate, and seeing them dynamically grow and shrink with <strong>no perceivable slowdown</strong> is really enjoyable.</li> <li>Rounded ends on the highlighter tool simulates the look of actual highlighter pens.</li> <li><em>Settings -&gt; Configure -&gt; Performance Tuning</em> makes Okular completely potato-friendly.</li> <li>The option to open new files as either separate application windows or tabs in a single window.</li> <li>Drag &amp; drop a folder containing images into Okular (or right-click an image folder and say &quot;open with Okular&quot;) and you now have an image viewer that lets you scroll through all of the images as though they were a single PDF document.</li> <li>Highlight text. Right-click. &quot;Speak Text&quot;</li> <li>On the main toolbar&#39;s navigation area (where it says, for example, &quot;25 of 100&quot;), click on the number representing the total number of pages. You get a little popup with a scrollbar, allowing you to scroll-select the desired page number instead of having to type it. This isn&#39;t decadence, it&#39;s accessibility. A really great touch for mobility-restricted users.</li> <li>Being able to view PDF, epub, CBR/CBZ comics, and images in one app.</li> </ul> <p>I could probably carry on all day, but you get the idea. I know that some of these features aren&#39;t necessarily exclusive to Okular, but they&#39;re all <em>present</em> in Okular in an unintrusive, elegant, and bloat-free way.</p> <p>I don&#39;t meant to objectively claim that Okular is the best document viewer out there. I can&#39;t make that claim, because I haven&#39;t tested that many other document viewers. The reason I haven&#39;t done that is because there&#39;s nothing Okular hasn&#39;t been able to do for me.</p> <p>P.S. I know now that Okular <em>is</em> available on Windows, but by the time I realized that, I had already moved back to an OS where any perceived enjoyment of the desktop experience isn&#39;t contingent on Stockholm Syndrome.</p> </div><!-- SC_ON --> &#32; submitted by &#32; <a href="https://www.reddit.com/user/ROT26_only_thx"> /u/ROT26_only_thx </a> <br/> <span><a href="https://www.reddit.com/r/archlinux/comments/qy1m1b/id_just_like_to_give_a_shoutout_to_okular_for/">[link]</a></span> &#32; <span><a href="https://www.reddit.com/r/archlinux/comments/qy1m1b/id_just_like_to_give_a_shoutout_to_okular_for/">[comments]</a></span>