For
reflowing text documents, decreasing the column width might be a very good idea.
Not exact matches
Unlike many other e-readers, Nook
reflows the PDF
text, which makes it great for reading
text, but a mixed bag if you're trying to read a
document that's heavy on its particular layout.
In the past, Sony readers (the PRS - 350 at least) would
reflow text in PDF
documents that had embedded
text (instead of scanned images of
text like your dungeon master guide) which is something I miss with the Kobo Glo — can you say if the T3 supports this?
You can also elect to double tap on the
document and it automatically
reflows the
text.
Newspapers and technical
documents also really shine and give you options to
reflow the
text and zoom in on specific aspects.
Though Barnes & Noble told us that the Nook doesn't support PDF
reflow, we found that with most
documents we were able to change font sizes and the
text fit to the screen well.
I would recommend using Kindle DX because Kindle doesn't
reflow text in PDF so having a larger screen will make it much easier to work with
documents meant to be printed on a letter sized paper.
PDF
reflow In addition to supporting reflowable EPUB content, RMSDK also supports PDF
reflow, enabling resizing
text - oriented
documents for greatly improved readability on small screens.
First, because you can not easily
reflow text in a PDF
document, these books can be difficult to read on devices with small screen.
Comfortable reading of complex PDF
documents Use PDF
reflow feature to extract pure
text from a PDF page and to comfortably read it in a single column, without left / right scrolling.
You can easily transfer Adobe PDF
documents with
reflow capability, Microsoft Word
documents, BBeB files and other
text file formats to the Reader.
Reflow works well for
text - based
documents, but it generally doesn't work well for PDFs with lots of images, graphs, multiple columns, and advanced formatting, and it certainly isn't going to work for scanned PDFs.
Back then Kindle software lacked support for zoom and pan so large 9.7 ″ screen was the only way to deal with
documents that are intended for letter size paper (due to the way PDF format works it may be impossible to
reflow text in PDF files, although Sony PRS - 600 seems to be quite good about it).
Yet with PDF's you can do this and more — tagging facilitates
reflowing text for mobile use, read - aloud features (whether for joggers or reduced vision / access purposes), bookmarks facilitate navigating
documents, and hyperlinks, quite simply, should be required in this day and age.
This new feature lets you
reflow the
text and adjust the fonts with a tap of your finger to make the
document more readable, and then just as easily return to the PDF version.