Adobe Reader Command Line Reference
Answer :
You can find something about this in the Adobe Developer FAQ. (It's a PDF document rather than a web page, which I guess is unsurprising in this particular case.)
The FAQ notes that the use of the command line switches is unsupported.
To open a file it's:
AcroRd32.exe <filename>
The following switches are available:
/n
- Launch a new instance of Reader even if one is already open/s
- Don't show the splash screen/o
- Don't show the open file dialog/h
- Open as a minimized window/p <filename>
- Open and go straight to the print dialog/t <filename> <printername> <drivername> <portname>
- Print the file the specified printer.
I found this:
http://www.robvanderwoude.com/commandlineswitches.php#Acrobat
Open a PDF file with navigation pane active, zoom out to 50%, and search for and highlight the word "batch":
AcroRd32.exe /A "zoom=50&navpanes=1=OpenActions&search=batch" PdfFile
To open a PDF at page 100 the follow works
<path to Adobe Reader> /A "page=100" "<Path To PDF file>"
If you require more than one argument separate them with &
I use the following in a batch file to open the book I'm reading to the page I was up to.
C:\Program Files\Adobe\Reader 10.0\Reader\AcroRd32.exe /A "page=149&pagemode=none" "D:\books\MCTS(70-562) ASP.Net 3.5 Development.pdf"
The best list of command line args for Adobe Reader I have found is here.
http://partners.adobe.com/public/developer/en/acrobat/PDFOpenParameters.pdf
It's for version 7 but all the arguments I tried worked.
As for closing the file, I think you will need to use the SDK, or if you are opening the file from code you could close the file from code once you have finished with it.
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