Best iPad PDF Readers Apps

A feature comparison of the top 5 PDF readers…

iPad PDF Readers Apps

The iPad, with its gorgeous IPS screen, is particularly well suited for eBook reading. No wonder there are a lot of excellent PDF readers and even some annotator apps available for the platform. In this article, I look at the five top PDF readers and compare important features.

  • iBooks by Apple (free, iPad and iPhone versions)
  • iRead PDF by Aji Ltd (free)
  • iAnnotate PDF by Aji Ltd ($9.99)
  • ReaddleDocs by Igor Zhadanov ($4.99)
  • GoodReader by Yuri Selukoff ($0.99)

Important features

Let’s take a quick look at some of the more important PDF reader features and show how these apps implement them.

Searching for information

If you plan to use your iPad as a collection of searchable books, you will certainly welcome some of the more advanced PDF readers. Except for Apple’s iBooks, all of these readers have a search feature. The iRead PDF app even allows you to search for words throughout your entire PDF library. This is of great help when you quickly need to remember which book discusses a particular subject.

Locking documents for security

I frequently loan my iPad to friends at work so that they can browse the Web while I’m working. When I do this, I prefer to lock out access to my PDF library. Of the five apps listed, only iBooks and iRead PDF do not allow you to do this. GoodReader even allows  you to have separate passwords for each folder, in addition to generic startup authentication and re-invocation if you go to  GoodReader when it’s running in the background. Adjusting backlight for easy viewing Unfortunately, the screen of the iPad can be  too bright even when using the minimal backlight level. All of these advanced PDF readers allow you to decrease the backlight level  beyond the normal limits of the iPad.

Displaying two pages in landscape view

GoodReader and ReaddleDocs both allow you to display two pages at the same time when your iPad is in landscape mode. While the  resolution may not be sufficient for easy readability, it’s a good feature for some user manuals and technical books that have  illustrations that carry over to another page.

Keeping multiple docs open at the same time

Only iRead PDF and iAnnotate PDF can  keep multiple PDF files opened at the same time (up to six). This makes it easier to switch between documents.

Highlighting and annotating text

iAnnotate is the PDF reader with the best text/drawing annotation features (it’s pretty close in capabilities to its desktop counterparts). With iAnnotate PDF, you can zoom in on a page, add a  drawing or handwritten annotation, and zoom out. This lets you create pretty decent annotations using your finger. The most recent version of ReaddleDocs has annotation (notes) capability.  iBooks allows you to add notes to eBooks but not to PDF files. Some other readers offer lower-level annotation support. For  example, SmileyDocs 1.6 ($0.99, app2. me/2943) lets you highlight and add notes, but they are only displayed in the view they are  created in (same orientation and same zoom level).

Table of Contents (TOC) support

All PDF readers, except Apple’s iBooks,  support TOCs, which help you find what you’re looking for and navigate to it quickly. (iBooks supports TOCs in eBooks but not in  PDF files.) Readdle-Docs has the best TOC implementation, displaying subsections with correct indentation. The other apps in this  article only show one level of the TOC.

Thumbnail view of pages

A thumbnail view of pages in a PDF document can help you find things that may not be mentioned in the

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