I am trying to print this pdf file through Google Chrome. For administrative reasons I would like to prove on the printed page that this comes from a certain website. How to print this document in Chrome in a way that at the page's footer the URL of the website will appear?
8,207 12 12 gold badges 49 49 silver badges 58 58 bronze badges asked Oct 29, 2013 at 10:53 308 1 1 gold badge 5 5 silver badges 17 17 bronze badges1. You're not printing "from a website", you're just printing a file. Files don't carry any origin metadata. 2. Let's assume you can print that PDF with some origin info. How would you prove that you haven't simply embedded origin data in a forged file?
Commented Oct 29, 2013 at 11:08@gronostaj: Thank you very much for your comment. They just need my contribution with a proof that comes from a cern site. I don't even know what does "embedded origin data in a forged file" mean.
Commented Oct 29, 2013 at 11:13To put it simpler, imagine that you have that document printed and signed by a CERN employee. How would you prove that you haven't just forged the document and printed the signature instead of obtaining it legitimately? If you can print a "proof" on a regular printer, then you can print a fake proof too.
Commented Oct 29, 2013 at 11:37@gronostaj: I see what you mean. That's why I want the url to be visible. If someone has doubts, he can type the url in, in see the relevant document.
Commented Oct 29, 2013 at 11:50 In internet explorer you can add custom header and footers ( custom text only). Commented Dec 5, 2015 at 16:53In Chrome: my problem was solved by changing margins from "minimum" to custom. Header/footer re-appeared. sometimes I adjust the margins down, but didn't notice that I caused the header/footer to disappear.
answered Sep 14, 2020 at 4:10 47 1 1 silver badge 1 1 bronze badgeDownvoter, please explain what's wrong with this answer. I can't improve it unless I know what's there to improve.
Commented Jun 1, 2022 at 8:14A rather late answer, but there is a sort-of workaround that doesn't involve editing PDFs or using a Word doc:
Generally when you print a regular webpage (HTML file), you get some options in the Google Chrome print page dialog:
Selecting the Headers and footers would do exactly what you need to achieve - it will show the webpage URL in the footer (as well as some other data in the header and in the footer, as mentioned above).
However, when printing a pdf file in Chrome, you only get two options: Fit to page & Two-Sided. You can't include headers and footers in the pdf file.
So far I haven't found any simple workarounds to solve this. Using Adobe PDF viewer instead of Chrome's or using the default printer dialog won't help.
The only solution I found so far is to either download the pdf file to your computer (by right clicking the pdf page and clicking "Save as. ") and edit it in a PDF manager/editor like Adobe Acrobat, or to edit the pdf file online, copy the URL of the pdf file, add it to the pdf file (where ever you want) and print it. Both will work.