With this change made, we feel comfortable adding read/unread support to our Mobile and web applications in the near future also. Without interfacing with your brain, we can’t actually check whether you’ve read a document or not, so in the case where this doesn’t quite catch something, you can still change the read/unread status of a document manually by toggling the read/unread dot. Now the document is only marked as read once it has been scrolled most of the way through and has been opened for a reasonable period of time, dependent on the length of the document. We had a lot of feedback related to this, and have redesigned this system in an attempt to make it a little bit smarter. This meant that it wasn’t a very accurate indicator of whether a document had actually been “read” or not, only opened. If you opened a PDF in a tab, it was marked as read instantly. When you include annotations, sticky notes will have a marker to the side of the document, with the full note text appended to the end of the document, in the same format that our “Export PDF with annotations” feature uses currently.Īutomatically marking documents as read was previously quite aggressive in Mendeley Desktop. To print a PDF, simply open it in a Mendeley reader tab, select the “File” menu at the top, and click “Print…” or press CTRL+P (CMD+P on MacOS).įrom there, you have some standard print options, and the option to include or exclude your annotations. Printing has been our #2 user request for some time (second to an Android app, which is currently in progress), so it’s great to be able to deliver. This release resolves two popular user requests, as well as numerous bug fixes. We’re very pleased to announce that Mendeley Desktop 1.12 is now available, and will appearing as an auto-update for all users over the next couple of days.
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