BEA Home  |  Events  |  Solutions  |  Partners  |  Products  |  Services  |  Download  |  Developer Center  |  WebSUPPORT

 
 
Portal Doc Home
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
PDF Files

Don't have Adobe Acrobat Reader?
It's free! Get it from the Adobe Web site.

PDF Documents

   
  New Product Information
  Release Notes (~300KB)
  Installation Guide (~500KB)
  Architectural Overview (~1000KB)
  Migration Guide (~800KB)

  Planning Documentation
  Strategies for Developing E-Business Web Sites (~700KB)
  Developing Campaign Infrastructure (~700KB)
  The BEA E-Marketing Fieldbook (~500KB)

  Administration Guides
  Deployment Guide (~2100KB)
  Performance Tuning Guide (~350KB)
 
   
  Developer Guides
  Using Webflow and Pipeline (~1600KB)
  Using the E-Business Control Center (~2900KB)
  Getting Started with Portals and Portlets (~1750KB)
  Building Personalized Applications (~1750KB)
  Building a Product Catalog (~2400KB)
  Managing Purchases and Processing Orders (~2500KB)
  Registering Customers and Managing Customer Services (~1500KB)
  Events and Behavior Tracking (~630KB)
  Security Guide (~1450KB)

  Other Resources
  Tour of the Stock Portal (~1300KB)
  Tour of the Avitek Financial Sample Portal (~1300KB)
  JSP Commerce and Campaign Tour (~1900KB)
  WebLogic Portal and WebLogic Integration Example (~700KB)
  Glossary (~250KB)

PDF Tips

 

Printing and Graphics: These PDF files give you the option of printing the documents. It is better to print from the PDF files than from the HTML files.

The graphics in the PDF files might not display well when viewed online. The print driver type and properties determine the quality of the graphics in the printed PDF files. When the document is opened in Adobe Acrobat Reader, try selecting a printer that provides at least 600 dots per inch (dpi) output. If available on the print driver's property pages, select the highest quality print options.

Download First, then Open the PDF File: Instead of opening the PDF file in your browser, you may want to download the PDF file to your system and then open the file in Acrobat Reader. To do this, right-mouse click on the PDF file's link, then select "Save Link As..." (Netscape) or "Save Target As..." (Microsoft Internet Explorer), and specify a local directory. Then open the file in Acrobat Reader.

Acrobat Reader Version: Adobe Acrobat Reader version 4.0 fixed some compatibility problems that occurred when you opened a PDF file in a browser session with Acrobat Reader version 3.0. If available for your platform, consider using the free Acrobat Reader 4.0 (or later) product.

Maximum Files: Your browser or Adobe Acrobat might reach its maximum number of accessed PDF files. You may want to limit the number of PDF files that you access in a single browser session.

Hyperlinks: Each PDF file includes a hyperlinked table of contents. The steps for viewing the table of contents vary depending on the version of Adobe Acrobat Reader you are using.

You can also click hyperlinked cross-references to other chapters and sections within the PDF file.