"I find television very educating. Every time somebody turns on the set, I go into the other room and read a book" Groucho Marx

Evince vs Okular

September 14, 2025 | Author: Maria Lin
Evince and Okular are both free open-source desktop reading software primarily for reading PDF books, but also for some other formats. They provide the ability to search in book text, add bookmarks, navigate the book using the table of contents, scale pages and view them in full-screen mode, add annotations.

But Evince is a program that only works on Linux, integrated into the GNOME and GTK environment. It is very easy to use, has a minimalist interface (close to GNOME applications), a minimum of additional functions and customization options. From the other hand it shows very high startup speed and is very lightweight. In addition to PDF, it supports PostScript, DjVu, TIFF, XPS formats.

Okular is a program that was also originally created for Linux (as part of KDE), but now works on Windows and Mac. It allows you to not only read/view PDF files, but also edit them, add comments. It has more extensive annotation capabilities, better comic-book support (CBR, CBZ), advanced export options (e.g. to text), many interface customization options and a plugin architecture that allows to expand the functionality.
Author: Maria Lin
Maria Lin, is a seasoned content writer who has contributed to numerous tech portals, including Mashable and bookrunch, as a guest author. She holds a Master's degree in Journalism from the University of California, where her research predominantly concentrated on mobile apps, software, AI and cloud services. With a deep passion for reading, Maria is particularly drawn to the intersection of technology and books, making book tech a subject of great interest to her. During her leisure time, she indulges in her love for cooking and finds solace in a good night's sleep. You can contact Maria Lin via email maria@bookrunch.com