One important field that Macintosh users need to add to their forms is a Submit button that submits the form to an email address. Acrobat needs one of these to be able to automatically distribute and collect forms. Creating the button isn't hard, but it does entail a fair number of steps.
To complete this article, you will need the following software:
Basic knowledge of commenting in Acrobat
Buttons frequently don't have corresponding artwork already on the page. The following steps assume that the page is blank where the button should go.
The following task also assumes your form file is open in Acrobat and the Forms toolbar is visible.
To create a Submit button:

Figure 1: To create a Submit button, set the Border Color to black, the Fill Color to whatever is pretty, and the Line Style to Beveled.

Figure 2: In the Options pane for your Submit button, set the Behavior to Push, and type Submit into the Label text box.

Figure 3: In the Submit button's Actions pane, choose “Submit a form” for the Action, and then click the Add button.

Figure 4: In the Options for the Submit a Form action, type your email address into the URL text box and choose the “PDF The complete document” radio button.

Figure 5: When you return to the Button Properties dialog box, "Submit a form" appears as the button's action.
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Figure 6: Returning to the document page, reposition and resize the button.
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Figure 7: When you return to the Acrobat Hand tool, your Submit button, fully functional, resides on the page.
For more information about working with forms in Acrobat 8, check out these other great tutorials:
John Deubert is a longtime consultant and instructor in Acrobat and PDF, having worked with both since the mid-nineties. He has extensive experience in PostScript and JavaScript and is the author of "Creating Adobe Acrobat Forms" and "Extending Acrobat Forms with JavaScript", both from Adobe Press. John's experience with JavaScript dates back to shortly after the language was first introduced in 1996; he has worked with JavaScript in Acrobat since 1999, when Acrobat 4 introduced useful support for the language. John has taught classes on PostScript and Acrobat throughout the world since 1985.
Excerpted from "Adobe Acrobat 8 for Windows and Macintosh: Visual QuickStart Guide" by John Deubert. Copyright © 2007 John Deubert. Used with the permission of Pearson Education, Inc. and Peachpit. All rights reserved. For more information about this book, please visit peachpit.com.