The PDF::Reader library implements a PDF parser conforming as much as possible to the PDF specification from Adobe.
It provides programmatic access to the contents of a PDF file with a high degree of flexibility.
The PDF 1.7 specification is a weighty document and not all aspects are currently supported. I welcome submission of PDF files that exhibit unsupported aspects of the spec to assist with improving our support.
This is primarily a low-level library that should be used as the foundation for higher level functionality - it's not going to render a PDF for you. There are a few exceptions to support very common use cases like extracting text from a page.
The recommended installation method is via Rubygems.
gem install pdf-reader
Begin by creating a PDF::Reader instance that points to a PDF file. Document level information (metadata, page count, bookmarks, etc) is available via this object.
reader = PDF::Reader.new("somefile.pdf")
puts reader.pdf_version
puts reader.info
puts reader.metadata
puts reader.page_count
PDF::Reader.new accepts an IO stream or a filename. Here's an example with an IO stream:
require 'open-uri'
io = open('http://example.com/somefile.pdf')
reader = PDF::Reader.new(io)
puts reader.info
If you open a PDF with File#open or IO#open, I strongly recommend using "rb" mode to ensure the file isn't mangled by ruby being 'helpful'. This is particularly important on windows and MRI >= 1.9.2.
File.open("somefile.pdf", "rb") do |io|
reader = PDF::Reader.new(io)
puts reader.info
end
PDF is a page based file format, so most visible information is available via page-based iteration
reader = PDF::Reader.new("somefile.pdf")
reader.pages.each do |page|
puts page.fonts
puts page.text
puts page.raw_content
end
If you need to access the full program for rendering a page, use the walk() method of PDF::Reader::Page.
class RedGreenBlue
def set_rgb_color_for_nonstroking(r, g, b)
puts "R: #{r}, G: #{g}, B: #{b}"
end
end
reader = PDF::Reader.new("somefile.pdf")
page = reader.page(1)
receiver = RedGreenBlue.new
page.walk(receiver)
For low level access to the objects in a PDF file, use the ObjectHash class like so:
reader = PDF::Reader.new("somefile.pdf")
puts reader.objects.inspect
Regardless of the internal encoding used in the PDF all text will be converted to UTF-8 before it is passed back from PDF::Reader.
Strings that contain binary data (like font blobs) will be marked as such.
Version 1.0.0 of PDF::Reader introduced a new page-based API that provides efficient and easy access to any page.
The pre-1.0 API was deprecated during the 1.x release series, and has been removed from 2.0.0.
There are two key exceptions that you will need to watch out for when processing a PDF file:
MalformedPDFError - The PDF appears to be corrupt in some way. If you believe the file should be valid, or that a corrupt file didn't raise an exception, please forward a copy of the file to the maintainers (preferably via the google group) and we will attempt to improve the code.
UnsupportedFeatureError - The PDF uses a feature that PDF::Reader doesn't currently support. Again, we welcome submissions of PDF files that exhibit these features to help us with future code improvements.
MalformedPDFError has some subclasses if you want to detect finer grained issues. If you don't, 'rescue MalformedPDFError' will catch all the subclassed errors as well.
Any other exceptions should be considered bugs in either PDF::Reader (please report it!).
Windows developers may run into problems when running specs due to MalformedPDFError's This is usually because CRLF characters are automatically added to some of the PDF's in the spec folder when you checkout a branch from Git.
To remove any invalid CRLF characters added while checking out a branch from Git, run:
rake fix_integrity
- James Healy mailto:jimmy@deefa.com
This library is distributed under the terms of the MIT License. See the included file for more detail.
Any questions or feedback should be sent to the PDF::Reader google group. It's better that any answers be available for others instead of hiding in someone's inbox.
http://groups.google.com/group/pdf-reader
The easiest way to explain how this works in practice is to show some examples. Check out the examples/ directory for a few files.
For PDF files containing Ascii85 streams, the ascii85_native gem can be used for increased performance. If the ascii85_native gem is detected, pdf-reader will automatically use the gem.
First, run gem install ascii85_native
and then require the gem alongside pdf-reader:
require "pdf-reader"
require "ascii85_native"
Another way of enabling native Ascii85 decoding is to place gem 'ascii85_native'
in your project's Gemfile
.
Occasionally some text cannot be extracted properly due to the way it has been stored, or the use of invalid bytes. In these cases PDF::Reader will output a little UTF-8 friendly box to indicate an unrecognisable character.
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PDF::Reader Code Repository: http://github.com/yob/pdf-reader
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PDF Specification: https://www.adobe.com/content/dam/acom/en/devnet/pdf/pdfs/PDF32000_2008.pdf
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Adobe PDF Developer Resources: http://www.adobe.com/devnet/pdf/pdf_reference.html
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PDF Tutorial Slide Presentations: https://web.archive.org/web/20150110042057/http://home.comcast.net/~jk05/presentations/PDFTutorials.html
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Developing with PDF (book): http://shop.oreilly.com/product/0636920025269.do