PDF is a file format created by Adobe [http://www.adobe.com/]. It is an initialism (versus an acronym, which is slightly different [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Initialism]) for "Portable Document Format". In 2008, PDF became an ISO standard (ISO 32000-1:2008) based on PDF version 1.7. The PDF specifications (also for older versions) are at http://www.adobe.com/devnet/pdf/pdf_reference.html [CL] maintains a page [http://phaseit.net/claird/comp.text.pdf/PDF.html] on PDF and tools for handling PDF files. ---- **What is inside a PDF file?** The content of a PDF file has four sections: header, body, cross references, and trailer. In essence, a PDF file consists of so-called objects which describe how the document should look like and how they are inter-related. Besides the objects, a PDF file contains some information on how and where to find these objects. The small examples below show a very simple PDF file. Apart from that, PDF files can contain binary data, can be encrypted, may be linearized (for quick access over the web), and even contain different versions of the same document in an incremental way. ***Header*** The header consists of one line like this: ====== %PDF-1.4 ====== The number denoted te version of the file format. ***Body*** The body is a collection of so-called PDF objects. These carry the content which is displayed in a PDF viewer application. An object can look like this: ====== 3 0 obj << /Type /Page /Parent 2 0 R /Resources 4 0 R /MediaBox [0 0 595 842] /Contents [6 0 R] >> endobj ====== It is started by a line “` obj`” and ended by “`endobj`”. In between there can be nearly anything depending on the type of the object. The example above shows a typical object containing a PDF dictionary (which is like a Tcl [array] or [dictionay]) with keys and corresponding values. The values can be arrays, numbers, strings, and such and even dictionaries again. PDF dictionaries can be said to contain metadata about the document and the content of the file. The real data are located in so-called streams: ====== 8 0 obj << /Length 32 >> stream 10 10 m 10 100 l 100 100 l S endstream endobj ====== The above object contains a stream that paints two lines on a page. ***Cross-references*** This sections contains the byte offsets for all objects in a PDF file. Like this: ====== xref 0 10 0000000005 65535 f 0000000010 00000 n 0000000060 00000 n 0000000124 00000 n 0000000231 00000 n 0000000000 00001 f 0000000299 00000 n 0000000424 00000 n 0000000542 00000 n 0000000625 00000 n ====== In this example there are 10 objects in the PDF file. This section of the PDF file makes it possible for viewer applications to quickly locate the objects needed to paint a pages content to the screen without searching through a possibly huge file. You can think of it as a poor-man's database lookup table. ***Trailer*** The trailer is normally the first thing read by the viewer application: ====== trailer << /Size 10 /Root 1 0 R /Info 9 0 R >> startxref 811 %%EOF ====== On the second but last line it contains the byte offset to te start of the cross-reference section. Th PDF dictionary before this offset number contains some information about the PDF. The line with the “`/Root`” entry is a link to the root object, which is the starting point for the viewer. The root object lists the Pages object which then again refers to the Page object containting the things to paint. ---- **Tcl and PDF, an overview** The most immediate contact between PDF and Tk probably is by way of [PS], the "output" format for [canvas]es. [Clif Flynt] has "a subset of a Tcl canvas->PDF script ... [[which]] does lines, text, and nested canvases" in the [starkit] at http://noucorp.com/postcard . [VI] There are two problems when using PDFs. One is that PDF is page based (like PostScript), so pagination is the application's headache. Add headers, footers, tables that span pages, and this soon gets to be like a mini typesetting program. Doing a canvas on one page (modulo the next para) or a text widget onto one page seems doable. The other is that I haven't figured out how to wrap text consistently. e.g. if a text item uses the -width option in the canvas, then I don't know how to decide where to break the text. I have read about this, and I've heard that this is possible in 8.4.5 or 8.5, but I still don't know how. From the packages below it is clear, that the only really missing thing is the conversion of the text widget to PDF. This has not yet been done and working with fonts, type, and glyphs is perhaps also one of the most difficult parts of a PDF file. Further, it seems that the Tk text widget lacks some [introspection] features that are needed when converting a text widget to PDF. ---- **Producing PDF from Tcl** ***pdf4tcl*** Frank Richter did a pure tcl package [pdf4tcl] (see also [http://pdf4tcl.berlios.de/]), which started as a port of pdf4php. It has a tclish and easy to use interface, but does only support a subset of pdf features. pdf4tcl is now version 0.5, supports additional pdf objects and licence changed to BSD. It is now maintained by [Peter Spjuth]. ***Trampoline!*** [Mac Cody] - [Trampoline!] aims to provide a means to export the contents of a canvas widget to a PDF document (see [http://trampoline.sourceforge.net]). The internal procedures within Trampoline! can also be used to generate PDF documents without Tk being present. The plan is to eventually split Trampoline! into two separate packages. Trampoline! will contain the Tk-dependent components that will call another package, called TclPDF, that will contain Tk-independent functionalities for generating PDF documents. ***tktopdf*** The GSoC 2008 project (see [Project Ideas for Google Summer of Code 2008]) made tktopdf [http://www.assembla.com/wiki/show/tktopdf] to create PDF from Tk windows (excluding ttk and the text widget). It is based on a library from [Clif Flynt], who also worked on generating PDFs from Tcl. ***pdflib*** [pdflib] [http://www.pdflib.com/] is an ANSI C library for creating new PDF files. Bindings for a number of languages, including Tcl, are available. This package is not designed to access and update existing PDF files. PDFLib is not entirely free. Notice at the heart of PDFLib's licensing [http://www.pdflib.com/purchase/howtobuy.html] this summary: "You may test and fully include our software in your projects, but you need a valid license key to remove the 'www.pdflib.com' demo stamp on all generated pages." ***Text2PDF*** [KPV] - [Text2PDF] produces PDF from some ASCII text. ***writepdf*** [Lars H] has written a pure Tcl package '''writepdf''' (see [http://ftp.ctan.org/tex-archive/macros/latex/contrib/tclldoc/examples/] and its parent directory) that can generate well-formed PDF files. The API is roughly at the same level of abstraction as writing raw [postscript] with [puts], so you need to be familiar with the PDF specification to use it. ''It would be great to have something sitting on top of writepdf which can generate correct pdf from a text widget and a canvas...It seems like this ought to be possible in pure Tcl.'' [Lars H]: It is certainly possible (at least to the same extent as the analogous generation of PS files). I suspect the main difficulty would be how to handle text, or more precisely, select a font that matches that used in the original widget. My more immediate interest was otherwise to be able to use PDF as an "export format" for graphics not really having anything to do with [Tk], but I don't know when I can return to even that part of the project. ***Tclhpdf*** What: Tclhpdf Where: http://reddog.s35.xrea.com/wiki/tclhpdf.html Description: Tcl interface to HARU Free PDF Library Updated: 09/2007 (Added by Roy Terry see comp.lang.tcl posting: 22Sep07) Contact: ohtsuka.yoshio@gmail.com ***TEItools*** What: TEItools Where: http://xtalk.price.ru/SGML/TEItools/ Description: Collection of Tcl and other tool scripts used for transforming SGML documents to various other formats. Currently supports HTML, LaTeX2e, RTF, PS, and PDF. Uses CoST. Updated: 04/1998 Contact: mailto:boris@xtalk.msk.su ***WELD*** What: WELD Where: http://www.javafoundry.com/javapdf Description: Web Enabled Logic Documents (WELD) make use of Jacl/Tcl to provide the ability to hold WWW applications together. WELD is a part of JavaPDF (the open source servlet utilities project). Updated: 08/2001 Contact: mailto:lhall@JavaFoundry.com (Lee T Hall) ---- **Ohter ways of producing PDFs** [Sven Sass]'s employer generates PDF by way of [Java] classes converting [Docbook] to [FO] to PDF (!). [Perl] and [Python] do PDF (see [http://www.unixreview.com/documents/s=7822/ur0304g/], for example), and, of course, Tcl has ways to exploit anything available through those languages, including [Tclperl] and [Tclpython]. Another well-worn pathway involves [transforming HTML to PDF]. [GS] (031129) There is a simple C source code to convert text file in PDF at http://wwwvms.mppmu.mpg.de/vmssig/src/c/TXT2PDF.C [Googie] - [Image Magick] contains '''import''' tool, which can be executed by [exec], so we can import [wish] window and save it as PDF. We can also use [TclMagick] instead of [exec]. [tonytraductor] - In TickleText [http://www.linguasos.org/tcltext.html] I just did: proc pdfout {} { if {$::filename != " "} { set data [.txt.txt get 1.0 {end -1c}] set fileid [open $::filename w] puts -nonewline $fileid $data close $fileid eval exec enscript $::filename -q -B -p $::filename.ps & eval exec ps2pdf $::filename.ps $::filename.pdf & eval exec rm $::filename.ps & } else { set filename [tk_getSaveFile -filetypes $::file_types] set data [.txt.txt get 1.0 {end -1c}] wm title . "Now Tickling: $::filename" set fileid [open $::filename w] puts -nonewline $fileid $data close $fileid eval exec enscript $::filename -q -B -p $::filename.pdf & eval exec ps2pdf $::filename.ps $::filename.pdf & eval exec rm $::filename.ps & } } but, honestly, I don't know if enscript works on Windows. Or for exporting .tex files to pdf I just used pdflatex in a similar manner. proc texpdf {} { if {$::filename != " "} { set data [.txt.txt get 1.0 {end -1c}] set fileid [open $::filename w] puts -nonewline $fileid $data close $fileid eval exec pdflatex $::filename } else { set filename [tk_getSaveFile -filetypes $::file_types] set data [.txt.txt get 1.0 {end -1c}] wm title . "Now Tickling: $::filename" set fileid [open $::filename w] puts -nonewline $fileid $data close $fileid eval exec pdflatex $::filename } } Of course, I'm a totaly newbie, so, perhaps I'm missing something here, or maybe there is a more efficient way to this. I don't know. It does work, though. The tex to pdf proc complains about the period in the filename, but, a friend gave me a perl script to shave off the extension, so, I think I can fix that...but with a perl script. Either way, despite the complaint, it generates a pdf file every time. I have posted samples to the Tickle Text site. ---- **Reading PDFs with Tcl** The page [Parsing PDF] has some code for reading PDF files. ---- **Discussions** [The Mathematical Orchid] - Does anybody know of a pure Tcl tool to ''read'' PDF files? (For diagnostic purposes. I have a PDF file here that Acrobat can't open; even the newest version. But the author claims "it works fine on my PC".) As far as I know, Tcl is able to handle binary files, so it should in principle be possible to do something like this. The only real difficuly is that parts of the file can be encrypted and/or compressed. (Anybody ever wrote a pure Tcl DEFLATE decompressor?) Orchid, [CL] works often with PDF (and the people who work with PDF), and I suspect there's a problem "upstream". Briefly, no, Tcl doesn't read PDF in the sense I believe you mean. You're welcome to e-mail or join the [Chat], for more detailed advice. [Lars H]: A practical advice (if you can't fix the problem upstream) is to try a different PDF viewer (e.g. ghostscript can handle not only [postscript] but also PDF, to mention the most cross-platform one). In my early experiments with generating PDF the files used to be viewable in everything I tried ''except'' Acrobat, and the error messages gave no information. (Later PDF specifications more properly described the issue that Acrobat got hung up on, though, so I managed to fix it.) [DKF]: Check that the PDF file has been downloaded correctly. If it was downloaded as text, there can be corruption of the contents (which, unlike [PostScript], are binary). [The Mathematical Orchid]: Already tried Ghostscript. Gives me some error about "JavaScript is required". The problem is a PDF file with some diagrams which refuse to display. (Half the diagram shows up, then some cryptic error message.) Downloaded several times, still won't display. Author insists they display with his copy of Acrobat. I'm guessing they have some extra software or something that they've forgetten they have. Well anyway, I've read the PDF spec (and the PS one, actually), so maybe I'll have a go at writing something myself. (As I say, I can read the file in Notepad, but the FLATE compressed parts are a tad difficult to follow. Most of a PDF file is actually plain ASCII until you compress it...) [IDG] Recent versions of acrobat have javascript built in, but it can be turned off in the preferences menu. Do you have an old version, or have you got javascript turned off? [schlenk]: Decoding the pdf stream isn't very hard, but your right that the compression is one thing that needs a bit more work, the rest is straight forward, unless you have edited pdfs with newer dicts. I have an example that reads PDF metadata with Tcl somewhere (need to search it...), was two hours work or so. ---- ** Not PDF but anyway ...** "pdf417_encode [http://freshmeat.net/projects/pdf417_encode/] converts ASCII strings into pdf417 [barcode]". NOTE: PDF417 barcodes have nothing whatsoever to do with Adobe's Portable Document Format. ---- !!!!!! %| [Category Acronym] | [Category Documentation] | [Category Printing] | [Category Word and Text Processing] |% !!!!!!