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% The new -open-at-page, -open-at-page-fit options
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% Add -args, clean up -control documentation
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% Explain quadruple backslash on command line leading to single real slash \\\\ -> \\ -> \
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% Explain page labels in -page-info
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% Correct the documentation for -diagonal and -reverse-diagonal
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% is scale_to_fit in do_stamp documented?
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\documentclass [a4paper,makeidx] { memoir}
\usepackage { palatino}
\usepackage { microtype}
\usepackage { graphics}
\usepackage [plainpages=false,pdfpagelabels,pdfborder=0 0 0] { hyperref}
\newcommand { \smallgap } { \vspace { 4mm} }
\newcommand { \cpdf } { \texttt { cpdf} }
\addtolength { \textwidth } { 20mm}
\makeindex
\begin { document}
\frontmatter
\thispagestyle { empty}
\begin { flushright}
{ \sffamily \bfseries \Huge Coherent PDF
\vspace { 2mm}
Command Line Toolkit}
\vspace { 12mm}
{ \Huge User Manual} \\
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Version 1.8 (October 2014)
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\vspace { 25mm}
\vfill
\includegraphics { logo.pdf}
\vspace { 2mm}
{ \sffamily \bfseries \LARGE Coherent Graphics Ltd}
\end { flushright}
\clearpage
\thispagestyle { empty}
\noindent For bug reports, feature requests and comments, email\\ \texttt { contact@coherentgraphics.co.uk}
\vspace * { \fill }
\noindent \copyright 2013 Coherent Graphics Limited. All rights reserved.
\smallgap
\noindent Adobe, Acrobat, Adobe PDF, Adobe Reader and PostScript are
registered trademarks of Adobe Systems Incorporated. Windows, Powerpoint and
Excel are registered trademarks of Microsoft Corporation.
% Letter
\cleardoublepage
\tableofcontents
\cleardoublepage
\chapter * { Typographical Conventions}
Command lines to be typed are shown in \texttt { typewriter font} in a box.
For example:
\begin { framed}
\small \verb !cpdf in.pdf -o out.pdf!
\end { framed}
\noindent When describing the general form of a command, rather than a particular
example, square brackets \verb |[]| are used to enclose optional parts, and
angled braces \verb !<>! to enclose general descriptions which may be
substituted for particular instances. For example,
\begin { framed}
\small \verb !cpdf <operation> in.pdf [<range>] -o out.pdf!
\end { framed}
\noindent describes a command line which requires an operation and, optionally,
a range. An exception is that we use \texttt { in.pdf} and \texttt { out.pdf}
instead of \texttt { <input file>} and \texttt { <output file>} to reduce
verbosity. Under Microsoft Windows, type \texttt { cpdf.exe} instead of \texttt { cpdf} .
\cleardoublepage
\mainmatter
\chapterstyle { hangnum}
\pagestyle { ruled}
\chapter { Basic Usage}
The Coherent PDF tools provide a wide range of facilities for modifying PDF
files created by other means. There is a single command-line program
\cpdf \ (\texttt { cpdf.exe} under Microsoft Windows). The rest of this manual describes the options that may be given
to this program.
\index { input files} \index { output files}
\section { Input and Output Files}
The typical pattern for usage is
\begin { framed}
\small \verb !cpdf [<operation>] <input file(s)> -o <output file>!
\end { framed}
\noindent and the simplest concrete example, assuming the existence of a file
\texttt { in.pdf} is:
\begin { framed}
\small \verb !cpdf in.pdf -o out.pdf!
\end { framed}
\noindent which copies \texttt { in.pdf} to \texttt { out.pdf} . The input and
output may be the same file. Of course, we should like to do more interesting
things to the PDF file than that!
Files on the command line are distinguished from other input by their
containing a period. If an input file does not contain a period, it should be
preceded by \verb !-i!. For example:
\begin { framed}
\small \verb !cpdf -i in -o out.pdf!
\end { framed}
\noindent A whole directory of files may be added (where a command supports multiple files) by using the \verb !-idir! option:
\begin { framed}
\small \verb !cpdf -merge -idir myfiles -o out.pdf!
\end { framed}
\noindent The files in the directory \verb !myfiles! are considered in alphabetical order. They must all be PDF files. If the names of the files are numeric, leading zeroes will be required for the order to be correct (e.g \verb !001.pdf!, \verb !002.pdf! etc).
\section { Input Ranges}
An \index { input range} \index { range} \textit { input range} may be specified
after each input file. This is treated differently by each operation. For
instance
\begin { framed}
\small \verb !cpdf in.pdf 2-5 out.pdf!
\end { framed}
\noindent extracts pages two, three, four and five from \texttt { in.pdf} ,
writing the result to \texttt { out.pdf} , assuming that \texttt { in.pdf} contains
at least five pages.
\index { page!range}
\index { reversing}
Here are the rules for building input ranges:
\begin { itemize}
\item A dash (\texttt { -} ) defines ranges, e.g. \texttt { 1-5} or \texttt { 6-3} .
\item A comma (\texttt { ,} ) allows one to specify several ranges, e.g. \texttt { 1-2,4-5} .
\item The word \texttt { end} represents the last page number.
\item The words \texttt { odd} and \texttt { even} can be used in place of or at the end of a page range to restrict to just the odd or even pages.
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\item The words \texttt { portrait} and \texttt { landscape} can be used in place of or at the end of a page range to restrict to just those pages which are portrait or landscape. Note that the meaning of ``portrait'' and ``landscape'' does not take account of any viewing rotation in place (use \texttt { -upright} first, if required). A page with equal width and height is considered neither portrait nor landscape.
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\item The word \texttt { reverse} is the same as \texttt { end-1} .
\item The word \texttt { all} is the same as \texttt { 1-end} .
\item A range must contain no spaces.
\item A tilde (\texttt { \~ { } } ) defines a page number counting from the end of the document rather than the beginning. Page \texttt { \~ { } 1} is the last page, \texttt { \~ { } 2} the penultimate page etc.
\end { itemize}
\noindent For example:
\begin { framed}
\small \verb !cpdf in.pdf 1,2,7-end -o out.pdf!
\vspace { 2.5mm}
\noindent Remove pages three, four, five and six from a document.
\vspace { 2.5mm}
\verb !cpdf in.pdf 1-16odd -o out.pdf!
\vspace { 2.5mm}
\noindent Extract the odd pages 1,3,...,13,15.
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\vspace { 2.5mm}
\verb !cpdf in.pdf landscape -rotate 90 -o out.pdf!
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\vspace { 2.5mm}
\noindent Rotate all landscape pages by ninety degrees.
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\vspace { 2.5mm}
\verb !cpdf in.pdf 1,all -o out.pdf!
\vspace { 2.5mm}
\noindent Duplicate the front page of a document, perhaps as a fax cover sheet.
\vspace { 2.5mm}
\verb !cpdf in.pdf ~3-~1 -o out.pdf!
\vspace { 2.5mm}
\noindent Extract the last three pages of a document, in order.
\end { framed}
\index { decryption}
\section { Decryption}
\index { owner password}
\index { user password}
\index { password}
In order to perform many operations, encrypted input PDF files must be
decrypted. Some require the owner password, some either the user or owner
passwords. Either password is supplied by writing \texttt { user=<password>} or
\texttt { owner=<password>} following each input file requiring it (before or
after any range). The document will \textit { not} be re-encrypted upon writing. For
example:
\begin { framed}
\small \verb !cpdf in.pdf user=fred reverse -o out.pdf!
\end { framed}
\noindent The password required (owner or user) depends upon the operation
being performed. Separate facilities are provided to decrypt and encrypt files
(See \Sref { crypt} ).
\section { Standard Input and Standard Output}
\index { standard input} \index { standard output}
Thus far, we have assumed that the input PDF will be read from a file on
disk, and the output written similarly. Often it's useful to be able to read
input from \texttt { stdin} (Standard Input) or write output to \texttt { stdout}
(Standard Output) instead. The typical use is to join several programs
together into a \textit { pipe} , passing data from one to the next without the
use of intermediate files. Use \texttt { -stdin} to read from standard input, and
\texttt { -stdout} to write to standard input, either to pipe data between
multiple programs, or multiple invocations of the same program. For example, this sequence of commands (all typed on one line)
\begin { framed}
\small \begin { verbatim} cpdf in.pdf reverse -stdout |
cpdf -stdin 1-5 -stdout |
cpdf -stdin reverse -o out.pdf\end { verbatim}
\end { framed}
\noindent extracts the last five pages of \texttt { in.pdf} in the correct order,
writing them to \texttt { out.pdf} . It does this by reversing the input, taking
the first five pages and then reversing the result.
To supply passwords for a file from \texttt { -stdin} , use \texttt { -stdin-owner <password>} and/or \texttt { -stdin-user <password>} .
Using \texttt { -stdout} on the final command in the pipeline to output the PDF
to screen is not recommended, since PDF files often contain compressed sections
which are not screen-readable.
Several \cpdf \ operations write to standard output by default (for
example, listing fonts). A useful feature of the command line (not specific to
\cpdf ) is the ability to redirect this output to a file. This is
achieved with the \texttt { >} operator:
\begin { framed}
\small \verb !cpdf -info in.pdf > file.txt!
\vspace { 2.5mm}
\noindent Use the \texttt { -info} operation (See \Sref { info} ), redirecting the
output to \texttt { file.txt} .
\end { framed}
\section { Doing several things at once with AND}
The keyword \texttt { AND} can be used to string together several commands in
one. The advantage compared with using pipes is that the file need not be
repeatedly parsed and written out, saving time.
To use \texttt { AND} , simply leave off the output specifier (e.g \texttt { -o} ) of
one command, and the input specifier (e.g filename). For instance:
\begin { framed}
\small \verb !cpdf -merge in.pdf in2.pdf AND -add-text "Label"!
\noindent \small \verb ! AND -merge in3.pdf -o out.pdf!
\vspace { 2.5mm}
\noindent Merge \texttt { in.pdf} and \texttt { in2.pdf} together, add text to both pages, append \texttt { in3.pdf} and write to \texttt { out.pdf} .
\end { framed}
\noindent To specify the range for each section, use \texttt { -range} :
\begin { framed}
\small \verb !cpdf -merge in.pdf in2.pdf AND -range 2-4 -add-text "Label"!
\noindent \small \verb ! AND -merge in3.pdf -o out.pdf!
\end { framed}
\section { Units}
\index { units}
When measurements are given to \cpdf , they are in points (1 point = 1/72 inch). They may optionally
be followed by some letters to change the measurement. The following are
supported:
\begin { table} [h]
\centering
\begin { tabular} { rl}
pt & Points (72 points per inch). The default. \\
cm & Centimeters \\
mm & Millimeters \\
in & Inches \\
\end { tabular}
\end { table}
\section { PDF Version Numbers}
\index { version number}
When an operation which uses a part of the PDF standard which was introduced in
a later version than that of the input file, the PDF version in the output file
is set to the later version (most PDF viewers will try to load any PDF file,
even if it is marked with a later version number). However, this automatic
version changing may be suppressed with the \texttt { -keep-version} flag.
Here is a list of Acrobat versions together with the maximum PDF version they
are intended to support:
\vspace { 2mm}
\begin { tabular} { rl}
PDF 1.2 & Acrobat 3.0 \\
PDF 1.3 & Acrobat 4.0 \\
PDF 1.4 & Acrobat 5.0 \\
PDF 1.5 & Acrobat 6.0 \\
PDF 1.6 & Acrobat 7.0 \\
PDF 1.7 & Acrobat 8.0, 9.0, 10.0
\end { tabular}
\vspace { 2mm}
\noindent If you wish to manually alter the PDF version of a file, use the
\texttt { -set-version} option described in \Sref { setversion} .
\section { File IDs}
PDF files contain an ID (consisting of two parts), used by some workflow
systems to uniquely identify a file. To change the ID, behavior, use the
\texttt { -change-id} operation. This will create a new ID for the output file.
\begin { framed}
\small \verb !cpdf -change-id in.pdf -o out.pdf!
\vspace { 2.5mm}
\noindent Write \texttt { in.pdf} to \texttt { out.pdf} , changing the ID.
\end { framed}
\section { Linearization}
\index { linearization}
Linearized PDF is a version of the PDF format in which the data is held in a
special manner to allow content to be fetched only when needed. This means
viewing a multipage PDF over a slow connection is more responsive. By default,
\cpdf \ does not linearize output files. To make it do so, add the \texttt { -l}
option to the command line, in addition to any other command being used. For example:
\begin { framed}
\small \verb !cpdf -l in.pdf -o out.pdf!
\vspace { 2.5mm}
\noindent Linearize the file \texttt { in.pdf} , writing to \texttt { out.pdf} .
\end { framed}
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\noindent This requires the existence of the external program \texttt { cpdflin} which is provided with \texttt { cpdf} . For Unix and Mac OS X, and for Windows under Cygwin or Mingw, it suffices to place the \texttt { cpdflin} executable in the same folder as \texttt { cpdf} . On Windows with \texttt { command.exe} , you must use \texttt { -cpdflin} to let \texttt { cpdf} know where to find it:
\begin { framed}
\small \verb !cpdf.exe -cpdflin "C:\\ cpdflin.exe" -l in.pdf -o out.pdf!
\vspace { 2.5mm}
\noindent Linearize the file \texttt { in.pdf} , writing to \texttt { out.pdf} .
\end { framed}
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\section { Object Streams}
PDF 1.5 introduced a new mechanism for storing objects to save space: object streams. by default, \texttt { cpdf} will preserve object streams in input files, creating no more. To prevent the retention of existing object streams, use \texttt { -no-preserve-objstm} :
\begin { framed}
\small \verb !cpdf -no-preserve-objstm in.pdf -o out.pdf!
\vspace { 2.5mm}
\noindent Write the file \texttt { in.pdf} to \texttt { out.pdf} , removing any object streams.
\end { framed}
\noindent To create new object streams if none exist, or augment the existing ones, use \texttt { -create-objstm} :
\begin { framed}
\small \verb !cpdf -create-objstm in.pdf -o out.pdf!
\vspace { 2.5mm}
\noindent Write the file \texttt { in.pdf} to \texttt { out.pdf} , preserving any existing object streams, and creating any new ones for new objects which have been added.
\end { framed}
\noindent To create wholly new object streams, use both options together:
\begin { framed}
\small \verb !cpdf -create-objstm -no-preserve-objstm in.pdf -o out.pdf!
\vspace { 2.5mm}
\noindent Write the file \texttt { in.pdf} to \texttt { out.pdf} with wholly new object streams.
\end { framed}
\noindent Files written with object streams will be set to PDF 1.5 or higher, unless \texttt { -keep-version} is used (see above).
Object streams are always removed prior to linearization.
\section { Malformed Files}
There are many malformed PDF files in existence, including many produced by
otherwise-reputable applications. \cpdf \ attempts to correct these problems
silently, but sometimes this can be very slow.
Grossly malformed files will be reconstructed. The reconstruction
progress is shown on \verb !stderr! (Standard Error):
\begin { framed}
\noindent \small \verb !./cpdf in.pdf -o out.pdf!\\
\small \verb !couldn't lex object number!\\
\small \verb !Attempting to reconstruct the malformed pdf in.pdf...!\\
\small \verb !Read 5530 objects!\\
\small \verb $ Malformed PDF reconstruction succeeded ! $
\end { framed}
\noindent Sometimes files can be technically well-formed but use inefficient PDF
constructs. If you are sure the input files you are using are
impeccably formed, the \texttt { -fast} option added to the command line (or, if
using \texttt { AND} , to each section of the command line). This will use certain
shortcuts which speed up processing, but would fail on badly-produced files.
The \verb !-fast! option may be used with:
\begin { framed}
\small \noindent \Sref { pages} \\
\noindent \small \verb !-rotate-contents -upright -vflip -hflip!\\
\small \verb !-shift -scale -scale-to-fit -scale-contents!\\
\noindent \Sref { stamps} \\
\noindent \small \verb !-add-text!\\
\small \verb !-stamp-on -stamp-under -combine-pages!
\end { framed}
\noindent If problems occur, refrain from using \verb !-fast!.
\section { Error Handling}
\index { error handling}
When \cpdf \ encounters an error, it exits with code 2. An error message is
displayed on \texttt { stderr} (Standard Error). In normal usage, this means it's
displayed on the screen. When a bad or inappropriate password is given, the exit code is 1.
\section { Control Files}
\index { control file}
\begin { framed}
\noindent \small \verb !cpdf -control <filename>!
\end { framed}
Some operating systems have a limit on the length of a command line. To
circumvent this, or simply for reasons of flexibility, a control file may be
specified from which arguments are drawn. This file does not support the full
syntax of the command line. Commands are separated by whitespace, quotation
marks may be used if an argument contains a space, and the sequence \verb !\" !
may be used to introduce a genuine quotation mark in such an argument.
Several \verb !-control! arguments may be specified, and may be mixed in with
conventional command-line arguments. The commands in each control file are
considered in the order in which they are given, after all conventional
arguements have been processed.
\section { String Arguments}
Command lines are handled differently on each operating system. Some
characters are reserved with special meanings, even when they occur inside
quoted string arguments. To avoid this problem, \cpdf \ performs processing on
string arguments as they are read.
A backslash is used to indicate that a character which would otherwise be
treated specially by the command line interpreter is to be treated literally. For
example, Unix-like systems attribute a special meaning to the exclamation mark, so
the command line
\begin { framed}
\small \verb ?cpdf -add-text "Hello!" in.pdf -o out.pdf?
\end { framed}
\noindent would fail. We must escape the exclamation mark with a backslash:
\begin { framed}
\small \verb ?cpdf -add-text "Hello\! " in.pdf -o out.pdf?
\end { framed}
\noindent It follows that backslashes intended to be taken literally must themselves be
escaped (i.e. written \verb !\\ !).
\section { Text Encodings}
\index { text encodings}
Some \texttt { cpdf} commands write text to standard output, or read text from
the command line or configuration files. These are:
\begin { framed}
\noindent \small \verb !-info!\\
\noindent \small \verb !-list-bookmarks!\\
\noindent \small \verb !-set-author! et al.\\
\noindent \small \verb !-list-annotations!
\end { framed}
\noindent There are three options to control how the text is interpreted:
\begin { framed}
\noindent \small \verb !-utf8!\\
\noindent \small \verb !-stripped!\\
\noindent \small \verb !-raw!
\end { framed}
\noindent Add \verb !-utf8! to use Unicode UTF8, \verb !-stripped! to convert to 7
bit ASCII by dropping any high characters, or \verb !-raw! to perform no
processing. The default is \verb !-stripped!.
\chapter { Merging and Splitting}
\begin { framed}
\small
\noindent \begin { verbatim}
cpdf -merge in1.pdf [<range>] in2.pdf [<range>] [<more names/ranges>]
[-retain-numbering] [-remove-duplicate-fonts] -o out.pdf\end { verbatim}
\vspace { 1.5mm}
\noindent \verb !cpdf -split in.pdf -o <format> [-chunk <chunksize>]!
\vspace { 1.5mm}
\noindent \verb !cpdf -split-bookmarks <level> in.pdf -o <format>!
\end { framed}
\vspace { 12mm}
\section { Merging}
\index { merging}
The \texttt { -merge} operation allow the merging of several files into one.
Ranges can be used to select only a subset of pages from each
input file in the output. The output file consists of the concatenation of all
the input pages in the order specified on the command line. Actually, the
\texttt { -merge} can be omitted, since this is the default operation of \cpdf .
\begin { framed} \small
\verb !cpdf -merge a.pdf 1 b.pdf 2-end -o out.pdf!
\vspace { 2.5mm}
\noindent Take page one of \texttt { a.pdf} and all but the first page of
\texttt { b.pdf} , merge them and produce \texttt { out.pdf} .
\end { framed}
\noindent Merge maintains bookmarks, named destinations, and name dictionaries.
Forms and other objects which cannot be merged are retained if they are from
the document which first exhibits that feature.
The \texttt { -retain-numbering} option keeps the PDF page numbering labels of
each document intact, rather than renumbering the output pages from 1.
The \texttt { -remove-duplicate-fonts} ensures that fonts used in more than one
of the inputs only appear once in the output.
\section { Splitting}
\index { splitting}
The \texttt { -split} operation splits a PDF file into a number of parts which
are written to file, their names being generated from a \emph { format} . The
optional \texttt { -chunk} option allows the number of pages written to each
output file to be set.
\begin { framed} \small
\verb !cpdf -split a.pdf -o out%%%.pdf!
\vspace { 2.5mm}
\noindent Split \texttt { a.pdf} to the files \texttt { out001.pdf} , \texttt { out002.pdf} etc.
\vspace { 2.5mm}
\verb !cpdf -split a.pdf 1 even -chunk 10 -o dir/out%%%.pdf!
\vspace { 2.5mm}
\noindent Split the even pages of \texttt { a.pdf} to the files
\texttt { out001.pdf} , \texttt { out002.pdf} etc. with at most ten pages in each
file. The directory (folder) \texttt { dir} must exist.
\end { framed}
\noindent If the output format does not provide enough numbers for the files generated,
the result is unspecified. The following format operators may be used:
\begin { table} [h]
\centering
\begin { tabular} { rl}
\verb !%, %%, %%% etc.! & Sequence number padded to the number of percent signs\\
\texttt { @F} & Original filename without extension \\
\texttt { @N} & Sequence number without padding zeroes \\
\texttt { @S} & Start page of this chunk \\
\texttt { @E} & End page of this chunk \\
\texttt { @B} & Bookmark name at this page \\
\end { tabular}
\end { table}
\section { Splitting on Bookmarks}
\index { splitting!on bookmarks}
The \texttt { -split-bookmarks <level>} operation splits a PDF file into a number of
parts, according to the page ranges implied by the document's bookmarks. These
parts are then written to file with names generated from the given format.
Level 0 denotes the top-level bookmarks, level 1 the next level (sub-bookmarks)
and so on. So \texttt { -split-bookmarks 1} creates breaks on level 0 and level
1 boundaries.
\begin { framed} \small
\verb !cpdf -split-bookmarks 0 a.pdf -o out%%%.pdf!
\vspace { 2.5mm}
\noindent Split \texttt { a.pdf} to the files \texttt { out001.pdf} ,
\texttt { out002.pdf} on bookmark boundaries.
\end { framed}
\noindent Now, there may be many bookmarks on a single page (for instance, if
paragraphs are bookmarked or there are two subsections on one page). The splits
calculated by \texttt { -split-bookmarks} ensure that each page appears in only
one of the output files.
It is possible to use the \texttt { @} operators above, including operator \texttt { @B} which expands to the text of the bookmark:
\begin { framed} \small
\verb !cpdf -split-bookmarks 0 a.pdf -o @B.pdf!
\vspace { 2.5mm}
\noindent Split \texttt { a.pdf} on bookmark boundaries, using the bookmark text as the filename.
\end { framed}
\noindent The bookmark text used for a name is converted from unicode to 7 bit ASCII, and the following characters are removed, in addition to any character with ASCII code less than 32:
\begin { framed}
\centering
\verb ! / ? < > \ : * | " ^ + =!
\end { framed}
\chapter { Pages}
\label { pages}
\begin { framed}
\small \noindent \verb !cpdf -scale-page "<scale x> <scale y>" in.pdf [<range>] -o out.pdf!
\vspace { 1.5mm}
\small \noindent \verb !cpdf -scale-to-fit "<x size> <y size>" in.pdf [<range>] -o out.pdf!
%\vspace{1.5mm}
%\small\noindent\verb!cpdf -scale-to-fit-best "<x size> <y size>" in.pdf [<range>] -o out.pdf!
%
%\vspace{1.5mm}
%\small\noindent\verb!cpdf -scale-to-fit-minus "<x size> <y size>" in.pdf [<range>] -o out.pdf!
\vspace { 1.5mm}
\small \noindent \verb !cpdf -scale-contents [<scale>] [<position>] in.pdf [<range>] -o out.pdf!
\vspace { 1.5mm}
\small \noindent \verb !cpdf -shift "<shift x> <shift y>" in.pdf [<range>] -o out.pdf!
\vspace { 1.5mm}
\small \noindent \verb !cpdf -rotate <angle> in.pdf [<range>] -o out.pdf!
\vspace { 1.5mm}
\small \noindent \verb !cpdf -rotateby <angle> in.pdf [<range>] -o out.pdf!
\vspace { 1.5mm}
\small \noindent \verb !cpdf -rotate-contents <angle> in.pdf [<range>] -o out.pdf!
\vspace { 1.5mm}
\small \noindent \verb !cpdf -upright in.pdf [<range>] -o out.pdf!
\vspace { 1.5mm}
\small \noindent \verb !cpdf -hflip in.pdf [<range>] -o out.pdf!
\vspace { 1.5mm}
\small \noindent \verb !cpdf -vflip in.pdf [<range>] -o out.pdf!
\vspace { 1.5mm}
\small \noindent \verb !cpdf -mediabox "<x> <y> <w> <h>" in.pdf [<range>] -o out.pdf!
\vspace { 1.5mm}
\small \noindent \verb !cpdf -crop "<x> <y> <w> <h>" in.pdf [<range>] -o out.pdf!
\vspace { 1.5mm}
\small \noindent \verb !cpdf -remove-crop in.pdf [<range>] -o out.pdf!
%\vspace{1.5mm}
%\small\noindent\verb!cpdf -copy-cropbox-to-mediabox in.pdf [<range>] -o out.pdf!
\vspace { 1.5mm}
\small \noindent \verb !cpdf -frombox <boxname> -tobox <boxname> [-mediabox_ if_ missing]! \\
\noindent \verb ! in.pdf [<range>] -o out.pdf!
\end { framed}
\section { Page Sizes}
\index { page size}
Any time when a page size is required, instead of writing, for instance \texttt { "210mm 197mm"} one can instead write \texttt { a4portrait} . Here is a list of supported page sizes:
\smallgap
\begin { tabular} { lll}
\texttt { a0portrait} & \texttt { a1portrait} & \texttt { a2portrait} \\
\texttt { a3portrait} & \texttt { a4portrait} & \texttt { a5portrait} \\
\texttt { a6portrait} & \texttt { a7portrait} & \texttt { a8portrait} \\
\texttt { a9portrait} & \texttt { a10portrait} & \\
\\
\texttt { a0landscape} & \texttt { a1landscape} & \texttt { a2landscape} \\
\texttt { a3landscape} & \texttt { a4landscape} & \texttt { a5landscape} \\
\texttt { a6landscape} & \texttt { a7landscape} & \texttt { a8landscape} \\
\texttt { a9landscape} & \texttt { a10landscape} & \\
\\
\texttt { usletterportrait} & \texttt { usletterlandscape} & \\
\texttt { uslegalportrait} & \texttt { uslegallandscape} &
\end { tabular}
\section { Scale Pages}
\index { scale pages}
The \texttt { -scale-page} operation scales each page in the range by the X and
Y factors given. This scales both the page contents, and the page size itself. It also scales any Crop Box and other boxes (Art Box, Trim Box etc). As with several of these commands, remember to take into account any page rotation when considering what the X and Y axes relate to.
\begin { framed}
\small \noindent \verb !cpdf -scale-page "2 2" in.pdf -o out.pdf!
\vspace { 2.5mm}
\noindent Convert an A4 page to A3, for instance.
\end { framed}
\noindent The \texttt { -scale-to-fit} operation scales each page in the range to fit a
given page size, preserving aspect ratio and centering the result.
\begin { framed}
\small \noindent \verb !cpdf -scale-to-fit "297mm 210mm" in.pdf -o out.pdf!
\small \noindent \verb !cpdf -scale-to-fit a4portrait in.pdf -o out.pdf!
\vspace { 2.5mm}
\noindent Scale a file's pages to fit A4 portrait.
\end { framed}
%The \texttt{-scale-to-fit-best} and \texttt{-scale-to-fit-minus} are similar, but will rotate a page by $90^\circ$ or $-90^\circ$ respectively on any page where doing so would maximise the scale.
\noindent The scale can optionally be set to a percentage of the available area, instead of filling it.
\begin { framed}
\small \noindent \verb !cpdf -scale-to-fit a4portrait -scale-to-fit-scale 0.9 in.pdf -o out.pdf!
\vspace { 2.5mm}
\noindent Scale a file's pages to fit A4 portrait, scaling the page 90\% of its possible size.
\end { framed}
\noindent The \texttt { -scale-contents} operation scales the contents about the center
of the crop box (or, if absent, the media box), leaving the page dimensions
(boxes) unchanged.
\begin { framed}
\small \noindent \verb !cpdf -scale-contents 0.5 in.pdf -o out.pdf!
\vspace { 2.5mm}
\noindent Scale a file's contents on all pages to 50\% of its original dimensions.
\end { framed}
\noindent To scale about a point other than the center, see the positioning commands described in \Sref { position} .
\section { Shift Page Contents}
\index { shift page contents}
The \texttt { -shift} operation shifts the contents of each page in the range
by X points horizontally and Y points vertically.
\begin { framed}
\small \noindent \verb !cpdf -shift "50 0" in.pdf even -o out.pdf!
\vspace { 2.5mm}
\noindent Shift pages to the right by 50 points (for instance, to increase
the binding margin).
\end { framed}
\section { Rotating Pages}
\index { rotate!pages}
There are two ways of rotating pages: (1)~setting a value in the PDF file which
asks the viewer (e.g. Acrobat) to rotate the page on-the-fly when viewing it
(use \texttt { -rotate} or \texttt { -rotateby} ) and (2)~actually rotating the page
contents and/or the page dimensions (use \texttt { -upright} afterwards or
\texttt { -rotate-contents} to just rotate the page contents).
The possible values for \texttt { -rotate} and \texttt { -rotate-by} are 0, 90,
180 and 270, all interpreted as being clockwise. Any value may be used for
\texttt { -rotate-contents} .
The \texttt { -rotate} operation sets the viewing rotation of the selected pages to
the absolute value given.
\begin { framed}
\small \verb !cpdf -rotate 90 in.pdf -o out.pdf!
\vspace { 2.5mm}
\noindent Set the rotation of all the pages in the input file to ninety degrees clockwise.
\end { framed}
\noindent The \texttt { -rotateby} operation changes the viewing rotation of all the
given pages by the relative value given.
\begin { framed}
\small \verb !cpdf -rotateby 90 in.pdf -o out.pdf!
\vspace { 2.5mm}
\noindent Rotate all the pages in the input file by ninety degrees clockwise.
\end { framed}
\noindent The \texttt { -rotate-contents} operation rotates the contents and dimensions
of the page by the given relative value.
\index { rotate!contents}
\begin { framed}
\small \verb !cpdf -rotate-contents 90 in.pdf -o out.pdf!
\vspace { 2.5mm}
\noindent Rotate all the page contents in the input file by
ninety degrees clockwise. Doesn't change the page dimensions.
\end { framed}
\label { upright}
\noindent The \texttt { -upright} operation does whatever combination of
\texttt { -rotate} and \texttt { -rotate-contents} is required to change the
rotation of the document to zero without altering its appearance.
\section { Flipping Pages}
\index { flip pages}
The \texttt { -hflip} and \texttt { -vflip} operations flip the contents of the
chosen pages horizontally or vertically. No account is taken of the current
page rotation when considering what "horizontally" and "vertically" mean, so you may like to use \texttt { -upright} first.
\begin { framed}
\small \verb !cpdf -hflip in.pdf even -o out.pdf!
\vspace { 2.5mm}
\noindent Flip the even pages in \texttt { in.pdf} horizontally.
\vspace { 2.5mm}
\verb !cpdf -vflip in.pdf -o out.pdf!
\vspace { 2.5mm}
\noindent Flip all the pages in \texttt { in.pdf} vertically.
\end { framed}
\section { Boxes and Cropping}
\index { crop pages}
\index { media box}
All PDF files contain a \textit { media box} for each page, giving the
dimensions of the paper. To change these dimensions (without altering the page
contents in any way), use the \texttt { -mediabox} option.
\begin { framed}
\small \verb !cpdf -mediabox "0pt 0pt 500pt 500pt" in.pdf -o out.pdf!
\vspace { 2.5mm}
\noindent Set the media box to 500 points square.
\end { framed}
\noindent The four numbers are minimum x, minimum y, width, height. x
coordinates increase to the right, y coordinates increase upwards.
PDF file can also optionally contain a \textit { crop box} for each page,
defining to what extent the page is cropped before being displayed or printed.
A crop box can be set, changed and removed, without affecting the underlying
media box. To set or change the crop box use \texttt { -crop} . To remove any
existing crop box, use \texttt { -remove-crop} .
\begin { framed}
\small \verb !cpdf -crop "0pt 0pt 200mm 200mm" in.pdf -o out.pdf!
\vspace { 2.5mm}
\noindent Crop pages to the bottom left 200-millimeter square of the page.
\vspace { 2.5mm}
\verb !cpdf -remove-crop in.pdf -o out.pdf!
\vspace { 2.5mm}
\noindent Remove cropping.
\end { framed}
\noindent Note that the crop box is only obeyed in some viewers.
\begin { framed}
\small \noindent \verb !cpdf -frombox <boxname> -tobox <boxname> [-mediabox-if-missing]! \\
\noindent \verb ! in.pdf [<range>] -o out.pdf!
\vspace { 2.5mm}
\noindent Copy the contents of one box to another.
\end { framed}
\noindent This operation copies the contents of one box (Media box, Crop box, Trim box etc.) to another. If \texttt { -mediabox-if-missing} is added, the media box will be substituted when the 'from' box is not set for a given page. For example
\begin { framed}
\small \verb !cpdf -frombox /TrimBox -tobox /CropBox in.pdf -o out.pdf!
\end { framed}
\noindent copies the Trim Box of each page to the Crop Box of each page. The possible boxes are \texttt { /MediaBox} , \texttt { /CropBox} , \texttt { /BleedBox} , \texttt { /TrimBox} , \texttt { /ArtBox} .
\chapter { Encryption and Decryption}
\index { encryption}
\index { decryption}
\begin { framed}
\small \noindent \verb !cpdf -encrypt <method> <owner> <user>!\\
\noindent \verb ! [-no-encrypt-metadata] <permissions> in.pdf -o out.pdf!
\vspace { 1.5mm}
\noindent \verb !cpdf -decrypt in.pdf owner=<owner password> -o out.pdf!
\end { framed}
\label { crypt}
\section { Introduction}
PDF files can be encrypted using various types of encryption and attaching
various permissions describing what someone can do with a particular document
(for instance, printing it or extracting content). There are two types of
person:
\begin { description}
\item The \textbf { User} can do to the document what is allowed in the permissions.
\item The \textbf { Owner} can do anything, including altering the permissions or removing encryption entirely.
\end { description}
There are five kinds of encryption:
\begin { itemize}
\item 40-bit encryption (method \texttt { 40bit} ) in Acrobat 3 (PDF 1.1) and above
\item 128-bit encryption (method \texttt { 128bit} ) in Acrobat 5 (PDF 1.4) and above
\item 128-bit AES encryption (method \texttt { AES} ) in Acrobat 7 (PDF 1.6) and above
\item 256-bit AES encryption (method \texttt { AES256} ) in Acrobat 9 (PDF 1.7) -- \textit { this is deprecated -- do not use for new documents}
\item 256-bit AES encryption (method \texttt { AES256ISO} ) in PDF 2.0
\end { itemize}
\vspace { 2mm}
\noindent All encryption supports these kinds of permissions:
\vspace { 2mm}
\begin { tabular} { ll}
\texttt { -no-edit} & Cannot change the document\\
\texttt { -no-print} & Cannot print the document\\
\texttt { -no-copy} & Cannot select or copy text or graphics\\
\texttt { -no-annot} & Cannot add or change form fields or annotations\\
\end { tabular}
\vspace { 2mm}
\noindent In addition, 128-bit encryption (Acrobat 5 and above) and AES encryption supports these:
\vspace { 2mm}
\begin { tabular} { ll}
\texttt { -no-forms} & Cannot edit form fields\\
\texttt { -no-extract} & Cannot extract text or graphics\\
\texttt { -no-assemble} & Cannot merge files etc.\\
\texttt { -no-hq-print} & Cannot print high-quality\\
\end { tabular}
\vspace { 2mm}
\noindent Add these flags to the command line to prevent each operation.
\vspace { 2mm}
\section { Encrypting a Document}
To encrypt a document, the owner and user passwords must be given (here, \texttt { fred} and \texttt { charles} respectively):
\begin { framed}
\small \verb !cpdf -encrypt 40bit fred charles -no-print in.pdf -o out.pdf!
\vspace { 1.5mm}
\small \verb !cpdf -encrypt 128bit fred charles -no-extract in.pdf -o out.pdf!
\vspace { 1.5mm}
\small \verb !cpdf -encrypt AES fred "" -no-edit -no-copy in.pdf -o out.pdf!
\end { framed}
\noindent A blank user password is
common. In this event, PDF viewers will typically not prompt for a
password for when opening the file or for operations allowable with the user password.
\begin { framed}
\vspace { 1.5mm}
\small \verb !cpdf -encrypt AES256 fred "" -no-forms in.pdf -o out.pdf!
\end { framed}
\noindent In addition, the usual method can be used to give the existing owner
password, if the document is already encrypted.
When using AES encryption, the option is available to refrain from encrypting the
metadata. Add \texttt { -no-encrypt-metadata} to the command line.
\section { Decrypting a Document}
To decrypt a document, the owner password is provided.
\begin { framed}
\small \verb !cpdf -decrypt in.pdf owner=fred -o out.pdf!
\end { framed}
\noindent The user password cannot decrypt a file.
\chapter { Compression}
\begin { framed}
\small \noindent \verb !cpdf -decompress in.pdf -o out.pdf!
\vspace { 1.5mm}
\noindent \verb !cpdf -compress in.pdf -o out.pdf!
2014-09-11 15:05:13 +02:00
\vspace { 1.5mm}
\noindent \verb !cpdf -squeeze in.pdf -o out.pdf!
\end { framed}
\cpdf \ provides basic facilities for decompressing and compressing PDF streams, and a more advanced PDF \textit { squeezer} .
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\section { Decompressing a Document}
\index { decompressing}
To decompress the streams in a PDF file, for instance to manually inspect the
PDF, use:
\begin { framed}
\small \verb !cpdf -decompress in.pdf -o out.pdf!
\end { framed}
\noindent If \cpdf \ finds a compression type it can't cope with, the stream is left compressed.
\section { Compressing a Document}
\index { compressing}
To compress the streams in a PDF file, use:
\begin { framed}
\small \verb !cpdf -compress in.pdf -o out.pdf!
\end { framed}
\noindent \cpdf \ compresses any streams which have no compression using the
\textbf { Flate\- Decode} method, with the exception of Metadata streams, which
are left uncompressed.
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\section { Squeezing a Document}
\index { squeeze}
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To \textit { squeeze} a PDF file, reducing its size by an average of about twenty percent (though sometimes not at all), use:
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\begin { framed}
\small \verb !cpdf -squeeze in.pdf -o out.pdf!
\end { framed}
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\noindent Adding \texttt { -squeeze} to the command line when using another operation will \textit { squeeze} the file or files upon output.
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The \texttt { -squeeze} operation writes some information about the squeezing process to standard output. The squeezing process involves several processes which losslessly attempt to reduce the file size. It is slow, so should not be used without thought.
\begin { verbatim}
$ . / cpdf - squeeze in.pdf - o out.pdf
Beginning squeeze: 123847 objects
Squeezing... Down to 114860 objects
Squeezing... Down to 114842 objects
Squeezing page data
Recompressing document
\end { verbatim}
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\chapter { Bookmarks}
\begin { framed}
\small \noindent \verb !cpdf -list-bookmarks [-utf8 | -raw] in.pdf!
\vspace { 1.5mm}
\small \noindent \verb !cpdf -remove-bookmarks in.pdf -o out.pdf!
\vspace { 1.5mm}
\small \noindent \verb !cpdf -add-bookmarks <bookmark file> in.pdf -o out.pdf!
\end { framed}
\index { bookmarks}
\index { document outline}
PDF Bookmarks (properly called the \textit { document outline} ) represent a tree
of references to parts of the file, typically displayed at the side of the
screen. The user can click on one to move to the specified place. \cpdf \ provides
facilities to list, add, and remove bookmarks. The format used by the list and
add operations is the same, so you can feed the output of one into the other,
for instance to copy bookmarks.
\section { List Bookmarks}
\index { bookmarks!listing}
The \texttt { -list-bookmarks} operation prints (to standard output) the
bookmarks in a file. The first column gives the level of the tree at which a
particular bookmark is. Then the text of the bookmark in quotes, then the page
number which the bookmark points to, then (optionally) the word "open" if the
bookmark should have its children (at the level immediately below) visible when
the file is loaded. For example, upon executing
\begin { framed}
\small \verb !cpdf -list-bookmarks doc.pdf!
\end { framed}
\noindent the result might be:
\begin { framed}
\begin { verbatim}
0 "Part 1" 1 open
1 "Part 1A" 2
1 "Part 1B" 3
0 "Part 2" 4
1 "Part 2a" 5
\end { verbatim}
\end { framed}
\noindent If the page number is 0, it indicates that clicking on that entry doesn't move to a page.
By default, \cpdf \ converts unicode to ASCII text, dropping characters outside
the ASCII range. To prevent this, and return unicode UTF8 output, add the
\texttt { -utf8} option to the command. To prevent any processing, use the
\texttt { -raw} option.
\section { Remove Bookmarks}
\label { removebookmarks}
\index { bookmarks!removing}
The \texttt { -remove-bookmarks} operations removes all bookmarks from the file.
\begin { framed}
\small \verb !cpdf -remove-bookmarks in.pdf -o out.pdf!
\end { framed}
\section { Add Bookmarks}
\index { bookmarks!adding}
The \texttt { -add-bookmarks} file adds bookmarks as specified by a
\textit { bookmarks file} , a text file in ASCII or UTF8 encoding and in the same format as that produced by the
\texttt { -list-bookmarks} option. If there are any bookmarks in the input PDF
already, they are discarded. For example, if the file \texttt { bookmarks.txt}
contains the output from \texttt { -list-bookmarks} above, then the command
\begin { framed}
\small \verb !cpdf -add-bookmarks bookmarks.txt in.pdf -o out.pdf!
\end { framed}
\noindent adds the bookmarks to the input file, writing to \texttt { out.pdf} . An error
will be given if the bookmarks file is not in the correct form (in particular,
the numbers in the first column which specify the level must form a proper
tree with no entry being more than one greater than the last).
\chapter { Presentations}
\begin { framed}
\small \noindent \begin { verbatim}
cpdf -presentation in.pdf [<range>] -o out.pdf
[-trans <transition-name>] [-duration <float>]
[-vertical] [-outward] [-direction <int>]
[-effect-duration <float>]\end { verbatim}
\end { framed}
\index { presentations}
\vspace { 12mm}
The PDF file format, starting at Version 1.1, provides for simple slide-show
presentations in the manner of Microsoft Powerpoint. These can be played in
Acrobat and possibly other PDF viewers, typically started by entering
full-screen mode. The \texttt { -presentation} operation allows such a
presentation to be built from any PDF file.
The \texttt { -trans} option chooses the transition style. When a page range is
used, it is the transition \textit { from} each page named which is altered. The
following transition styles are available:
\begin { description}
\item [Split] Two lines sweep across the screen, revealing the new page. By
default the lines are horizontal. Vertical lines are selected by using the
\texttt { -vertical} option.
\item [Blinds] Multiple lines sweep across the screen, revealing the new page.
By default the lines are horizontal. Vertical lines are selected by using the
\texttt { -vertical} option.
\item [Box] A rectangular box sweeps inward from the edges of the page. Use
\texttt { -outward} to make it sweep from the center to the edges.
\item [Wipe] A single line sweeps across the screen from one edge to the other
in a direction specified by the \texttt { -direction} option.
\item [Dissolve] The old page dissolves gradually to reveal the new one.
\item [Glitter] The same as \textbf { Dissolve} but the effect sweeps across the
page in the direction specified by the \texttt { -direction} option.
\end { description}
\noindent To remove a transition style currently applied to the selected pages,
omit the \texttt { -trans} option.
The \texttt { -effect-duration} option specifies the length of time in seconds
for the transition itself. The default value is one second.
The \texttt { -duration} option specifies the maximum time in seconds that the
page is displayed before the presentation automatically advances. The default,
in the absence of the \texttt { -duration} option, is for no automatic
advancement.
The \texttt { -direction} option (for \textbf { Wipe} and \textbf { Glitter} styles
only) specifies the direction of the effect. The following values are valid:
\begin { itemize}
\item [\textbf{0}] Left to right
\item [\textbf{90}] Bottom to top (\textbf { Wipe} only)
\item [\textbf{180}] Right to left (\textbf { Wipe} only)
\item [\textbf{270}] Top to bottom
\item [\textbf{315}] Top-left to bottom-right (\textbf { Glitter} only)
\end { itemize}
\noindent For example:
\begin { framed}
\small
\noindent \verb !cpdf -presentation in.pdf 2-end -trans Split -duration 10 -o out.pdf!
\vspace { 2.5mm}
The \textbf { Split} style, with vertical lines, and each slide staying ten
seconds unless manually advanced. The first page (being a title) does not move
on automatically, and has no transition effect.
\end { framed}
\noindent To use different options on different page ranges, run \cpdf \ multiple times on
the file using a different page range each time.
\chapter { Watermarks and Stamps}
\label { stamps}
\index { watermarks}
\index { stamps}
\begin { framed}
\noindent \small \verb !cpdf -stamp-on source.pdf in.pdf [<range>] -o out.pdf!
\vspace { 1.5mm}
\noindent \small \verb !cpdf -stamp-under source.pdf in.pdf [<range>] -o out.pdf!
\vspace { 1.5mm}
\noindent \small \verb !cpdf -combine-pages over.pdf under.pdf -o out.pdf!
\vspace { 1.5mm}
\noindent \small \begin { verbatim} cpdf -add-text <text-format>
[-font <fontname>]
[-font-size <size-in-points>]
[-color <color>]
[-line-spacing <number>]
[-outline]
[-linewidth <number>]
[-underneath]
[-relative-to-cropbox]
[-prerotate]
[-bates <number>]
[-opacity <number>]
in.pdf [<range>] -o out.pdf\end { verbatim}
\noindent See also positioning commands below.
\vspace { 1.5mm}
\noindent \small \verb !cpdf -remove-text in.pdf [<range>] -o out.pdf!
\end { framed}
\section { Add a Watermark or Logo}
The \texttt { -stamp-on} and \texttt { -stamp-under} operations stamp the first
page of a source PDF onto or under each page in the given range of the input
file. For example,
\begin { framed}
\small \verb !cpdf -stamp-on logo.pdf in.pdf odd -o out.pdf!
\end { framed}
\noindent stamps the file \texttt { logo.pdf} onto the odd pages of \texttt { in.pdf} ,
writing to \texttt { out.pdf} . A watermark should go underneath each page:
\begin { framed}
\small \verb !cpdf -stamp-under topsecret.pdf in.pdf -o out.pdf!
\end { framed}
2014-10-06 15:32:53 +02:00
\noindent The position commands in \Sref { position} can be used to locate the stamp more precisely (they are calculated relative to the crop box of the stamp). Or, preprocess the stamp with \texttt { -shift} first.
The \texttt { -combine-pages} operation takes two PDF files and stamps each
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page of one over each page of the other. The length of the output is the same
as the length of the ``under'' file. For instance:
\begin { framed}
\small \verb !cpdf -combine-pages over.pdf under.pdf -o out.pdf!
\end { framed}
\noindent Page attributes (such as the display rotation) are taken from the ``under''
file. For best results, remove any rotation differences in the two files using
\texttt { -upright} first.
\section { Stamp Text, Dates and Times.}
\index { date}
\index { time}
\index { stamp text}
The \texttt { -add-text} operation allows text, dates and times to be stamped
over one or more pages of the input at a given position and using a given font,
font size and color.
\begin { framed}
\small \verb !cpdf -add-text "Copyright 2013 ACME Corp." in.pdf -o out.pdf!
\end { framed}
\noindent The default is black 12pt Times New Roman text in the top left of each page. The text can be placed underneath rather than over the page by adding the \texttt { -underneath} option.
Text previously added by \cpdf \ may be removed by the \texttt { -remove-text} operation.
\index { removing text}
\begin { framed}
\small \verb !cpdf -remove-text in.pdf -o out.pdf!
\end { framed}
\subsection { Page Numbers}
\index { page!numbers}
There are various special codes to include the page number in the text:
\vspace { 2mm}
\begin { tabular} { ll}
\texttt { \% Page} & Page number in arabic notation (1, 2, 3\ldots ) \\
\texttt { \% roman} & Page number in lower-case roman notation (i, ii, iii\ldots ) \\
\texttt { \% Roman} & Page number in upper-case roman notation (I, II, III\ldots ) \\
\texttt { \% EndPage} & Last page of document in arabic notation \\
\texttt { \% Label} & The page label of the page \\
\texttt { \% EndLabel} & The page label of the last page \\
\texttt { \% filename} & The full file name of the input document \\
\end { tabular}
\vspace { 2mm}
\noindent For example, the format \texttt { "Page~\% Page~of~\% EndPage"} might become "Page~5~of~17".
NB: In some circumstances (e.g in batch files) on Microsoft Windows, \% is a special character, and must be escaped (written as \verb $ %%$). Consult your local documentation for details.
\subsection { Date and Time Formats}
\begin { ctabular} { ll}
\texttt { \% a} & Abbreviated weekday name (Sun, Mon etc.)\\
\texttt { \% A} & Full weekday name (Sunday, Monday etc.)\\
\texttt { \% b} & Abbreviated month name (Jan, Feb etc.)\\
\texttt { \% B} & Full month name (January, February etc.)\\
\texttt { \% d} & Day of the month (01--31) \\
\texttt { \% e} & Day of the month (1--31) \\
\texttt { \% H} & Hour in 24-hour clock (00--23)\\
\texttt { \% I} & Hour in 12-hour clock (01--12)\\
\texttt { \% j} & Day of the year (001--366)\\
\texttt { \% m} & Month of the year (01--12)\\
\texttt { \% M} & Minute of the hour (00--59)\\
\texttt { \% p} & "a.m" or "p.m"\\
\texttt { \% S} & Second of the minute (00--61)\\
\texttt { \% T} & Same as \% H:\% M:\% S\\
\texttt { \% u} & Weekday (1--7, 1 = Monday)\\
\texttt { \% w} & Weekday (0--6, 0 = Monday)\\
\texttt { \% Y} & Year (0000--9999)\\
\texttt { \% \% } & The \% character.
\end { ctabular}
\subsection { Bates Numbers}
\index { bates numbers}
Unique page identifiers can be specified by putting \verb !%Bates! in the format.
The starting point can be set with the \texttt { -bates} option. For example:
\begin { framed}
\small \verb !cpdf -add-text "Page ID: %Bates" -bates 23745 in.pdf -o out.pdf!
\end { framed}
\subsection { Position}
\label { position}
The position of the text may be specified either in absolute terms:
\begin { framed}
\small \verb !-pos-center "200 200"!
\vspace { 2.5mm}
\noindent Position the center of the baseline text at (200pt, 200pt)
\vspace { 2.5mm}
\small \verb !-pos-left "200 200"!
\vspace { 2.5mm}
\noindent Position the left of the baseline of the text at (200pt, 200pt)
\vspace { 2.5mm}
\small \verb !-pos-right "200 200"!
\vspace { 2.5mm}
\noindent Position the right of the baseline of the text at (200pt, 200pt)
\end { framed}
\noindent Positions relative to certain common points can be set:
\begin { framed}
\noindent \begin { tabular} { ll}
\small \verb !-top 10! & Center of baseline 10 pts down from the top center \\
\small \verb !-topleft 10! & Left of baseline 10 pts down and in from top left \\
\small \verb !-topright 10! & Right of baseline 10 pts down and left from top right\\
\small \verb !-left 10! & Left of baseline 10 pts in from center left \\
\small \verb !-bottomleft 10! & Left of baseline 10 pts in and up from bottom left \\
\small \verb !-bottom 10! & Center of baseline 10 pts up from bottom center\\
\small \verb !-bottomright 10! & Right of baseline 10 pts up and in from bottom right \\
\small \verb !-right 10! & Right of baseline 10 pts in from the center right \\
\small \verb !-diagonal! & Diagonal, bottom left to top right, centered on page\\
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\small \verb !-reverse-diagonal! & Diagonal, bottom right to top left, centered on page\\
\small \verb !-center! & Centered on page\\
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\end { tabular}
\end { framed}
\noindent No attempt is made to take account of the page rotation when interpreting the
position, so \texttt { -prerotate} must be added to the command line if the file
contains pages with a non-zero viewing rotation. This is equivalent to
pre-processing the document with \texttt { -upright} .
%The \texttt{-shorter-side} modifier can be used to indicate that all the
%positions above are relative to the shorter side of the page, any rotation
%required being automatic. In other words, \texttt{top, topleft, topright} are
%either on the top or left, depending upon which is the shorter side, and
%\texttt{bottom, bottomleft, bottomright} are either on the bottom or right
%similarly. This flag has no effect on \texttt{-diagonal}.
The \texttt { -relative-to-cropbox} modifier can be added to the command line to
make these measurements relative to the crop box instead of the media box.
The default position is equivalent to \texttt { -topleft 100} .
The \texttt { -midline} option may be added to specify that the positioning
commands above are to be considered relative to the midline of the text, rather
than its baseline.
\subsection { Font and Size}
\index { font}
The font may be set with the \texttt { -font} option. The 14 Standard PDF fonts are available:
\vspace { 2mm}
\begin { ctabular} { l}
Times-Roman\\
Times-Bold\\
Times-Italic\\
Times-BoldItalic\\
Helvetica\\
Helvetica-Bold\\
Helvetica-Oblique\\
Helvetica-BoldOblique\\
Courier\\
Courier-Bold\\
Courier-Oblique\\
Courier-BoldOblique\\
Symbol\\
ZapfDingbats
\end { ctabular}
\noindent For example, page numbers in Times Italic can be achieved by:
\begin { framed}
\small \verb !cpdf -add-text "-%Page-" -font "Times-Italic" in.pdf -o out.pdf!
\end { framed}
\noindent See \Sref { copyfont} for how to use other fonts.
The font size can be altered with the \texttt { -font-size} option, which
specifies the size in points:
\begin { framed}
\small \verb !cpdf -add-text "-%Page-" -font-size 36 in.pdf -o out.pdf!
\end { framed}
\subsection { Colors}
\index { color}
The \texttt { -color} option takes an RGB color, where red, green and blue
components range between 0 and 1. The following values are predefined:
\vspace { 2mm}
\begin { tabular} { ll}
\textbf { Color} & \textbf { R, G, B} \\ \hline
white & 1, 1, 1\\
black & 0, 0, 0\\
red & 1, 0, 0\\
green & 0, 1, 0\\
blue & 0, 0, 1\\
\end { tabular}
\begin { framed}
\small \verb !cpdf -add-text "Hullo" -color "red" in.pdf -o out.pdf!
\vspace { 1.5mm}
\small \verb !cpdf -add-text "Hullo" -color "0.5 0.5 0.5" in.pdf -o out.pdf!
\end { framed}
\noindent Partly-transparent text may be specified using the \verb !-opacity! option. Wholly opaque is 1 and wholly transparent is 0. For example:
\begin { framed}
\small \verb !cpdf -add-text "DRAFT" -color "red" -opacity 0.3 -o out.pdf!
\end { framed}
\subsection { Outline Text}
\index { outline text}
The \texttt { -outline} option sets outline text. The line width (default 1pt)
may be set with the \texttt { -linewidth} option. For example, to stamp
documents as drafts:
\begin { framed}
\small \verb !cpdf -add-text "DRAFT" -diagonal -outline in.pdf -o out.pdf!
\end { framed}
\subsection { Multi-line Text}
The code \texttt { $ \backslash $ n} can be included in the text string to move to
the next line. In this case, the vertical position refers to the baseline of
the first line of text (if the position is at the top, top left or top right of
the page) or the baseline of the last line of text (if the position is at the
bottom, bottom left or bottom right).
\begin { framed}
\small \begin { verbatim} cpdf -add-text "Specification\n %Page of %EndPage"
-topright 10 in.pdf -o out.pdf\end { verbatim}
\end { framed}
\noindent The \texttt { -midline} option may be used to make these vertical positions
relative to the midline of a line of text rather than the baseline, as usual.
The \texttt { -line-spacing} option can be used to increase or decrease the line
spacing, where a spacing of 1 is the standard.
\begin { framed}
\small \begin { verbatim} cpdf -add-text "Specification\n %Page of %EndPage"
-topright 10 -line-spacing 1.5 in.pdf -o out.pdf\end { verbatim}
\end { framed}
\noindent Justification of multiple lines is handled by the \texttt { -justify-left} ,
\texttt { -justify-right} and\\ \texttt { -justify-center} options. The defaults are
left justification for positions relative to the left hand side of the page,
right justification for those relative to the right, and center justification
for positions relative to the center of the page. For example:
\begin { framed}
\small \begin { verbatim} cpdf -add-text "Long line\nShort " -justify-right
in.pdf -o out.pdf\end { verbatim}
\end { framed}
\subsection { Special Characters}
If your command line allows for the inclusion of unicode characters, the input
text will be considered as UTF8 by \verb !cpdf!. Special characters which exist
in the PDF WinAnsiEncoding Latin 1 code (such as many accented characters) will
be reproduced in the PDF. This does not mean, however, that every special
character can be reproduced. You must experiment.
For compatibility with previous versions of cpdf, special characters may be
introduced manually with a backslash followed by the three-digit octal code of
the character in the PDF WinAnsiEncoding Latin 1 Code. The full table is
included in Appendix D of the Adobe PDF Reference Manual, which is available at
\url { http://www.adobe.com/devnet/pdf/pdf_ reference.html} .
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For example, a German sharp s (\ss ) may be introduced by \verb !\3 37!.
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\chapter { Multipage Facilities}
\begin { framed}
\small \noindent \verb !cpdf -twoup-stack in.pdf -o out.pdf!
\vspace { 1.5mm}
\small \noindent \verb !cpdf -twoup in.pdf -o out.pdf!
\vspace { 1.5mm}
\small \noindent \verb !cpdf -pad-before in.pdf [<range>] -o out.pdf!
\vspace { 1.5mm}
\small \noindent \verb !cpdf -pad-after in.pdf [<range>] -o out.pdf!
\vspace { 1.5mm}
\small \noindent \verb !cpdf -pad-every [<integer>] in.pdf -o out.pdf!
\vspace { 1.5mm}
\small \noindent \verb !cpdf -pad-multiple [<integer>] in.pdf -o out.pdf!
\end { framed}
\section { Two-up}
\index { two-up}
This facility puts multiple logical pages on a single physical page.
The \texttt { -twoup-stack} operation puts two logical pages on each physical
page, rotating them 90 degrees to do so. The new mediabox is thus larger.
The \texttt { -twoup} operation does the same, but scales the new sides down so
that the media box is unchanged.
\section { Inserting Blank Pages}
\index { blank pages!inserting}
Sometimes, for instance to get a printing arrangement right, it's useful to
be able to insert blank pages into a PDF file. \cpdf \ can add blank pages
before a given page or pages, or after. The pages in question are specified by
a range in the usual way:
\begin { framed}
\small \verb !cpdf -pad-before in.pdf 1 -o out.pdf!
\vspace { 2.5mm}
\noindent Add a blank page before page 1 (i.e. at the beginning of the document.)
\vspace { 2.5mm}
\verb !cpdf -pad-after in.pdf 2,16,38,84,121,147 -o out.pdf!
\vspace { 2.5mm}
\noindent Add a blank page after pages 2, 16, 38, 84, 121 and 147 (for
instance, to add a clean page between chapters of a document.)
\end { framed}
\noindent The dimensions of the padded page are derived from the boxes (media box, crop box etc.) of the page after or before which the padding is to be applied.
The \verb !-pad-every n! operation places a blank page after every n pages, excluding any last one. For example\ldots
\begin { framed}
\small \verb !cpdf -pad-every 3 in.pdf -o out.pdf!
\vspace { 2.5mm}
\noindent Add a blank page after every three pages
\end { framed}
\noindent \ldots on a 9 page document adds a blank page after pages 3 and 6.
The \verb !-pad-multiple n! operation adds blank pages so the document has a multiple of \verb !n! pages. For example:
\begin { framed}
\small \verb !cpdf -pad-multiple 8 in.pdf -o out.pdf!
\vspace { 2.5mm}
\noindent Add blank pages to \texttt { in.pdf} so it has a multiple of 8 pages.
\end { framed}
\chapter { Annotations}
\begin { framed}
\small \noindent \verb !cpdf -list-annotations in.pdf [<range>]!
\vspace { 1.5mm}
\small \noindent \verb !cpdf -copy-annotations from.pdf to.pdf [<range>] -o out.pdf!
\vspace { 1.5mm}
\small \noindent \verb !cpdf -remove-annotations in.pdf [<range>] -o out.pdf!
\end { framed}
\section { List Annotations}
\index { annotations!listing}
The \texttt { -list-annotations} operation prints the textual content of any
annotations on the selected pages to standard output. Each annotation is
preceded by a separation marker consisting of a carriage return, a line of 80
dashes, and another carriage return.
\begin { framed}
\small \verb !cpdf -list-annotations in.pdf > annots.txt!
\vspace { 2.5mm}
\noindent Print annotations from \texttt { in.pdf} , redirecting output to \texttt { annots.txt} .
\end { framed}
\section { Copy Annotations}
\index { annotations!copying}
The \texttt { -copy-annotations} operation copies the annotations in the given
page range from one file (the file specified immediately after the option) to
another pre-existing PDF. The range is specified after this pre-existing PDF.
The result is then written an output file, specified in the usual way.
\begin { framed}
\small \verb !cpdf -copy-annotations from.pdf to.pdf 1-10 -o result.pdf !
\vspace { 2.5mm}
\noindent Copy annotations from the first ten pages of \texttt { from.pdf}
onto the PDF file \texttt { to.pdf} , writing the result to \texttt { results.pdf} .
\end { framed}
\section { Remove Annotations}
\index { annotations!removing}
The \texttt { -remove-annotations} operation removes all annotations from the
given page range.
\begin { framed}
\small \verb !cpdf -remove-annotations in.pdf 1 -o out.pdf!
\vspace { 2.5mm}
\noindent Remove annotations from the first page of a file only.
\end { framed}
\chapter { Document Information and Metadata}
\index { document information}
\index { metadata}
\begin { framed}
\small \noindent \verb !cpdf -list-fonts in.pdf!
\vspace { 1.5mm}
\small \noindent \verb !cpdf -info [-raw | -utf8] in.pdf!
\vspace { 1.5mm}
\small \noindent \verb !cpdf -page-info in.pdf!
\vspace { 1.5mm}
\small \noindent \verb !cpdf -pages in.pdf!
\vspace { 1.5mm}
\small \noindent \verb !cpdf -set-title <title of document> in.pdf -o out.pdf!\\
(Also \texttt { -set-author} etc. See \Sref { setdocinfo} .)
\vspace { 1.5mm}
\small \noindent \verb !cpdf -set-page-layout <layout> in.pdf -o out.pdf!
\vspace { 1.5mm}
\small \noindent \verb !cpdf -set-page-mode <mode> in.pdf -o out.pdf!
\vspace { 1.5mm}
\small \noindent \verb !cpdf -hide-toolbar <true | false> in.pdf -o out.pdf!\\
\noindent \verb ! -hide-menubar!\\
\noindent \verb ! -hide-window-ui!\\
\noindent \verb ! -fit-window!\\
\noindent \verb ! -center-window!\\
\noindent \verb ! -display-doc-title!
\vspace { 1.5mm}
\small \noindent \verb !cpdf -set-metadata <metadata-file> in.pdf -o out.pdf!
\vspace { 1.5mm}
\small \noindent \verb !cpdf -remove-metadata in.pdf -o out.pdf!
\vspace { 1.5mm}
\small \noindent \verb !cpdf -print-metadata in.pdf -o out.pdf!
2014-09-18 14:27:17 +02:00
\vspace { 1.5mm}
\small \noindent \verb !cpdf -add-page-labels in.pdf -o out.pdf!\\
\noindent \verb ! [-label-style <style>]!\\
\noindent \verb ! [-label-prefix <string>]!\\
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\noindent \verb ! [-label-startval <integer>]!\\
\vspace { 1.5mm}
\small \noindent \verb !cpdf -remove-page-labels in.pdf -o out.pdf!
2013-08-29 12:57:05 +02:00
\end { framed}
\section { Listing Fonts}
\index { fonts!listing}
The \texttt { -list-fonts} operation prints the fonts in the document,
one-per-line to standard output. For example:
\begin { framed} \small \begin { verbatim} 1 /F245 /Type0 /Cleargothic-Bold /Identity-H
1 /F247 /Type0 /ClearGothicSerialLight /Identity-H
1 /F248 /Type1 /Times-Roman /WinAnsiEncoding
1 /F250 /Type0 /Cleargothic-RegularItalic /Identity-H
2 /F13 /Type0 /Cleargothic-Bold /Identity-H
2 /F16 /Type0 /Arial-ItalicMT /Identity-H
2 /F21 /Type0 /ArialMT /Identity-H
2 /F58 /Type1 /Times-Roman /WinAnsiEncoding
2 /F59 /Type0 /ClearGothicSerialLight /Identity-H
2 /F61 /Type0 /Cleargothic-BoldItalic /Identity-H
2 /F68 /Type0 /Cleargothic-RegularItalic /Identity-H
3 /F47 /Type0 /Cleargothic-Bold /Identity-H
3 /F49 /Type0 /ClearGothicSerialLight /Identity-H
3 /F50 /Type1 /Times-Roman /WinAnsiEncoding
3 /F52 /Type0 /Cleargothic-BoldItalic /Identity-H
3 /F54 /Type0 /TimesNewRomanPS-BoldItalicMT /Identity-H
3 /F57 /Type0 /Cleargothic-RegularItalic /Identity-H
4 /F449 /Type0 /Cleargothic-Bold /Identity-H
4 /F451 /Type0 /ClearGothicSerialLight /Identity-H
4 /F452 /Type1 /Times-Roman /WinAnsiEncoding
\end { verbatim}
\end { framed}
\noindent The first column gives the page number, the second the internal unique font
name, the third the type of font (Type1, TrueType etc), the fourth the PDF font
name, the fifth the PDF font encoding.
\section { Reading Document Information}
\label { info}
The \texttt { -info} option prints entries from the document information
dictionary to standard output.
\begin { framed}
\begin { verbatim}
$ cpdf - info pdf _ reference.pdf
Encryption: 40bit
Linearized: true
Permissions: No edit
Version: 1.6
Pages: 1310
Title: PDF Reference, version 1.7
Author: Adobe Systems Incorporated
Subject: Adobe Portable Document Format (PDF)
Keywords:
Creator: FrameMaker 7.2
Producer: Acrobat Distiller 7.0.5 (Windows)
Created: D:20061017081020Z
Modified: D:20061118211043-02'30'
\end { verbatim}
\end { framed}
\noindent The details of the format for creation and modification dates can be found in
Appendix~\ref { dates} .
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By default, cpdf strips to ASCII, discarding character codes in excess of 127. In order to preserve the original unicode, add the \texttt { -utf8} option. To disable all postprocessing of the string, add \texttt { -raw} .
2013-08-29 12:57:05 +02:00
\vspace { 4mm}
The \texttt { -page-info} option prints the media box and other boxes
page-by-page to standard output:
\begin { framed}
\begin { verbatim}
$ cpdf - page - info 14 psfonts.pdf
Page 1:
MediaBox: 0.000000 0.000000 600.000000 450.000000
CropBox: 200.000000 200.000000 500.000000 500.000000
BleedBox:
TrimBox:
ArtBox:
Rotation: 0
\end { verbatim}
\end { framed}
\noindent Note that the format for boxes is minimum x, minimum y, maximum x, maximum y.
\smallgap
\noindent The \texttt { -pages} operation prints the number of pages in the file.
\begin { framed}
\begin { verbatim}
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cpdf -pages Archos.pdf
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8
\end { verbatim}
\end { framed}
\section { Setting Document Information}
\label { setdocinfo}
The \textit { document information dictionary} in a PDF file specifies various
pieces of information about a PDF. These can be consulted in a PDF viewer (for
instance, Acrobat).
Here is a summary of the commands for setting entries in the document
information dictionary:
\begin { framed}
\noindent \begin { tabular} { ll}
\textbf { Information} & \textbf { Example command-line fragment} \\
Title & \texttt { cpdf -set-title "Discourses"} \\
Author & \texttt { cpdf -set-author "Joe Smith"} \\
Subject & \texttt { cpdf -set-subject "Behavior"} \\
Keywords & \texttt { cpdf -set-keywords "Ape Primate"} \\
Creator & \texttt { cpdf -set-creator "Original Program"} \\
Producer & \texttt { cpdf -set-producer "Distilling Program"} \\
Creation Date & \texttt { cpdf -set-create "D:19970915110347-08'00'"} \\
Modification Date & \texttt { cpdf -set-modify "D:19970915110347-08'00'"} \\
Mark as Trapped & \texttt { cpdf -set-trapped} \\
Mark as Untrapped & \texttt { cpdf -set-untrapped} \\
\end { tabular}
\end { framed}
\noindent (The details of the format for creation and modification dates can be found
in Appendix~\ref { dates} . Using the date \texttt { "now"} uses the time and date
at which the command is executed.)
\vspace { 2mm}
For example, to set the title, the full command line would be
\begin { framed}
\small \verb !cpdf -set-title "A Night in London" in.pdf -o out.pdf!
\end { framed}
\noindent The text string is considered to be in UTF8 format, unless the \texttt { -raw}
option is added---in which case, it is unprocessed.
\section { Upon Opening a Document}
\subsection { Page Layout}
\index { page!layout}
The \texttt { -set-page-layout} option specifies the page layout to be used
when a document is opened in, for instance, Acrobat. The possible
(case-sensitive) values are:
\vspace { 2mm}
\begin { tabular} { ll}
\texttt { SinglePage} & \vspace { 2mm} \parbox { 8cm} { Display one page at a time} \\
\texttt { OneColumn} & \vspace { 2mm} \parbox { 8cm} { Display the pages in one column} \\
\texttt { TwoColumnLeft} & \vspace { 2mm} \parbox { 8cm} { Display the pages in two columns, odd numbered pages on the left} \\
\texttt { TwoColumnRight} & \vspace { 2mm} \parbox { 8cm} { Display the pages in two columns, even numbered pages on the left} \\
\texttt { TwoPageLeft} & \vspace { 2mm} \parbox { 8cm} { (PDF 1.5 and above) Display the pages two at a time, odd numbered pages on the left} \\
\texttt { TwoPageRight} & \vspace { 2mm} \parbox { 8cm} { (PDF 1.5 and above) Display the pages two at a time, even numbered pages on the left}
\end { tabular} \\
\noindent For instance:
\begin { framed}
\small \verb !cpdf -set-page-layout TwoColumnRight in.pdf -o out.pdf!
\end { framed}
\subsection { Page Mode}
\index { page!mode}
The \textit { page mode} in a PDF file defines how a viewer should display the
document when first opened. The possible (case-sensitive) values are:
\vspace { 2mm}
\begin { tabular} { ll}
\texttt { UseNone} & \vspace { 2mm} \parbox { 8cm} { Neither document outline nor thumbnail images visible} \\
\texttt { UseOutlines} & \vspace { 2mm} \parbox { 8cm} { Document outline (bookmarks) visible} \\
\texttt { UseThumbs} & \vspace { 2mm} \parbox { 8cm} { Thumbnail images visible} \\
\texttt { FullScreen} & \vspace { 2mm} \parbox { 8cm} { Full-screen mode (no menu bar, window controls, or anything but the document visible)} \\
\texttt { UseOC} & \vspace { 2mm} \parbox { 8cm} { (PDF 1.5 and above) Optional content group panel visible} \\
\texttt { UseAttachments} & \vspace { 2mm} \parbox { 8cm} { (PDF 1.5 and above) Attachments panel visible}
\end { tabular} \\
\noindent For instance:
\begin { framed}
\small \verb !cpdf -set-page-mode FullScreen in.pdf -o out.pdf!
\end { framed}
\subsection { Display Options}
\vspace { 2mm}
\begin { tabular} { ll}
\texttt { -hide-toolbar} & \vspace { 2mm} \parbox { 8cm} { Hide the viewer's toolbar} \\
\texttt { -hide-menubar} & \vspace { 2mm} \parbox { 8cm} { Document outline (bookmarks) visible} \\
\texttt { -hide-window-ui} & \vspace { 2mm} \parbox { 8cm} { Hide the viewer's scroll bars} \\
\texttt { -fit-window} & \vspace { 2mm} \parbox { 8cm} { Resize the document's windows to fit size of first page} \\
\texttt { -center-window} & \vspace { 2mm} \parbox { 8cm} { Position the document window in the center of the screen} \\
\texttt { -display-doc-title} & \vspace { 2mm} \parbox { 8cm} { Display the document title instead of the file name in the title bar}
\end { tabular} \\
\noindent For instance:
\begin { framed}
\small \verb !cpdf -hide-toolbar true in.pdf -o out.pdf!
\end { framed}
\section { Metadata}
\index { metadata}
PDF files can contain a piece of arbitrary metadata, often in XML format.
This is typically stored in an uncompressed stream, so that other applications
can read it without having to decode the whole PDF. To set the metadata:
\begin { framed}
\small \verb !cpdf -set-metadata data.xml in.pdf -o out.pdf!
\end { framed}
\noindent To remove any metadata:
\begin { framed}
\small \verb !cpdf -remove-metadata in.pdf -o out.pdf!
\end { framed}
\noindent To print the current metadata to standard output:
\begin { framed}
\small \verb !cpdf -print-metadata in.pdf!
\end { framed}
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\section { Page Labels}
\index { page labels} \index { page!labels}
It is possible to add \textit { page labels} to a document. These are not the printed on the page, but may be displayed alongside thumbnails or in print dialogue boxes by PDF readers. We use \texttt { -add-page-labels} to do this, by default with decimal arabic numbers (1,2,3\ldots ). We can add \texttt { -label-style} to choose what type of labels to add from these kinds:
\vspace { 4mm}
\begin { tabular} { rl}
\texttt { DecimalArabic} & 1,2,3,4,5\ldots \\
\texttt { LowercaseRoman} & i,ii,iii,iv,v\ldots \\
\texttt { UppercaseRoman} & I,II,III,IV,V\ldots \\
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\texttt { LowercaseLetters} & a,b,c,\ldots ,z,aa,bb\ldots \\
\texttt { UppercaseLetters} & A,B,C,\ldots ,Z,AA,BB\ldots \\
\texttt { NoLabelPrefixOnly} & No number, but a prefix will be used if defined.
2014-09-18 14:27:17 +02:00
\end { tabular}
\vspace { 4mm}
\noindent We can use \texttt { -label-prefix} to add a textual prefix to each label.
Consider a file with twenty pages and no current page labels (a PDF reader will assume 1,2,3\ldots if there are none). We will add the following page labels:
\vspace { 4mm}
i, ii, iii, iv, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, A-0, A-1, A-2, A-3, A-4, A-5
\vspace { 4mm}
\noindent Here are the commands, in order:
\begin { framed}
\noindent \verb !cpdf -add-page-labels in.pdf 1-4 -label-style LowercaseRoman!\\
\noindent \verb ! -o out.pdf!\\
\noindent \verb !cpdf -add-page-labels out.pdf 5-14 -o out.pdf!\\
\noindent \verb !cpdf -add-page-labels out.pdf 15-20 -label-prefix "A-"!\\
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\noindent \verb ! -label-startval 0 -o out.pdf!
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\end { framed}
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\noindent By default the labels begin at page number 1 for each range. To override this, we can use \texttt { -label-startval} (we used $ 0 $ in the final command), where we want the numbers to begin at zero rather than one.
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Page labels may be removed altogether by using \texttt { -remove-page-labels} command.
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\chapter { File Attachments}
\index { attachments}
\begin { framed}
\small \noindent \verb !cpdf -attach-file <filename> [-to-page <page number>] in.pdf -o out.pdf!
\vspace { 1.5mm}
\small \noindent \verb !cpdf -list-attached-files in.pdf!
\vspace { 1.5mm}
\small \noindent \verb !cpdf -remove-files in.pdf -o out.pdf!
\end { framed}
PDF supports adding attachments (files of any kind, including other PDFs) to
an existing file. The \cpdf \ tool supports adding and removing \textit { document-level
attachments} --- that is, ones which are associated with the document as a
whole rather than with an individual page, and also \textit { page-level attachments} , associated with a particular page.
\section { Adding Attachments}
\index { attachments!adding}
To add an attachment, use the \texttt { -attach-file} option. For instance,
\begin { framed}
\small \verb !cpdf -attach-file sheet.xls in.pdf -o out.pdf!
\end { framed}
\noindent attaches the Excel spreadsheet \texttt { sheet.xls} to the input file. If the file already has attachments, the new file is added to their number. You can specify multiple files to be attached by using \verb !-attach-file! multiple times. They will be attached in the given order.
The \texttt { -to-page} option can be used to specify that the files will be attached to the given page, rather than at the document level. The \texttt { -to-page} option may be specified at most once.
\section { Listing Attachments}
\index { attachments!listing}
To list all document- and page-level attachments, use the \texttt { -list-attached-files} operation. The page number and filename of each attachment is given, page 0 representing a document-level attachment.
\begin { framed}
\begin { verbatim}
$ cpdf - list - attached - files 14 psfonts.pdf
0 utility.ml
0 utility.mli
4 notes.xls
\end { verbatim}
\end { framed}
\section { Removing Attachments}
\index { attachments!removing}
To remove all document-level and page-level attachments from a file, use the \texttt { -remove-files} operation:
\begin { framed}
\small \verb !cpdf -remove-files in.pdf -o out.pdf!
\end { framed}
\chapter { Working with Images}
\begin { framed}
\noindent \small \verb !cpdf -image-resolution <minimum resolution> in.pdf [<range>]!
%\vspace{1.5mm}
%\noindent\small\verb!cpdf -extract-images in.pdf [<range>] -o <string>!
\end { framed}
\section { Detecting Low-resolution Images}
To list all images in the given range of pages which fall below a given resolution (in dots-per-inch), use the \verb !-image-resolution! function:
\begin { framed}
\noindent \small \verb @cpdf -image-resolution 300 in.pdf [<range>]@
\end { framed}
\begin { framed}
\begin { verbatim} 2, /Im5, 531, 684, 149.935297, 150.138267
2, /Im6, 184, 164, 149.999988, 150.458710
2, /Im7, 171, 156, 149.999996, 150.579145
2, /Im9, 65, 91, 149.999986, 151.071856
2, /Im10, 94, 60, 149.999990, 152.284285
2, /Im15, 184, 139, 149.960011, 150.672060
4, /Im29, 53, 48, 149.970749, 151.616446\end { verbatim}
\end { framed}
\noindent The format is \textit { page number, image name, x pixels, y pixels, x resolution, y resolution} . The resolutions refer to the image's effective resolution at point of use (taking account of scaling, rotation etc).
% \section{Extracting Images}
% \begin{framed}
% \noindent\verb!cpdf -extract-images in.pdf [<range>] -o <string>!
% \end{framed}
%The Tools can extract images from PDF files to JPEG, JPEG2000, JBIG2 and PNM (Portable Any Map) files. Images which are already in JPEG/JPEG2000/JBIG2 format in the PDF are written in those formats, unaltered. All other images are decoded and written as PNM files (unless the decoding method is unknown). If the command line tool \textsf{pnm2png} is present, PNG files are output instead.
%For example,
% \begin{framed}
% \small\verb!cpdf -extract-images in.pdf 2-6 -o img%%%!
% \end{framed}
%might generate \texttt{img001.jpg}, \texttt{img002.png}, \texttt{img003.jpg} etc. from the images on pages two to six. The number of percentage characters in the output format indicate the width of the numbering system for the output file names.
\chapter { Fonts}
\begin { framed}
\noindent \verb !cpdf -copy-font fromfile.pdf -copy-font-page <int>!
\noindent \verb ! -copy-font-name <name> in.pdf [<range>] -o out.pdf!
\vspace { 1.5mm}
\noindent \verb !cpdf -remove-fonts in.pdf -o out.pdf!
\vspace { 1.5mm}
\noindent \verb !cpdf -missing-fonts in.pdf!
\end { framed}
\section { Copying Fonts}
\label { copyfont}
In order to use a font other than the standard 14 with \verb !-add-text!, it
must be added to the file. The font source PDF is given, together with the
font's resource name on a given page, and that font is copied to all the pages
in the input file's range, and then written to the output file.
The font is named in the output file with it's basefont name, so it can be
easily used with \verb !-add-text!.
For example, if the file \verb !fromfile.pdf! has a font \verb !/GHLIGA+c128! with
the name \verb !/F10! on page 1 (this information can be found with
\verb !-list-fonts!), the following would copy the font to the file
\verb !in.pdf! on all pages, writing the output to \verb !out.pdf!:
\begin { framed}
\small \noindent \verb !cpdf -copy-font fromfile.pdf -copy-font-name /F10!
\small \noindent \verb ! -copy-font-page 1 in.pdf -o out.pdf!
\vspace { 2.5mm}
\end { framed}
\noindent Text in this font can then be added by giving \verb !-font /GHLIGA+c128!. Be
aware that due to the vagaries of PDF font handling concerning which characters
are present in the source font, not all characters may be available, or the
encoding (mapping from input codes to glyphs) may be non-obvious.
\section { Removing Fonts}
\label { removefont}
To remove embedded fonts from a document, use \verb !-remove-fonts!. PDF readers will
substitute local fonts for the missing fonts. The use of this function is only
recommended when file size is the sole consideration.
\begin { framed}
\small \noindent \verb !cpdf -remove-fonts in.pdf -o out.pdf!
\vspace { 2.5mm}
\end { framed}
\section { Listing Missing Fonts}
The \verb !-missing-fonts! operation lists any unembedded fonts in the document, one per line.
\begin { framed}
\small \noindent \verb !cpdf -missing-fonts in.pdf!
\vspace { 2.5mm}
\end { framed}
\noindent The format is
\begin { framed}
\small \noindent \verb !Page number, Name, Subtype, Basefont, Encoding!
\vspace { 2.5mm}
\end { framed}
\label { listmisingfonts}
\chapter { Miscellaneous}
\begin { framed}
\noindent \verb !cpdf -draft [-boxes] in.pdf [<range>] -o out.pdf!
\vspace { 1.5mm}
\noindent \verb !cpdf -blacktext in.pdf [<range>] -o out.pdf!
\vspace { 1.5mm}
\noindent \verb !cpdf -blacklines in.pdf [<range>] -o out.pdf!
\vspace { 1.5mm}
\noindent \verb !cpdf -blackfills in.pdf [<range>] -o out.pdf!
\vspace { 1.5mm}
\noindent \verb !cpdf -thinlines <minimum thickness> in.pdf [<range>] -o out.pdf!
\vspace { 1.5mm}
\noindent \verb !cpdf -clean in.pdf -o out.pdf!
\vspace { 1.5mm}
\noindent \verb !cpdf -set-version <version number> in.pdf -o out.pdf!
\vspace { 1.5mm}
\noindent \verb !cpdf -copy-id-from source.pdf in.pdf -o out.pdf!
\vspace { 1.5mm}
\noindent \verb !cpdf -remove-id in.pdf -o out.pdf!
\end { framed}
\section { Draft Documents}
\index { draft}
The \texttt { -draft} option removes bitmap (photographic) images from a
file, so that it can be printed with less ink. Optionally, the
\texttt { -boxes} option can be added, filling the spaces left blank with a
crossed box denoting where the image was. This is not guaranteed to be fully
visible in all cases (the bitmap may be have been partially covered by vector
objects or clipped in the original). For example:
\begin { framed}
\small \verb !cpdf -draft -boxes in.pdf -o out.pdf!
\end { framed}
\section { Blackening Text, Lines and Fills}
\index { blacken text}
Sometimes PDF output from an application (for instance, a web browser) has
text in colors which would not print well on a grayscale printer. The
\texttt { -blacktext} operation blackens all text on the given pages so it will be readable
when printed.
This will not work on text which has been converted to outlines, nor on text
which is part of a form.
\begin { framed}
\small \verb !cpdf -blacktext in.pdf -o out.pdf!
\end { framed}
\index { blacken lines}
\noindent The \texttt { -blacklines} operation blackens all lines on the given pages.
\begin { framed}
\small \verb !cpdf -blacklines in.pdf -o out.pdf!
\end { framed}
\index { blacken fills}
\noindent The \texttt { -blackfills} operation blackens all fills on the given pages.
\begin { framed}
\small \verb !cpdf -blackfills in.pdf -o out.pdf!
\end { framed}
\section { Hairline Removal}
\index { hairline removal}
Quite often, applications will use very thin lines, or even the value of 0,
which in PDF means "The thinnest possible line on the output device". This
might be fine for on-screen work, but when printed on a high resolution device,
such as by a commercial printer, they may be too faint, or disappear
altogether. The \texttt { -thinlines} option prevents this by changing all lines
thinner than \texttt { <minimal~thickness>} to the given thickness. For example:
\begin { framed}
\small \noindent \verb !cpdf -thinlines 0.2mm in.pdf [<range>] -o out.pdf!
\vspace { 2.5mm}
\noindent Thicken all lines less than 0.2mm to that value.
\end { framed}
\section { Garbage Collection}
\index { garbage collection}
Sometimes incremental updates to a file by an application, or bad
applications can leave data in a PDF file which is no longer used. This
function removes that unneeded data.
\begin { framed}
\small \noindent \verb !cpdf -clean in.pdf -o out.pdf!
\end { framed}
\section { Change PDF Version Number}
\index { version number}
\label { setversion}
To change the pdf version number, use the \texttt { -set-version} operation,
giving the part of the version number after the decimal point. For example:
\begin { framed}
\small \noindent \verb !cpdf -set-version 4 in.pdf -o out.pdf!
\vspace { 2.5mm}
\noindent Change file to PDF 1.4.
\end { framed}
\noindent This does not alter any of the actual data in the file ---
just the supposed version number.
\section { Copy ID}
\index { copy ID}
The \texttt { -copy-id-from} operation copies the ID from the given file to the
input, writing to the output.
\begin { framed}
\small \noindent \verb !cpdf -copy-id-from source.pdf in.pdf -o out.pdf!
\vspace { 2.5mm}
\noindent Copy the id from \texttt { source.pdf} to the contents of \texttt { in.pdf} , writing to \texttt { out.pdf} .
\end { framed}
\noindent If there is no ID in the source file, the existing ID is retained.
\section { Remove ID}
\index { remove ID}
The \texttt { -remove-id} operation removes the ID from a document.
\begin { framed}
\small \noindent \verb !cpdf -remove-id in.pdf -o out.pdf!
\vspace { 2.5mm}
\noindent Remove the ID from \texttt { in.pdf} , writing to \texttt { out.pdf} .
\end { framed}
\appendix
\chapter { Dates}
\label { dates}
\index { dates!defined}
Dates in PDF are specified according to the following format:
\begin { framed}
\texttt { D:YYYYMMDDHHmmSSOHH'mm'} \\ \\ where:
\begin { itemize}
\item \texttt { YYYY} is the year;
\item \texttt { MM} is the month;
\item \texttt { DD} is the day (01-31);
\item \texttt { HH} is the hour (00-23);
\item \texttt { mm} is the minute (00-59);
\item \texttt { SS} is the second (00-59);
\item \texttt { O} is the relationship of local time to Universal Time (UT), denoted by '+', '-' or 'Z';
\item \texttt { HH} is the absolute value of the offset from UT in hours (00-23);
\item \texttt { mm} is the absolute value of the offset from UT in minutes (00-59).
\end { itemize}
\end { framed}
\noindent A contiguous prefix of the parts above can be used instead, for lower
accuracy dates. For example:
\begin { framed}
\small \noindent \verb !D:2013! (2013)
\vspace { 1.5mm}
\noindent \verb !D:20130103! (3rd March 2013)
\vspace { 1.5mm}
\noindent \verb !D:201301031854-08'00'! (3rd March 2013, 6:54PM, US Pacific Standard Time)
\end { framed}
\backmatter
\printindex
\end { document}