minecart
is a Python package that simplifies the extraction of text,
images, and shapes from a PDF document. It provides a very Pythonic
interface to extract positioning, color, and font metadata for all of
the objects in the PDF. It is a pure-Python package (it depends on
pdfminer
for the low-level parsing). minecart
takes
inspiration from Tim McNamara’s slate
, but aims to provide more
detailed information:
>>> pdffile = open('example.pdf', 'rb')
>>> doc = minecart.Document(pdffile)
>>> page = doc.get_page(3)
>>> for shape in page.shapes.iter_in_bbox((0, 0, 100, 200)):
... print shape.path, shape.fill.color.as_rgb()
>>> im = page.images[0].as_pil() # requires pillow
>>> im.show()
Currently only Python 2.7 is supported. 3.4+ support (using
pdfminer.six
) is planned.
- The easy way:
pip install minecart
- The hard way: download the source code, change into the working
directory, and run
python setup.py install
For CJK languages: Supporting the CJK languages requires an
addtional step, as detailed in pdfminer
.
- Shapes: You can extract path information, bounding box, stroke
parameters, and stroke/fill colors. Color support is fairly robust,
allowing the simple
.as_rgb()
in most cases. (To be concrete,minecart
supports theDeviceRGB
,DeviceCMYK
,DeviceGray
, andCIE-based
color spaces.Indexed
colors are supported if they index into one of the above.) - Images:
minecart
can easily extract images toPIL.Image
objects. - Text: (Called
Lettering
in the source) In addition to extracting plain text from the PDF, you can access the position/bounding box information and the font used.
If there’s a feature you’d like to extract from a PDF that’s not currently supported, open up an issue or submit a pull request! I’m especially interested in hearing whether there are many PDFs using color spaces outside of the ones currently supported.
The main entry point will always be minecart.Document
, which accepts
a single parameter, an open file-like object which will be read to
create the document. The Document
has two primary methods for
accessing its contents: .get_page(num)
and .iter_pages()
. Both
methods return minecart.Page
objects, which provide access to the
graphical elements found on the page. Page
objects have three main
attributes:
.images
: A list of all theminecart.Image
objects found on the page..letterings
: A list of all the text objects found on the page, asLettering
objects.Lettering
is aunicode
subclass which adds bounding box and font information (using.get_bbox()
or.font
)..shapes
: A list of all the squares, circles, lines, etc. found on the page asShape
objects.Shape
objects have three main attributes of interest:.stroke
: An object containing the stroke parameters used to draw the shape..stroke
has.color
,.linewidth
,.linecap
,.linejoin
,.miterlimit
, and.dash
attributes. If the shape was not stroked,.stroke
will beNone
..fill
: An object containing the fill parameters used to draw the shape. Right now,.fill
only has a.color
parameter..path
: A list with the coordinates used to defined the shape, as well as the type of line segment each set of coordinates defines. Refer to theminecart.Shape
documentation for more details
Note on color: The PDF spec spends a fair amount of time dealing
with color specifications, defining color spaces, and transforms and
the like. minecart
's approach is to simplify things down with sensible
defaults, so that every color has an .as_rgb()
method, which returns
a 3-tuple with component values between 0 (black) and 1 (white). If you
are interested in extracting colorspace families and parameters, you can
do that too, though!
We try to keep docstrings complete and up to date, so you can read
through the source or use dir
and help
to see what methods are
available.
If you are having trouble working with minecart
, feel free to create
a new issue.
Bug reports are always welcome (using the GitHub tracker) as are feature requests. The PDF spec has so many corners, it is hard to prioritize which features to implement. If there’s something you’d like to extract from a document but isn’t currently supported, please create a new issue.
If you’d like to contribute code, you can either create an issue and include a patch (if the changes are small) or fork the project and create a pull request.
This project is licensed under the MIT license.