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593 lines
21 KiB
Markdown
593 lines
21 KiB
Markdown
Introduction
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============
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PDFio is a simple C library for reading and writing PDF files. The primary
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goals of pdfio are:
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- Read and write any version of PDF file
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- Provide access to pages, objects, and streams within a PDF file
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- Support reading and writing of encrypted PDF files
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- Extract or embed useful metadata (author, creator, page information, etc.)
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- "Filter" PDF files, for example to extract a range of pages or to embed fonts
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that are missing from a PDF
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- Provide access to objects used for each page
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PDFio is *not* concerned with rendering or viewing a PDF file, although a PDF
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RIP or viewer could be written using it.
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PDFio is Copyright © 2021-2022 by Michael R Sweet and is licensed under the
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Apache License Version 2.0 with an (optional) exception to allow linking against
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GPL2/LGPL2 software. See the files "LICENSE" and "NOTICE" for more information.
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Requirements
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------------
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PDFio requires the following to build the software:
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- A C99 compiler such as Clang, GCC, or MS Visual C
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- A POSIX-compliant `make` program
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- ZLIB (<https://www.zlib.net>) 1.0 or higher
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IDE files for Xcode (macOS/iOS) and Visual Studio (Windows) are also provided.
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Installing pdfio
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----------------
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PDFio comes with a portable makefile that will work on any POSIX-compliant
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system with ZLIB installed. To make it, run:
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make all
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To test it, run:
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make test
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To install it, run:
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make install
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If you want a shared library, run:
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make all-shared
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make install-shared
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The default installation location is "/usr/local". Pass the `prefix` variable
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to make to install it to another location:
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make install prefix=/some/other/directory
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The makefile installs the pdfio header to "${prefix}/include", the library to
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"${prefix}/lib", the `pkg-config` file to "${prefix}/lib/pkgconfig", the man
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page to "${prefix}/share/man/man3", and the documentation to
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"${prefix}/share/doc/pdfio".
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The makefile supports the following variables that can be specified in the make
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command or as environment variables:
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- `AR`: the library archiver (default "ar")
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- `ARFLAGS`: options for the library archiver (default "cr")
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- `CC`: the C compiler (default "cc")
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- `CFLAGS`: options for the C compiler (default "")
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- `CODESIGN_IDENTITY`: the identity to use when code signing the shared library
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on macOS (default "Developer ID")
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- `COMMONFLAGS`: options for the C compiler and linker (typically architecture
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and optimization options, default is "-Os -g")
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- `CPPFLAGS`: options for the C preprocessor (default "")
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- `DESTDIR` and `DSTROOT`: specifies a root directory when installing
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(default is "", specify only one)
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- `DSOFLAGS`: options for the C compiler when linking the shared library
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(default "")
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- `LDFLAGS`: options for the C compiler when linking the test programs
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(default "")
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- `LIBS`: library options when linking the test programs (default "-lz")
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- `RANLIB`: program that generates a table-of-contents in a library
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(default "ranlib")
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- `prefix`: specifies the installation directory (default "/usr/local")
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Visual Studio Project
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---------------------
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The Visual Studio solution ("pdfio.sln") is provided for Windows developers and
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generates both a static library and DLL.
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Xcode Project
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-------------
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There is also an Xcode project ("pdfio.xcodeproj") you can use on macOS which
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generates a static library that will be installed under "/usr/local" with:
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sudo xcodebuild install
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You can reproduce this with the makefile using:
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sudo make macos install
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Detecting PDFio
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---------------
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PDFio can be detected using the `pkg-config` command, for example:
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if pkg-config --exists pdfio; then
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...
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fi
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In a makefile you can add the necessary compiler and linker options with:
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```make
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CFLAGS += `pkg-config --cflags pdfio`
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LIBS += `pkg-config --libs pdfio`
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```
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On Windows, you need to link to the `PDFIO1.LIB` (DLL) library and include the
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`zlib_native` NuGet package dependency. You can also use the published
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`pdfio_native` NuGet package.
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Header Files
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------------
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PDFio provides a primary header file that is always used:
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```c
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#include <pdfio.h>
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```
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PDFio also provides [PDF content helper functions](@) for producing PDF content
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that are defined in a separate header file:
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```c
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#include <pdfio-content.h>
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```
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API Overview
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============
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PDFio exposes several types:
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- `pdfio_file_t`: A PDF file (for reading or writing)
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- `pdfio_array_t`: An array of values
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- `pdfio_dict_t`: A dictionary of key/value pairs in a PDF file, object, etc.
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- `pdfio_obj_t`: An object in a PDF file
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- `pdfio_stream_t`: An object stream
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Reading PDF Files
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-----------------
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You open an existing PDF file using the [`pdfioFileOpen`](@@) function:
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```c
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pdfio_file_t *pdf = pdfioFileOpen("myinputfile.pdf", error_cb, error_data);
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```
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where the three arguments to the function are the filename ("myinputfile.pdf"),
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an optional error callback function (`error_cb`), and an optional pointer value
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for the error callback function (`error_data`). The error callback is called
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for both errors and warnings and accepts the `pdfio_file_t` pointer, a message
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string, and the callback pointer value, for example:
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```c
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bool
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error_cb(pdfio_file_t *pdf, const char *message, void *data)
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{
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(void)data; // This callback does not use the data pointer
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fprintf(stderr, "%s: %s\n", pdfioFileGetName(pdf), message);
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// Return false to treat warnings as errors
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return (false);
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}
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```
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The default error callback (`NULL`) does the equivalent of the above.
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Each PDF file contains one or more pages. The [`pdfioFileGetNumPages`](@@)
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function returns the number of pages in the file while the
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[`pdfioFileGetPage`](@@) function gets the specified page in the PDF file:
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```c
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pdfio_file_t *pdf; // PDF file
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size_t i; // Looping var
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size_t count; // Number of pages
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pdfio_obj_t *page; // Current page
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// Iterate the pages in the PDF file
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for (i = 0, count = pdfioFileGetNumPages(pdf); i < count; i ++)
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{
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page = pdfioFileGetPage(pdf, i);
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// do something with page
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}
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```
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Each page is represented by a "page tree" object (what [`pdfioFileGetPage`](@@)
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returns) that specifies information about the page and one or more "content"
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objects that contain the images, fonts, text, and graphics that appear on the
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page. Use the [`pdfioPageGetNumStreams`](@@) and [`pdfioPageOpenStream`](@@)
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functions to access the content streams for each page.
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The [`pdfioFileClose`](@@) function closes a PDF file and frees all memory that
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was used for it:
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```c
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pdfioFileClose(pdf);
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```
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Writing PDF Files
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-----------------
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You create a new PDF file using the [`pdfioFileCreate`](@@) function:
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```c
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pdfio_rect_t media_box = { 0.0, 0.0, 612.0, 792.0 }; // US Letter
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pdfio_rect_t crop_box = { 36.0, 36.0, 576.0, 756.0 }; // w/0.5" margins
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pdfio_file_t *pdf = pdfioFileCreate("myoutputfile.pdf", "2.0", &media_box, &crop_box, error_cb, error_data);
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```
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where the six arguments to the function are the filename ("myoutputfile.pdf"),
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PDF version ("2.0"), media box (`media_box`), crop box (`crop_box`), an optional
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error callback function (`error_cb`), and an optional pointer value for the
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error callback function (`error_data`). The units for the media and crop boxes
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are points (1/72nd of an inch).
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Alternately you can stream a PDF file using the [`pdfioFileCreateOutput`](@@)
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function:
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```c
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pdfio_rect_t media_box = { 0.0, 0.0, 612.0, 792.0 }; // US Letter
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pdfio_rect_t crop_box = { 36.0, 36.0, 576.0, 756.0 }; // w/0.5" margins
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pdfio_file_t *pdf = pdfioFileCreateOutput(output_cb, output_ctx, "2.0", &media_box, &crop_box, error_cb, error_data);
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```
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Once the file is created, use the [`pdfioFileCreateObj`](@@),
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[`pdfioFileCreatePage`](@@), and [`pdfioPageCopy`](@@) functions to create
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objects and pages in the file.
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Finally, the [`pdfioFileClose`](@@) function writes the PDF cross-reference and
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"trailer" information, closes the file, and frees all memory that was used for
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it.
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PDF Objects
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-----------
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PDF objects are identified using two numbers - the object number (1 to N) and
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the object generation (0 to 65535) that specifies a particular version of an
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object. An object's numbers are returned by the [`pdfioObjGetNumber`](@@) and
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[`pdfioObjGetGeneration`](@@) functions. You can find a numbered object using
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the [`pdfioFileFindObj`](@@) function.
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Objects contain values (typically dictionaries) and usually an associated data
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stream containing images, fonts, ICC profiles, and page content. PDFio provides several accessor functions to get the value(s) associated with an object:
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- [`pdfioObjGetArray`](@@) returns an object's array value, if any
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- [`pdfioObjGetDict`](@@) returns an object's dictionary value, if any
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- [`pdfioObjGetLength`](@@) returns the length of the data stream, if any
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- [`pdfioObjGetSubtype`](@@) returns the sub-type name of the object, for
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example "Image" for an image object.
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- [`pdfioObjGetType`](@@) returns the type name of the object, for example
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"XObject" for an image object.
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PDF Streams
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-----------
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Some PDF objects have an associated data stream, such as for pages, images, ICC
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color profiles, and fonts. You access the stream for an existing object using
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the [`pdfioObjOpenStream`](@@) function:
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```c
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pdfio_file_t *pdf = pdfioFileOpen(...);
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pdfio_obj_t *obj = pdfioFileFindObj(pdf, number);
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pdfio_stream_t *st = pdfioObjOpenStream(obj, true);
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```
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The first argument is the object pointer. The second argument is a boolean
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value that specifies whether you want to decode (typically decompress) the
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stream data or return it as-is.
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When reading a page stream you'll use the [`pdfioPageOpenStream`](@@) function
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instead:
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```c
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pdfio_file_t *pdf = pdfioFileOpen(...);
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pdfio_obj_t *obj = pdfioFileGetPage(pdf, number);
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pdfio_stream_t *st = pdfioPageOpenStream(obj, 0, true);
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```
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Once you have the stream open, you can use one of several functions to read
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from it:
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- [`pdfioStreamConsume`](@@) reads and discards a number of bytes in the stream
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- [`pdfioStreamGetToken`](@@) reads a PDF token from the stream
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- [`pdfioStreamPeek`](@@) peeks at the next stream data without advancing or
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"consuming" it
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- [`pdfioStreamRead`](@@) reads a buffer of data
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When you are done reading from the stream, call the [`pdfioStreamClose`](@@)
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function:
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```c
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pdfioStreamClose(st);
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```
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To create a stream for a new object, call the [`pdfioObjCreateStream`](@@)
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function:
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```c
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pdfio_file_t *pdf = pdfioFileCreate(...);
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pdfio_obj_t *obj = pdfioFileCreateObj(pdf, ...);
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pdfio_stream_t *st = pdfioObjCreateStream(obj, PDFIO_FILTER_FLATE);
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```
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The first argument is the newly created object. The second argument is either
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`PDFIO_FILTER_NONE` to specify that any encoding is done by your program or
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`PDFIO_FILTER_FLATE` to specify that PDFio should Flate compress the stream.
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To create a page content stream call the [`pdfioFileCreatePage`](@@) function:
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```c
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pdfio_file_t *pdf = pdfioFileCreate(...);
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pdfio_dict_t *dict = pdfioDictCreate(pdf);
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... set page dictionary keys and values ...
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pdfio_stream_t *st = pdfioFileCreatePage(pdf, dict);
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```
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Once you have created the stream, use any of the following functions to write
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to the stream:
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- [`pdfioStreamPrintf`](@@) writes a formatted string to the stream
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- [`pdfioStreamPutChar`](@@) writes a single character to the stream
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- [`pdfioStreamPuts`](@@) writes a C string to the stream
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- [`pdfioStreamWrite`](@@) writes a buffer of data to the stream
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The [PDF content helper functions](@) provide additional functions for writing
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specific PDF page stream commands.
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When you are done writing the stream, call [`pdfioStreamCLose`](@@) to close
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both the stream and the object.
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PDF Content Helper Functions
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----------------------------
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PDFio includes many helper functions for embedding or writing specific kinds of
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content to a PDF file. These functions can be roughly grouped into ???
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categories:
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- [Color Space Functions](@)
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- [Font Object Functions](@)
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- [Image Object Functions](@)
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- [Page Stream Functions](@)
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- [Page Dictionary Functions](@)
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### Color Space Functions
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PDF color spaces are specified using well-known names like "DeviceCMYK",
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"DeviceGray", and "DeviceRGB" or using arrays that define so-called calibrated
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color spaces. PDFio provides several functions for embedding ICC profiles and
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creating color space arrays:
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- [`pdfioArrayCreateColorFromICCObj`](@@) creates a color array for an ICC color profile object
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- [`pdfioArrayCreateColorFromMatrix`](@@) creates a color array using a CIE XYZ color transform matrix, a gamma value, and a CIE XYZ white point
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- [`pdfioArrayCreateColorFromPalette`](@@) creates an indexed color array from an array of sRGB values
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- [`pdfioArrayCreateColorFromPrimaries`](@@) creates a color array using CIE XYZ primaries and a gamma value
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- [`pdfioArrayCreateColorFromStandard`](@@) creates a color array for a standard color space
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You can embed an ICC color profile using the
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[`pdfioFileCreateICCObjFromFile`](@@) function:
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```c
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pdfio_file_t *pdf = pdfioFileCreate(...);
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pdfio_obj_t *icc = pdfioFileCreateICCObjFromFile(pdf, "filename.icc");
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```
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where the first argument is the PDF file and the second argument is the filename
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of the ICC color profile.
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PDFio also includes predefined constants for creating a few standard color
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spaces:
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```c
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pdfio_file_t *pdf = pdfioFileCreate(...);
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// Create an AdobeRGB color array
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pdfio_array_t *adobe_rgb = pdfioArrayCreateColorFromStandard(pdf, 3, PDFIO_CS_ADOBE);
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// Create an Display P3 color array
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pdfio_array_t *display_p3 = pdfioArrayCreateColorFromStandard(pdf, 3, PDFIO_CS_P3_D65);
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// Create an sRGB color array
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pdfio_array_t *srgb = pdfioArrayCreateColorFromStandard(pdf, 3, PDFIO_CS_SRGB);
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```
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### Font Object Functions
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PDF supports many kinds of fonts, including PostScript Type1, PDF Type3,
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TrueType/OpenType, and CID. PDFio provides two functions for creating font
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objects. The first is [`pdfioFileCreateFontObjFromBase`](@@) which creates a
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font object for one of the base PDF fonts:
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- "Courier"
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- "Courier-Bold"
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- "Courier-BoldItalic"
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- "Courier-Italic"
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- "Helvetica"
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- "Helvetica-Bold"
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- "Helvetica-BoldOblique"
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- "Helvetica-Oblique"
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- "Symbol"
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- "Times-Bold"
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- "Times-BoldItalic"
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- "Times-Italic"
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- "Times-Roman"
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- "ZapfDingbats"
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PDFio always uses the Windows CP1252 subset of Unicode for these fonts.
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The second function is [`pdfioFileCreateFontObjFromFile`](@@) which creates a
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font object from a TrueType/OpenType font file, for example:
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```c
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pdfio_file_t *pdf = pdfioFileCreate(...);
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pdfio_obj_t *arial = pdfioFileCreateFontObjFromFile(pdf, "OpenSans-Regular.ttf", false);
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```
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will embed an OpenSans Regular TrueType font using the Windows CP1252 subset of
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Unicode. Pass `true` for the third argument to embed it as a Unicode CID font
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instead, for example:
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```c
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pdfio_file_t *pdf = pdfioFileCreate(...);
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pdfio_obj_t *arial = pdfioFileCreateFontObjFromFile(pdf, "NotoSansJP-Regular.otf", true);
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```
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will embed the NotoSansJP Regular OpenType font with full support for Unicode.
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Note: Not all fonts support Unicode.
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### Image Object Functions
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PDF supports images with many different color spaces and bit depths with
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optional transparency. PDFio provides two helper functions for creating image
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objects that can be referenced in page streams. The first function is
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[`pdfioFileCreateImageObjFromData`](@@) which creates an image object from data
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in memory, for example:
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```c
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pdfio_file_t *pdf = pdfioFileCreate(...);
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unsigned char data[1024 * 1024 * 4]; // 1024x1024 RGBA image data
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pdfio_obj_t *img = pdfioFileCreateImageObjFromData(pdf, data, /*width*/1024, /*height*/1024, /*num_colors*/3, /*color_data*/NULL, /*alpha*/true, /*interpolate*/false);
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```
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will create an object for a 1024x1024 RGBA image in memory, using the default
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color space for 3 colors ("DeviceRGB"). We can use one of the
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[color space functions](@) to use a specific color space for this image, for
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example:
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```c
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pdfio_file_t *pdf = pdfioFileCreate(...);
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// Create an AdobeRGB color array
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pdfio_array_t *adobe_rgb = pdfioArrayCreateColorFromMatrix(pdf, 3, pdfioAdobeRGBGamma, pdfioAdobeRGBMatrix, pdfioAdobeRGBWhitePoint);
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// Create a 1024x1024 RGBA image using AdobeRGB
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unsigned char data[1024 * 1024 * 4]; // 1024x1024 RGBA image data
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pdfio_obj_t *img = pdfioFileCreateImageObjFromData(pdf, data, /*width*/1024, /*height*/1024, /*num_colors*/3, /*color_data*/adobe_rgb, /*alpha*/true, /*interpolate*/false);
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```
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The "interpolate" argument specifies whether the colors in the image should be
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smoothed/interpolated when scaling. This is most useful for photographs but
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should be `false` for screenshot and barcode images.
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If you have a JPEG or PNG file, use the [`pdfioFileCreateImageObjFromFile`](@@)
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function to copy the image into a PDF image object, for example:
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```c
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pdfio_file_t *pdf = pdfioFileCreate(...);
|
|
pdfio_obj_t *img = pdfioFileCreateImageObjFromFile(pdf, "myphoto.jpg", /*interpolate*/true);
|
|
```
|
|
|
|
|
|
### Page Dictionary Functions
|
|
|
|
PDF pages each have an associated dictionary to specify the images, fonts, and color spaces used by the page. PDFio provides functions to add these resources
|
|
to the dictionary:
|
|
|
|
- [`pdfioPageDictAddColorSpace`](@@) adds a named color space to the page dictionary
|
|
- [`pdfioPageDictAddFont`](@@) adds a named font to the page dictionary
|
|
- [`pdfioPageDictAddImage`](@@) adds a named image to the page dictionary
|
|
|
|
|
|
### Page Stream Functions
|
|
|
|
PDF page streams contain textual commands for drawing on the page. PDFio
|
|
provides many functions for writing these commands with the correct format and
|
|
escaping, as needed:
|
|
|
|
- [`pdfioContentClip`](@@) clips future drawing to the current path
|
|
- [`pdfioContentDrawImage`](@@) draws an image object
|
|
- [`pdfioContentFill`](@@) fills the current path
|
|
- [`pdfioContentFillAndStroke`](@@) fills and strokes the current path
|
|
- [`pdfioContentMatrixConcat`](@@) concatenates a matrix with the current
|
|
transform matrix
|
|
- [`pdfioContentMatrixRotate`](@@) concatenates a rotation matrix with the
|
|
current transform matrix
|
|
- [`pdfioContentMatrixScale`](@@) concatenates a scaling matrix with the
|
|
current transform matrix
|
|
- [`pdfioContentMatrixTranslate`](@@) concatenates a translation matrix with the
|
|
current transform matrix
|
|
- [`pdfioContentPathClose`](@@) closes the current path
|
|
- [`pdfioContentPathCurve`](@@) appends a Bezier curve to the current path
|
|
- [`pdfioContentPathCurve13`](@@) appends a Bezier curve with 2 control points
|
|
to the current path
|
|
- [`pdfioContentPathCurve23`](@@) appends a Bezier curve with 2 control points
|
|
to the current path
|
|
- [`pdfioContentPathLineTo`](@@) appends a line to the current path
|
|
- [`pdfioContentPathMoveTo`](@@) moves the current point in the current path
|
|
- [`pdfioContentPathRect`](@@) appends a rectangle to the current path
|
|
- [`pdfioContentRestore`](@@) restores a previous graphics state
|
|
- [`pdfioContentSave`](@@) saves the current graphics state
|
|
- [`pdfioContentSetDashPattern`](@@) sets the line dash pattern
|
|
- [`pdfioContentSetFillColorDeviceCMYK`](@@) sets the current fill color using a
|
|
device CMYK color
|
|
- [`pdfioContentSetFillColorDeviceGray`](@@) sets the current fill color using a
|
|
device gray color
|
|
- [`pdfioContentSetFillColorDeviceRGB`](@@) sets the current fill color using a
|
|
device RGB color
|
|
- [`pdfioContentSetFillColorGray`](@@) sets the current fill color using a
|
|
calibrated gray color
|
|
- [`pdfioContentSetFillColorRGB`](@@) sets the current fill color using a
|
|
calibrated RGB color
|
|
- [`pdfioContentSetFillColorSpace`](@@) sets the current fill color space
|
|
- [`pdfioContentSetFlatness`](@@) sets the flatness for curves
|
|
- [`pdfioContentSetLineCap`](@@) sets how the ends of lines are stroked
|
|
- [`pdfioContentSetLineJoin`](@@) sets how connections between lines are stroked
|
|
- [`pdfioContentSetLineWidth`](@@) sets the width of stroked lines
|
|
- [`pdfioContentSetMiterLimit`](@@) sets the miter limit for stroked lines
|
|
- [`pdfioContentSetStrokeColorDeviceCMYK`](@@) sets the current stroke color
|
|
using a device CMYK color
|
|
- [`pdfioContentSetStrokeColorDeviceGray`](@@) sets the current stroke color
|
|
using a device gray color
|
|
- [`pdfioContentSetStrokeColorDeviceRGB`](@@) sets the current stroke color
|
|
using a device RGB color
|
|
- [`pdfioContentSetStrokeColorGray`](@@) sets the current stroke color
|
|
using a calibrated gray color
|
|
- [`pdfioContentSetStrokeColorRGB`](@@) sets the current stroke color
|
|
using a calibrated RGB color
|
|
- [`pdfioContentSetStrokeColorSpace`](@@) sets the current stroke color space
|
|
- [`pdfioContentSetTextCharacterSpacing`](@@) sets the spacing between
|
|
characters for text
|
|
- [`pdfioContentSetTextFont`](@@) sets the font and size for text
|
|
- [`pdfioContentSetTextLeading`](@@) sets the line height for text
|
|
- [`pdfioContentSetTextMatrix`](@@) concatenates a matrix with the current text
|
|
matrix
|
|
- [`pdfioContentSetTextRenderingMode`](@@) sets the text rendering mode
|
|
- [`pdfioContentSetTextRise`](@@) adjusts the baseline for text
|
|
- [`pdfioContentSetTextWordSpacing`](@@) sets the spacing between words for text
|
|
- [`pdfioContentSetTextXScaling`](@@) sets the horizontal scaling for text
|
|
- [`pdfioContentStroke`](@@) strokes the current path
|
|
- [`pdfioContentTextBegin`](@@) begins a block of text
|
|
- [`pdfioContentTextEnd`](@@) ends a block of text
|
|
- [`pdfioContentTextMoveLine`](@@) moves to the next line with an offset in a
|
|
text block
|
|
- [`pdfioContentTextMoveTo`](@@) moves within the current line in a text block
|
|
- [`pdfioContentTextNextLine`](@@) moves to the beginning of the next line in a
|
|
text block
|
|
- [`pdfioContentTextShow`](@@) draws a literal string in a text block
|
|
- [`pdfioContentTextShowf`](@@) draws a formatted string in a text block
|
|
- [`pdfioContentTextShowJustified`](@@) draws an array of literal strings with
|
|
offsets between them
|