pyPdf ignores newlines in PDF file
I don't know much about PDF encoding, but I think you can solve your particular problem by modifying pdf.py
. In the PageObject.extractText
method, you see what's going on:
def extractText(self):
[...]
for operands,operator in content.operations:
if operator == "Tj":
_text = operands[0]
if isinstance(_text, TextStringObject):
text += _text
elif operator == "T*":
text += "\n"
elif operator == "'":
text += "\n"
_text = operands[0]
if isinstance(_text, TextStringObject):
text += operands[0]
elif operator == '"':
_text = operands[2]
if isinstance(_text, TextStringObject):
text += "\n"
text += _text
elif operator == "TJ":
for i in operands[0]:
if isinstance(i, TextStringObject):
text += i
If the operator is Tj
or TJ
(it's Tj in your example PDF) then the text is simply appended and no newline is added. Now you wouldn't necessarily want to add a newline, at least if I'm reading the PDF reference right: Tj/TJ
are simply the single and multiple show-string operators, and the existence of a separator of some kind isn't mandatory.
Anyway, if you modify this code to be something like
def extractText(self, Tj_sep="", TJ_sep=""):
[...]
if operator == "Tj":
_text = operands[0]
if isinstance(_text, TextStringObject):
text += Tj_sep
text += _text
[...]
elif operator == "TJ":
for i in operands[0]:
if isinstance(i, TextStringObject):
text += TJ_sep
text += i
then the default behaviour should be the same:
In [1]: pdf.getPage(1).extractText()[1120:1250]
Out[1]: u'ing an individual which, because of name, identifyingnumber, mark or description can be readily associated with a particular indiv'
but you can change it when you want to:
In [2]: pdf.getPage(1).extractText(Tj_sep=" ")[1120:1250]
Out[2]: u'ta" means any information concerning an individual which, because of name, identifying number, mark or description can be readily '
or
In [3]: pdf.getPage(1).extractText(Tj_sep="\n")[1120:1250]
Out[3]: u'ta" means any information concerning an individual which, because of name, identifying\nnumber, mark or description can be readily '
Alternatively, you could simply add the separators yourself by modifying the operands themselves in-place, but that could break something else (methods like get_original_bytes
make me nervous).
Finally, you don't have to edit pdf.py
itself if you don't want to: you could simply pull out this method into a function.