pdftotext(1) General Commands Manual pdftotext(1) NAME pdftotext - Portable Document Format (PDF) to text converter (version 4.00) SYNOPSIS pdftotext [options] [PDF-file [text-file]] DESCRIPTION Pdftotext converts Portable Document Format (PDF) files to plain text. Pdftotext reads the PDF file, PDF-file, and writes a text file, text- file. If text-file is not specified, pdftotext converts file.pdf to file.txt. If text-file is '-', the text is sent to stdout. CONFIGURATION FILE Pdftotext reads a configuration file at startup. It first tries to find the user's private config file, ~/.xpdfrc. If that doesn't exist, it looks for a system-wide config file, typically /usr/local/etc/xpdfrc (but this location can be changed when pdftotext is built). See the xpdfrc(5) man page for details. OPTIONS Many of the following options can be set with configuration file com- mands. These are listed in square brackets with the description of the corresponding command line option. -f number Specifies the first page to convert. -l number Specifies the last page to convert. -layout Maintain (as best as possible) the original physical layout of the text. The default is to 'undo' physical layout (columns, hyphenation, etc.) and output the text in reading order. If the -fixed option is given, character spacing within each line will be determined by the specified character pitch. -simple Similar to -layout, but optimized for simple one-column pages. This mode will do a better job of maintaining horizontal spac- ing, but it will only work properly with a single column of text. -table Table mode is similar to physical layout mode, but optimized for tabular data, with the goal of keeping rows and columns aligned (at the expense of inserting extra whitespace). If the -fixed option is given, character spacing within each line will be determined by the specified character pitch. -lineprinter Line printer mode uses a strict fixed-character-pitch and -height layout. That is, the page is broken into a grid, and characters are placed into that grid. If the grid spacing is too small for the actual characters, the result is extra white- space. If the grid spacing is too large, the result is missing whitespace. The grid spacing can be specified using the -fixed and -linespacing options. If one or both are not given on the command line, pdftotext will attempt to compute appropriate value(s). -raw Keep the text in content stream order. Depending on how the PDF file was generated, this may or may not be useful. -fixed number Specify the character pitch (character width), in points, for physical layout, table, or line printer mode. This is ignored in all other modes. -linespacing number Specify the line spacing, in points, for line printer mode. This is ignored in all other modes. -clip Text which is hidden because of clipping is removed before doing layout, and then added back in. This can be helpful for tables where clipped (invisible) text would overlap the next column. -nodiag Diagonal text, i.e., text that is not close to one of the 0, 90, 180, or 270 degree axes, is discarded. This is useful to skip watermarks drawn on top of body text, etc. -enc encoding-name Sets the encoding to use for text output. The encoding-name must be defined with the unicodeMap command (see xpdfrc(5)). The encoding name is case-sensitive. This defaults to "Latin1" (which is a built-in encoding). [config file: textEncoding] -eol unix | dos | mac Sets the end-of-line convention to use for text output. [config file: textEOL] -nopgbrk Don't insert page breaks (form feed characters) between pages. [config file: textPageBreaks] -bom Insert a Unicode byte order marker (BOM) at the start of the text output. -opw password Specify the owner password for the PDF file. Providing this will bypass all security restrictions. -upw password Specify the user password for the PDF file. -q Don't print any messages or errors. [config file: errQuiet] -cfg config-file Read config-file in place of ~/.xpdfrc or the system-wide config file. -v Print copyright and version information. -h Print usage information. (-help and --help are equivalent.) BUGS Some PDF files contain fonts whose encodings have been mangled beyond recognition. There is no way (short of OCR) to extract text from these files. EXIT CODES The Xpdf tools use the following exit codes: 0 No error. 1 Error opening a PDF file. 2 Error opening an output file. 3 Error related to PDF permissions. 99 Other error. AUTHOR The pdftotext software and documentation are copyright 1996-2017 Glyph & Cog, LLC. SEE ALSO xpdf(1), pdftops(1), pdftohtml(1), pdfinfo(1), pdffonts(1), pdfde- tach(1), pdftoppm(1), pdftopng(1), pdfimages(1), xpdfrc(5) http://www.xpdfreader.com/ 10 Aug 2017 pdftotext(1)