Skip to content

ColombiaPython/certificate-generator

Folders and files

NameName
Last commit message
Last commit date

Latest commit

 

History

8 Commits
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Repository files navigation

certg

A certificate generator, from a SVG to a lot of PDFs

How to see an example

Get the code, and run:

python3 certg.py certg.yaml

The certg.yaml is included in the project, with the other file it uses: cert.svg.

After successful execution, you will get two .pdf files, the result of the generation.

What do I need to have installed

The Python's module yaml and Inkscape in your system.

How to really use it, you mean, for my stuff

You need to create two files: the configuration, and the source SVG. Here's a deep explanation of how it all works, but remember you can get the examples provided and start tweaking them :)

The source SVG is the SVG you want to transform into PDFs, but with some indications for text to be replaced in. These indications are between curly brackets. For example, you may have:

Thanks {{name}} for all your {{type_of_doing}}!

Then, in the configuration file you have a replace_info variable: it's a list of dictionaries. Each dictionary will produce a generated PDF with the info replaced, and the keys/values in that dictionary will be the info to replace.

Note that you need to provide in the config all the attributes to replace; for example:

name: Foo Bar
type_of_doing: support

Furthermore, in the config you have some mandatory variables you need to fill. Those are:

  • svg_source: the filename of the SVG you created
  • result_prefix: the prefix of the PDFs' filenames that will be generated
  • result_distinct: the name of the variable in the replacing attributes used as a distinct string for the PDFs.

For example, if you put certs as the prefix and name as the distinct value, you'll get as output a file named certs-foobar.pdf.

Something important

It seems that along the way a new feature was added and never documented. The current state of the script expects an attendance.csv file. There youll be able to easily populate the fields:

email, name, lastname, fullname, idnumber

As long as this csv file is found in the same folder, the script will find it and use it. Hope

About

No description, website, or topics provided.

Resources

License

Stars

Watchers

Forks

Releases

No releases published

Packages

No packages published

Contributors 4

  •  
  •  
  •  
  •  

Languages