Skip to content

A framework for extracting data from PDFs in iOS

License

Notifications You must be signed in to change notification settings

kotikan/PDFKitten

 
 

Repository files navigation

Kurt the PDFKitten

A framework for searching PDF documents on iOS.

Why?

iOS, up to and including the current fifth version, does not provide any public APIs for searching PDF documents, or determining where on a page a given word is drawn. Any developer aiming to provide these features in an app must use low-level Core Graphics APIs, and keep track of the stateful process of laying out the content of the page.

This project is meant to facilitate this by implementing a complete workflow, taking as input a PDF document, a keyword string, and returning a set of selections that can be drawn on top of the PDF document.

How?

First, create a new instance of the scanner.

	CGPDFPageRef page = CGPDFDocumentGetPage(document, 1);
	Scanner *scanner = [Scanner scannerWithPage:page];

Set a keyword (case-insensitive) and scan a page.

	NSArray *selections = [scanner select:@"happiness"];

Finally, scan the page and draw the selections.

	for (Selection *selection in selections)
	{
		// draw selection
	}

Limitations

The PDF specification is huge, allowing for different fonts, text encodings et cetera. This means strict design is a must, and thorough testing is needed. At this point, this project is not fully compatible with all font types, and especially suppert for non-latin characters will require further development.

Offering a complete solution for processing any PDF document would apparently require the inclusion of a complete library of font files. We currently do not intend to include more than the bare essentials for a proof-of-concept application.

Only latin character sets are currently supported.

License and Warranty

This software is provided under the MIT license, see License.txt.

About

A framework for extracting data from PDFs in iOS

Resources

License

Stars

Watchers

Forks

Releases

No releases published

Packages

No packages published

Languages

  • Objective-C 99.6%
  • Ruby 0.4%