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Python bindings for MuPDF's rendering library.

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PyMuPDF 1.16.7

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Release date: November 10, 2019

Travis-CI: Build Status

On PyPI since August 2016:

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Introduction

This is version 1.16.7 of PyMuPDF (formerly python-fitz), a Python binding with support for MuPDF 1.16.* - "a lightweight PDF, XPS, and E-book viewer".

MuPDF can access files in PDF, XPS, OpenXPS, CBZ, EPUB and FB2 (e-books) formats, and it is known for its top performance and high rendering quality.

With PyMuPDF you can access files with extensions like ".pdf", ".xps", ".oxps", ".cbz", ".fb2" or ".epub". About 10 popular image formats are also supported via the document interface.

Usage and Documentation

For all supported document types you can

  • decrypt the document
  • access meta information, links and bookmarks
  • render pages in raster formats (PNG and some others), or the vector format SVG
  • search for text
  • extract text or images
  • convert to other formats: PDF, (X) HTML, XML, text

To some degree, PyMuPDF can therefore be used as an image converter: it can read a range of input formats and can produce Portable Network Graphics (PNG), Portable Anymaps (PNM, etc.), Portable Arbitrary Maps (PAM), Adobe Postscript and Adobe Photoshop documents, making the use of other graphics packages obselete in these cases. But interfacing with e.g. PIL/Pillow for image input and output is easy as well.

PDF files can be created, joined or split up. Pages can be inserted, deleted, re-arranged or modified in many ways (including annotations and form fields).

  • Images and fonts can be extracted or inserted.
  • Embedded files are fully supported.
  • PDFs can be reformatted to support double-sided printing, posterizing, applying logos or watermarks
  • Password protection is fully supported: decryption, encryption, encryption method selection, permmission level and user / owner password setting.
  • Low-level PDF structures can be accessed and modified.

Have a look at the basic demos, the examples (which contain complete, working programs), and the recipes section of our Wiki sidebar, which contains more than a dozen of guides in How-To-style.

Our documentation, written using Sphinx, is available in various formats from the following sources. It currently is a combination of a reference guide and a user manual. For a quick start look at the tutorial and the recipes chapters.

Installation

For all Windows and (thanks to our user @jbarlow83!) for the major Mac OSX and Linux versions we offer wheels in the download section of PyPI.

The platform tag for Mac OSX is macosx_10_6_intel.

The platform tag for Linux is manylinux1_x86_64, which makes these wheels usable on Debian, Ubuntu and most other variations.

On other operating systems you need to generate PyMuPDF yourself. And of course you can choose to do so for a wheel-supported platform, too.

To do this, you must download and generate MuPDF. This process depends very much on your system. For most platforms, the MuPDF source contains prepared procedures for achieving this. Please observe the following general steps:

  • Be sure to download the official MuPDF source release from here. Do not use MuPDF's GitHub repo. It contains their current development source, which is not compatible with this PyMuPDF version most of the time.

  • The repo's fitz folder contains a few files whose names start with an underscore "_". These files contain configuration data and hotfixes. Each one must be copy-renamed to its correct target location of the MuPDF source that you have downloaded, before you generate MuPDF. Currently, these files are:

    • fitz configuration file _config.h copy-replace to: mupdf/include/mupdf/fitz/config.h. It contains configuration data like e.g. which fonts to support.

    • Now MuPDF can be generated.

  • Since PyMuPDF v1.14.17, the sources provided in this repository no longer contain the interface files fitz.py and fitz.wrap.c - they are generated "on the fly" by setup.py using the interface generator SWIG. So you need SWIG being installed on your system. Please refer to issue #312 for some background.

    • PyMuPDF wheels have been generated using SWIG v4.0.1.
  • If you do not (want to) use SWIG for generating PyMuPDF, please download the sources from PyPI - they continue to contain the generated interface files, and installation should work like any other generation of Python extensions for your system.

Once this is done, adjust directories in setup.py and run python setup.py install.

The following sections contain further comments for some platforms.

Ubuntu

Our users (thanks to @gileadslostson and @jbarlow83!) have documented their MuPDF installation experiences from sources in this Wiki page.

OSX

First, install the MuPDF headers and libraries, which are provided by mupdf-tools: brew install mupdf-tools.

Then you might need to export ARCHFLAGS='-arch x86_64', since libmupdf.a is for x86_64 only.

Finally, please double check setup.py before building. Update include_dirs and library_dirs if necessary.

MS Windows

If you are looking to make your own binary, consult this Wiki page. It explains how to use Visual Studio for generating MuPDF in quite some detail.

Earlier Versions

Earlier versions are available in the releases directory.

License

PyMuPDF is distributed under GNU GPL V3. Because you will implicitely also be using MuPDF, its license GNU AFFERO GPL V3 applies as well. Copies of both are included in this repository.

Contact

Please submit questions, comments or issues here, or directly contact the authors via their e-mail addresses.

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