pikepdf is a Python library for reading and writing PDF files.
pikepdf is based on QPDF, a powerful PDF manipulation and repair library.
Python + QPDF = "py" + "qpdf" = "pyqpdf", which looks like a dyslexia test. Say it out loud, and it sounds like "pikepdf".
# Elegant, Pythonic API
with pikepdf.open('input.pdf') as pdf:
num_pages = len(pdf.pages)
del pdf.pages[-1]
pdf.save('output.pdf')
To install:
pip install pikepdf
For users who want to build from source, see installation.
pikepdf is documented and actively maintained. Commercial support is available.
This library is similar to PyPDF2 and pdfrw - it provides low level access to PDF features and allows editing and content transformation of existing PDFs. Some knowledge of the PDF specification may be helpful. It does not have the capability to render a PDF to image.
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OCRmyPDF uses pikepdf to graft OCR text layers onto existing PDFs, to examine the contents of input PDFs, and to optimize PDFs.
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pdfarranger is a small Python application that provides a graphical user interface to rotate, crop and rearrange PDFs.
pikepdf is provided under the Mozilla Public License 2.0 license (MPL) that can be found in the LICENSE file. By using, distributing, or contributing to this project, you agree to the terms and conditions of this license.
Informally, MPL 2.0 is a not a "viral" license. It may be combined with other work, including commercial software. However, you must disclose your modifications to pikepdf in source code form. In other works, fork this repository on GitHub or elsewhere and commit your contributions there, and you've satisfied your obligations. MPL 2.0 is compatible with the GPL and LGPL - see the guidelines for notes on use in GPL.
The debian/copyright
file describes licensing terms for the test suite and the provenance of test resources.