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Tabula is a tool for liberating data tables trapped inside PDF files

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Repo Note: The master branch is an in development version of Tabula. This may be substantially different from the latest releases of Tabula.

As of August 2015, the master branch (and Tabula 1.1.X+) uses tabula-java instead of tabula-extractor under the hood. Previous versions of Tabula use tabula-extractor.


Tabula

tabula master Build Status

Tabula helps you liberate data tables trapped inside PDF files.

© 2012-2016 Manuel Aristarán. Available under MIT License. See AUTHORS.md and LICENSE.md.

Why Tabula?

If you’ve ever tried to do anything with data provided to you in PDFs, you know how painful this is — you can’t easily copy-and-paste rows of data out of PDF files. Tabula allows you to extract that data in CSV format, through a simple web interface (Check out this short screencast)

Caveat: Tabula only works on text-based PDFs, not scanned documents. If you can click-and-drag to select text in your table in a PDF viewer (even if the output is disorganized trash), then your PDF is text-based and Tabula should work.

Security Concerns?: Tabula is designed with security in mind. Your PDF and the extracted data never touch the net -- when you use Tabula, as long as your browser's URL bar says "localhost" or "127.0.0.1", all processing takes place on your local machine. Tabula does download a list of Tabula versions from our server to alert you if Tabula has been updated (and we use hits to that list to count how often Tabula is being used); it also downloads a few badges and assets from the web.

Using Tabula

First, make sure you have a recent copy of Java installed. You can download Java here. Tabula requires a Java Runtime Environment compatible with Java 7 (i.e. Java 7, 8 or higher). If you have a problem, check Known Issues first, then report an issue.

  • Windows

    Download tabula-win.zip from the download site. Unzip the whole thing and open the tabula.exe file inside. A browser should automatically open to http://127.0.0.1:8080/ . If not, open your web browser of choice and visit that link.

    To close Tabula, just go back to the console window and press "Control-C" (as if to copy).

  • ###Mac OS X Download tabula-mac.zip from the download site. Unzip and open the Tabula app inside. A browser should automatically open to http://127.0.0.1:8080/ . If not, open your web browser of choice and visit that link.

    To close Tabula, find the Tabula icon in your dock, right-click (or control-click) on it, and press "Quit".

    Note: If you’re running Mac OS X 10.8 or later, you might get an error like "Tabula is damaged and can't be opened." We're working on fixing this, but click here for a workaround.

  • ###Other platforms (e.g. Linux) Download tabula-jar.zip from the download site and unzip it to the directory of your choice. Open a terminal window, and cd to inside the tabula directory you just unzipped. Then run:

    java -Dfile.encoding=utf-8 -Xms256M -Xmx1024M -jar tabula.jar

    Then manually navigate your browser to http://127.0.0.1:8080/ (New in Tabula 1.1. To go back to the old behavior that automatically launches your web browser, use the -Dtabula.openBrowser=true option.

    Tabula binds to port 8080 by default. You can change it with the warbler.port option; for example, to use port 9999:

    java -Dfile.encoding=utf-8 -Xms256M -Xmx1024M -Dwarbler.port=9999 -jar tabula.jar

If the program fails to run, double-check that you have Java installed and then try again.

There are some bugs that we're aware of that we haven't managed to fix yet. If there's not a solution here or you need more help, please go ahead and report an issue.

  • Legacy Java Environment (SE 6) Is Required: (Mac): The Mac operating system recently changed how it packages the Java Runtime Environment. If you get this error, download Tabula's "large experimental" package. This package includes its own Java Runtime Environment and should work without this issue.

  • "Tabula is damaged and can't be opened" (Mac): If you’re running Mac OS X 10.8 or later, GateKeeper may prevent you from opening the Tabula app. Please see this GateKeeper page for more information.

    1. Right-click on Tabula.app and select Open from the context menu.
    2. The system will tell you that the application is "from an unidentified developer" and ask you whether you want to open it. Click Open to allow the application to run. The system remembers this choice and won't prompt you again.

    (If you continue to have issues, double-check the OS X GateKeeper documentation for more information.)

  • org.jruby.exceptions.RaiseException: (Encoding::CompatibilityError) incompatible character encodings: (Windows): Your Windows computer expects a type of encoding other than Unicode or Windows's English encoding. You can fix this by entering a few simple commands in the Command Prompt. (The commands won't affect anything besides Tabula.)

    1. Open a Command Prompt
    2. type cd and then the path to the directory that contains tabula.exe, e.g. cd C:\Users\Username\Downloads
    3. Change that terminal's codepage to Unicode by typing: chcp 65001
    4. Run Tabula by typing tabula.exe
  • A browser tab opens, but something other than Tabula loads there. Or Tabula doesn't start. It's possible another program is using port 8080, whichh Tabula binds to by default. You can try closing the other program, or change the port Tabula uses by running Tabula from the terminal with the warbler.port property:

    java -Dfile.encoding=utf-8 -Xms256M -Xmx1024M -Dwarbler.port=9999 -jar tabula.jar

Incorporating Tabula into your own project

Tabula is open-source, so we'd love for you to incorporate pieces of Tabula into your own projects. The "guts" of Tabula -- that is, the logic and heuristics that reconstruct tables from PDFs -- is contained in the tabula-java repo. There's a JAR file that you can easily incorporate into JVM languages like Java, Scala or Clojure and it includes a command-line tool for you to automate your extraction tasks. Visit that repo for more information on how to use tabula-java on the CLI and on how Tabula exports tabula-java scripts.

Bindings:

Tabula has bindings for JRuby and R. If you end up writing bindings for another language (Python, in particular!), let us know and we'll add a link here.

  • tabula-extractor provides JRuby bindings for tabula-java
  • tabulizer provides R bindings for tabula-java and is community-supported by @leeper.
  • tabula-js provides Node.js bindings for tabula-java; it is community-supported by @ezodude.

Running Tabula from source (for developers)

  1. Download JRuby. You can install it from its website, or using tools like rvm or rbenv. Note that as of Tabula 1.1.0 (7875582becb2799b65586d5680782cafd399bb33), Tabula uses the JRuby 9000 series (i.e. JRuby 9.1.5.0).

  2. Download Tabula and install the Ruby dependencies. (Note: if using rvm or rbenv, ensure that JRuby is being used.

    git clone git://github.com/tabulapdf/tabula.git
    cd tabula
    
    gem install bundler
    gem install tabula-extractor
    bundle install
    

Then, start the development server:

bundle exec rackup

(If you get encoding errors, set the JAVA_OPTS environment variable to -Dfile.encoding=utf-8)

The site instance should now be viewable at http://127.0.0.1:9292/ .

You can a couple some options when executing the server in this manner:

TABULA_DATA_DIR="/tmp/tabula" \
TABULA_DEBUG=1 \
bundle exec rackup
  • TABULA_DATA_DIR controls where uploaded data for Tabula is stored. By default, data is stored in the OS-dependent application data directory for the current user. (similar to: C:\Users\foo\AppData\Roaming\Tabula on Windows, ~/Library/Application Support/Tabula on Mac, ~/.tabula on Linux/UNIX)
  • TABULA_DEBUG prints out extra status data when PDF files are being processed. (false by default.)

Alternatively, running the server as a JAR file

Testing in this manner will be closer to testing the "packaged application" version of the app.

bundle exec rake war
java -Dfile.encoding=utf-8 -Xms256M -Xmx1024M -jar build/tabula.jar

Building a packaged application version

After performing the above steps ("Running Tabula from source"), you can compile Tabula into a standalone application:

Mac OS X

If you wish to share Tabula with other machines, you will need a codesigning certificate. Our distribution of Tabula uses a self-signed certificate, as noted above. See this section of build.xml for details. If you will only be running Tabula on the machine you are building it on, you may remove this entire block (lines 44-53).

To compile the app:

rake macosx

This will result in a portable "tabula_mac.zip" archive (inside the build directory) for Mac OS X users.

Note that the Mac version bundles Java with the Tabula app. This results in a 98MB zip file, versus the 30MB zip file for other platforms, but allows users to run Tabula without having to worry about Java version incompatibilities.

Windows

You can build .exe files for the Windows target on any platform.

Download a 3.1.X (beta) copy of Launch4J.

Unzip it into the Tabula repo so that "launch4j" (with subdirectories "bin", etc.) is in the repository root.

(If you're building on a 64bit Linux, you may need to install 32bit libs like, in Ubuntu sudo apt-get install lib32z1 lib32ncurses5)

Then:

rake windows

This will result in a portable "tabula_win.zip" archive (inside the build directory) for Mac OS X users.


If you have issues, you can try building manually. (These commands are for OS X/Linux and may need to be adjusted for Windows users.)

# (from the root directory of the repo)
rake war
cd launch4j
ant -f ../build.xml windows

A "tabula.exe" file will be generated in "build/windows". To run, the exe file needs "tabula.jar" (contained in "build") in the same directory. You can create a .zip archive by doing:

# (from the root directory of the repo)
cd build/windows
mkdir tabula
cp tabula.exe ./tabula/
cp ../tabula.jar ./tabula/
zip -r9 tabula_win.zip tabula
rm -fr tabula

Contributing

Interested in helping out? We'd love to have your help!!

You can help by:

  • Reporting a bug.
  • Adding or editing documentation.
  • Contributing code via a Pull Request from ideas or bugs listed in the Enhancements section of the issues. see CONTRIBUTING.md
  • Spreading the word about Tabula to people who might be able to benefit from using it.

Backers

You can also support our continued work on Tabula with a one-time or monthly donation on OpenCollective. Organizations who use Tabula can also sponsor the project for acknolwedgement on our official site and this README.

Special thanks to the following users and organizations for generously supporting Tabula with donations and grants:

The John S. and James L. Knight Foundation

More acknowledgments can be found in AUTHORS.md.

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