HexaPDF is a pure Ruby library with an accompanying application for working with PDF files. It was designed with ease of use and performance in mind. It uses lazy loading and lazy computing when possible and tries to produce small PDF files by default.
In short, it allows
- creating new PDF files,
- manipulating existing PDF files,
- merging multiple PDF files into one,
- extracting meta information, text, images and files from PDF files,
- securing PDF files by encrypting or signing them and
- optimizing PDF files for smaller file size or other criteria.
HexaPDF is available under two license, the AGPL and a commercial license, see the License section for details.
- Pure Ruby
- Minimal dependencies ('cmdparse' for
hexapdf
binary, 'geom2d' for document layout) - Easy to use, Ruby-esque API
- Fully tested with 100% code coverage
- Low-level API with high-level convenience interface on top
- Complete canvas API which directly maps to PDF internal operators
- Path drawing operations like lines, polylines, rectangles, bézier curves, arcs, ...
- Embedding images in JPEG (lossy), PNG (lossless) and PDF (vector) format with support for transparency
- UTF-8 text via TrueType fonts and support for font subsetting
- High-level document composition engine with automatic content layout
- Flowing text around other content
- Pre-define styles and assign to multiple content boxes
- Automatic page breaks
- (Un)ordered lists
- Multi-column layout
- PDF forms (AcroForm) with Adobe Reader like appearance generation
- Annotations
- Document outline
- Attaching files to the whole PDF or individual pages, extracting files
- Image extraction
- Encryption including PDF 2.0 features (e.g. AES256)
- Digital signatures
- File size optimization
- PDF object validation
hexapdf
binary for most common PDF manipulation tasks
The HexaPDF distribution provides the library as well as the hexapdf
application. The application
can be used to perform common tasks like merging PDF files, decrypting or encrypting PDF files and
so on.
When HexaPDF is used as a library, it can be used to do all the task that the command line application does and much more. Here is a "Hello World" example that shows how to create a simple PDF file:
require 'hexapdf'
doc = HexaPDF::Document.new
canvas = doc.pages.add.canvas
canvas.font('Helvetica', size: 100)
canvas.text("Hello World!", at: [20, 400])
doc.write("hello-world.pdf")
For detailed information have a look at the HexaPDF website where you will the API documentation, example code and more.
It is recommend to use the HTML API documentation provided by the HexaPDF website as it is enhanced with example graphics and PDF files and tightly integrated into the rest of the website.
Since HexaPDF is written in Ruby, a working Ruby installation is needed - see the official installation documentation for details. Note that you need Ruby version 2.6 or higher as prior versions are not supported!
HexaPDF works on all Ruby implementations that are CRuby compatible, e.g. TruffleRuby, and on any platform supported by Ruby (Linux, macOS, Windows, ...).
Apart from Ruby itself the HexaPDF library has only one external dependency geom2d
which is
written and provided by the HexaPDF authors. The hexapdf
application has an additional dependency
on cmdparse
, a command line parsing library.
HexaPDF itself is distributed via Rubygems and therefore easily installable via gem install hexapdf
.
The main difference between HexaPDF and Prawn is that HexaPDF is a full PDF library whereas Prawn is a library for generating content.
To be more specific, it is easily possible to read an existing PDF with HexaPDF and modify parts of it before writing it out again. The modifications can be to the PDF object structure like removing superfluous annotations or the the content itself.
Prawn has no such functionality. There is basic support for using a PDF as a template using the
pdf-reader
and prawn-template
gems but support is very limited. However, Prawn has a very
featureful API when it comes to creating content, for individual pages as well as across pages.
If you want to migrate from Prawn to HexaPDF, there is the migration guide with detailed information and examples, comparing the Prawn API to HexaPDF's equivalents.
Why use HexaPDF?
-
It has many more features beside content creation that might come in handy (e.g. PDF form creation, encryption, digital signatures, ...).
-
The architecture of HexaPDF is based on the object model of the PDF standard. This makes extending HexaPDF very easy and allows for reading PDF files for templating purposes.
-
HexaPDF provides a high level API for composing a document of individual elements that are automatically layouted. Such elements can be headers, paragraphs, code blocks, ... or links, emphasized text and so on. These elements can be customized and additional element types easily added.
-
In addition to being usable as a library, HexaPDF also comes with a command line tool for manipulating PDFs. This tool is intended to be a replacement for tools like
pdftk
and the various Poppler-based tools likepdfinfo
,pdfimages
, ...
Clone the repository and then run rake dev:setup
. This will install the needed Rubygem
dependencies as well as make sure that all applications needed for the tests are available.
AGPL - see the LICENSE file for licensing details. Commercial licenses are available at https://gettalong.at/hexapdf/.
A commercial license is needed as soon as HexaPDF is distributed with your software or remotely accessed via a network and you don't provide the source code of your application under the AGPL. For example, if you serve PDFs on the fly in a web application.
Contact sales@gettalong.at for more information!
Some included files have a different license:
-
For the license of the included AFM files in the
data/hexapdf/afm
directory, see the filedata/hexapdf/afm/MustRead.html
. -
The files
test/data/encoding/{glyphlist.txt,zapfdingbats.txt}
are licensed under the Apache License V2.0. -
The file
test/data/fonts/Ubuntu-Title.ttf
is licensed under the SIL Open Font License. -
The AES test vector files in
test/data/aes-test-vectors
have been created using the test vector file available from http://csrc.nist.gov/groups/STM/cavp/block-ciphers.html#test-vectors.
See https://hexapdf.gettalong.org/contributing.html for more information.
Thomas Leitner, https://gettalong.org