Text::PDF::Dict(3pm) User Contributed Perl Documentation Text::PDF::Dict(3pm)NAME
Text::PDF::Dict - PDF Dictionaries and Streams. Inherits from PDF::Objind
INSTANCE VARIABLES
There are various special instance variables which are used to look after, particularly, streams. Each begins with a space:
stream Holds the stream contents for output
streamfile
Holds the stream contents in an external file rather than in memory. This is not the same as a PDF file stream. The data is stored
in its unfiltered form.
streamloc
If both ' stream' and ' streamfile' are empty, this indicates where in the source PDF the stream starts.
METHODS
$d->outobjdeep($fh)
Outputs the contents of the dictionary to a PDF file. This is a recursive call.
It also outputs a stream if the dictionary has a stream element. If this occurs then this method will calculate the length of the stream
and insert it into the stream's dictionary.
$d->read_stream($force_memory)
Reads in a stream from a PDF file. If the stream is greater than "PDF::Dict::mincache" (defaults to 32768) bytes to be stored, then the
default action is to create a file for it somewhere and to use that file as a data cache. If $force_memory is set, this caching will not
occur and the data will all be stored in the $self->{' stream'} variable.
$d->val
Returns the dictionary, which is itself.
$d->copy($inpdf, $res, $unique, $outpdf, %opts)
Copies an object. See Text::PDF::Objind::Copy() for details
perl v5.8.8 2006-09-09 Text::PDF::Dict(3pm)
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PDF::API2::Basic::PDF::Dict(3pm) User Contributed Perl Documentation PDF::API2::Basic::PDF::Dict(3pm)NAME
PDF::API2::Basic::PDF::Dict - PDF Dictionaries and Streams. Inherits from PDF::Objind
INSTANCE VARIABLES
There are various special instance variables which are used to look after, particularly, streams. Each begins with a space:
stream
Holds the stream contents for output
streamfile
Holds the stream contents in an external file rather than in memory. This is not the same as a PDF file stream. The data is stored in
its unfiltered form.
streamloc
If both ' stream' and ' streamfile' are empty, this indicates where in the source PDF the stream starts.
METHODS
$d->outobjdeep($fh)
Outputs the contents of the dictionary to a PDF file. This is a recursive call.
It also outputs a stream if the dictionary has a stream element. If this occurs then this method will calculate the length of the stream
and insert it into the stream's dictionary.
$d->read_stream($force_memory)
Reads in a stream from a PDF file. If the stream is greater than "PDF::Dict::mincache" (defaults to 32768) bytes to be stored, then the
default action is to create a file for it somewhere and to use that file as a data cache. If $force_memory is set, this caching will not
occur and the data will all be stored in the $self->{' stream'} variable.
$d->val
Returns the dictionary, which is itself.
perl v5.14.2 2014-03-09 PDF::API2::Basic::PDF::Dict(3pm)
:confused:
We have a Sco Open Unix 5.0.5 Server that I am trying to configure to allow for PDF creation. Currently the server is just using lpr to print to laser printers located throughout the facility. The goal is to be able to also print to pdf documents. There is no option for... (2 Replies)
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Hi there,
when I convert a Word document to PDF (with different tools) everything works fine, but my email address name.surname@xxxmail.com in hyperlinks is changed in surname@xxxmail.com.
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Hi,
Can somebody help me with the below situation,
Input File,
========
2007_08_07_IA-0100-014_(MONTHLY).PDF
2007_08_07_IA-0100-031_(QUARTERLY)(RERUN).PDF
2008-02-28_KR-1022-003_(MONTH)(RERUN)(REC1).CSV
Required output,
============
MONTHLY
QUARTERLY
MONTH
... (15 Replies)
Hello, ladies, gentlemen.
First I suppose I should introduce myself.
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Hi ,
My requirement is to scan a directory for file names with LTR.PDF*
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is there a way to get... (10 Replies)
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These three finds worked as expected:
$ find . -iname "*.PDF"
$ find . -iname "*.PDF" \( ! -name "*_nobackup.*" \)
$ find . -path "*_nobackup*" -prune -iname "*.PDF"
They all returned the match:
./folder/file.pdf
:b:
This find returned no matches:
$ find . -path "*_nobackup*" -prune... (3 Replies)