From 9468226a9e2e2ab8cdd599f1d8538e860ca86120 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Biswakalyan Bhuyan Date: Sun, 13 Nov 2022 23:46:45 +0530 Subject: id card generator --- .../img2pdf-0.4.4-py3.10.egg-info/PKG-INFO | 328 +++++++++++++++++++++ 1 file changed, 328 insertions(+) create mode 100644 env/lib/python3.10/site-packages/img2pdf-0.4.4-py3.10.egg-info/PKG-INFO (limited to 'env/lib/python3.10/site-packages/img2pdf-0.4.4-py3.10.egg-info/PKG-INFO') diff --git a/env/lib/python3.10/site-packages/img2pdf-0.4.4-py3.10.egg-info/PKG-INFO b/env/lib/python3.10/site-packages/img2pdf-0.4.4-py3.10.egg-info/PKG-INFO new file mode 100644 index 0000000..d0c319a --- /dev/null +++ b/env/lib/python3.10/site-packages/img2pdf-0.4.4-py3.10.egg-info/PKG-INFO @@ -0,0 +1,328 @@ +Metadata-Version: 2.1 +Name: img2pdf +Version: 0.4.4 +Summary: Convert images to PDF via direct JPEG inclusion. +Home-page: https://gitlab.mister-muffin.de/josch/img2pdf +Download-URL: https://gitlab.mister-muffin.de/josch/img2pdf/repository/archive.tar.gz?ref=0.4.4 +Author: Johannes Schauer Marin Rodrigues +Author-email: josch@mister-muffin.de +License: LGPL +Keywords: jpeg pdf converter +Classifier: Development Status :: 5 - Production/Stable +Classifier: Intended Audience :: Developers +Classifier: Intended Audience :: Other Audience +Classifier: Environment :: Console +Classifier: Programming Language :: Python +Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 3 +Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 3.5 +Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: Implementation :: CPython +Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: Implementation :: PyPy +Classifier: License :: OSI Approved :: GNU Lesser General Public License v3 (LGPLv3) +Classifier: Natural Language :: English +Classifier: Operating System :: OS Independent +Description-Content-Type: text/markdown +Provides-Extra: gui +License-File: LICENSE + +[![Travis Status](https://travis-ci.com/josch/img2pdf.svg?branch=main)](https://app.travis-ci.com/josch/img2pdf) +[![Appveyor Status](https://ci.appveyor.com/api/projects/status/2kws3wkqvi526llj/branch/main?svg=true)](https://ci.appveyor.com/project/josch/img2pdf/branch/main) + +img2pdf +======= + +Lossless conversion of raster images to PDF. You should use img2pdf if your +priorities are (in this order): + + 1. **always lossless**: the image embedded in the PDF will always have the + exact same color information for every pixel as the input + 2. **small**: if possible, the difference in filesize between the input image + and the output PDF will only be the overhead of the PDF container itself + 3. **fast**: if possible, the input image is just pasted into the PDF document + as-is without any CPU hungry re-encoding of the pixel data + +Conventional conversion software (like ImageMagick) would either: + + 1. not be lossless because lossy re-encoding to JPEG + 2. not be small because using wasteful flate encoding of raw pixel data + 3. not be fast because input data gets re-encoded + +Another advantage of not having to re-encode the input (in most common +situations) is, that img2pdf is able to handle much larger input than other +software, because the raw pixel data never has to be loaded into memory. + +The following table shows how img2pdf handles different input depending on the +input file format and image color space. + +| Format | Colorspace | Result | +| ------------------------------------- | ------------------------------ | ------------- | +| JPEG | any | direct | +| JPEG2000 | any | direct | +| PNG (non-interlaced, no transparency) | any | direct | +| TIFF (CCITT Group 4) | monochrome | direct | +| any | any except CMYK and monochrome | PNG Paeth | +| any | monochrome | CCITT Group 4 | +| any | CMYK | flate | + +For JPEG, JPEG2000, non-interlaced PNG and TIFF images with CCITT Group 4 +encoded data, img2pdf directly embeds the image data into the PDF without +re-encoding it. It thus treats the PDF format merely as a container format for +the image data. In these cases, img2pdf only increases the filesize by the size +of the PDF container (typically around 500 to 700 bytes). Since data is only +copied and not re-encoded, img2pdf is also typically faster than other +solutions for these input formats. + +For all other input types, img2pdf first has to transform the pixel data to +make it compatible with PDF. In most cases, the PNG Paeth filter is applied to +the pixel data. For monochrome input, CCITT Group 4 is used instead. Only for +CMYK input no filter is applied before finally applying flate compression. + +Usage +----- + +The images must be provided as files because img2pdf needs to seek in the file +descriptor. + +If no output file is specified with the `-o`/`--output` option, output will be +done to stdout. A typical invocation is: + + $ img2pdf img1.png img2.jpg -o out.pdf + +The detailed documentation can be accessed by running: + + $ img2pdf --help + +Bugs +---- + + - If you find a JPEG, JPEG2000, PNG or CCITT Group 4 encoded TIFF file that, + when embedded into the PDF cannot be read by the Adobe Acrobat Reader, + please contact me. + + - An error is produced if the input image is broken. This commonly happens if + the input image has an invalid EXIF Orientation value of zero. Even though + only nine different values from 1 to 9 are permitted, Anroid phones and + Canon DSLR cameras produce JPEG images with the invalid value of zero. + Either fix your input images with `exiftool` or similar software before + passing the JPEG to `img2pdf` or run `img2pdf` with `--rotation=ifvalid` + (if you run img2pdf from the commandline) or by passing + `rotation=img2pdf.Rotation.ifvalid` as an argument to `convert()` when using + img2pdf as a library. + + - img2pdf uses PIL (or Pillow) to obtain image meta data and to convert the + input if necessary. To prevent decompression bomb denial of service attacks, + Pillow limits the maximum number of pixels an input image is allowed to + have. If you are sure that you know what you are doing, then you can disable + this safeguard by passing the `--pillow-limit-break` option to img2pdf. This + allows one to process even very large input images. + +Installation +------------ + +On a Debian- and Ubuntu-based systems, img2pdf can be installed from the +official repositories: + + $ apt install img2pdf + +If you want to install it using pip, you can run: + + $ pip3 install img2pdf + +If you prefer to install from source code use: + + $ cd img2pdf/ + $ pip3 install . + +To test the console script without installing the package on your system, +use virtualenv: + + $ cd img2pdf/ + $ virtualenv ve + $ ve/bin/pip3 install . + +You can then test the converter using: + + $ ve/bin/img2pdf -o test.pdf src/tests/test.jpg + +For Microsoft Windows users, PyInstaller based .exe files are produced by +appveyor. If you don't want to install Python before using img2pdf you can head +to appveyor and click on "Artifacts" to download the latest version: +https://ci.appveyor.com/project/josch/img2pdf + +GUI +--- + +There exists an experimental GUI with all settings currently disabled. You can +directly convert images to PDF but you cannot set any options via the GUI yet. +If you are interested in adding more features to the PDF, please submit a merge +request. The GUI is based on tkinter and works on Linux, Windows and MacOS. + +![](screenshot.png) + +Library +------- + +The package can also be used as a library: + + import img2pdf + + # opening from filename + with open("name.pdf","wb") as f: + f.write(img2pdf.convert('test.jpg')) + + # opening from file handle + with open("name.pdf","wb") as f1, open("test.jpg") as f2: + f1.write(img2pdf.convert(f2)) + + # using in-memory image data + with open("name.pdf","wb") as f: + f.write(img2pdf.convert("\x89PNG...") + + # multiple inputs (variant 1) + with open("name.pdf","wb") as f: + f.write(img2pdf.convert("test1.jpg", "test2.png")) + + # multiple inputs (variant 2) + with open("name.pdf","wb") as f: + f.write(img2pdf.convert(["test1.jpg", "test2.png"])) + + # convert all files ending in .jpg inside a directory + dirname = "/path/to/images" + imgs = [] + for fname in os.listdir(dirname): + if not fname.endswith(".jpg"): + continue + path = os.path.join(dirname, fname) + if os.path.isdir(path): + continue + imgs.append(path) + with open("name.pdf","wb") as f: + f.write(img2pdf.convert(imgs)) + + # convert all files ending in .jpg in a directory and its subdirectories + dirname = "/path/to/images" + imgs = [] + for r, _, f in os.walk(dirname): + for fname in f: + if not fname.endswith(".jpg"): + continue + imgs.append(os.path.join(r, fname)) + with open("name.pdf","wb") as f: + f.write(img2pdf.convert(imgs)) + + + # convert all files matching a glob + import glob + with open("name.pdf","wb") as f: + f.write(img2pdf.convert(glob.glob("/path/to/*.jpg"))) + + # ignore invalid rotation values in the input images + with open("name.pdf","wb") as f: + f.write(img2pdf.convert('test.jpg'), rotation=img2pdf.Rotation.ifvalid) + + # writing to file descriptor + with open("name.pdf","wb") as f1, open("test.jpg") as f2: + img2pdf.convert(f2, outputstream=f1) + + # specify paper size (A4) + a4inpt = (img2pdf.mm_to_pt(210),img2pdf.mm_to_pt(297)) + layout_fun = img2pdf.get_layout_fun(a4inpt) + with open("name.pdf","wb") as f: + f.write(img2pdf.convert('test.jpg', layout_fun=layout_fun)) + + # use a fixed dpi of 300 instead of reading it from the image + dpix = dpiy = 300 + layout_fun = img2pdf.get_fixed_dpi_layout_fun((dpix, dpiy)) + with open("name.pdf","wb") as f: + f.write(img2pdf.convert('test.jpg', layout_fun=layout_fun)) + + # create a PDF/A-1b compliant document by passing an ICC profile + with open("name.pdf","wb") as f: + f.write(img2pdf.convert('test.jpg', pdfa="/usr/share/color/icc/sRGB.icc")) + +Comparison to ImageMagick +------------------------- + +Create a large test image: + + $ convert logo: -resize 8000x original.jpg + +Convert it into PDF using ImageMagick and img2pdf: + + $ time img2pdf original.jpg -o img2pdf.pdf + $ time convert original.jpg imagemagick.pdf + +Notice how ImageMagick took an order of magnitude longer to do the conversion +than img2pdf. It also used twice the memory. + +Now extract the image data from both PDF documents and compare it to the +original: + + $ pdfimages -all img2pdf.pdf tmp + $ compare -metric AE original.jpg tmp-000.jpg null: + 0 + $ pdfimages -all imagemagick.pdf tmp + $ compare -metric AE original.jpg tmp-000.jpg null: + 118716 + +To get lossless output with ImageMagick we can use Zip compression but that +unnecessarily increases the size of the output: + + $ convert original.jpg -compress Zip imagemagick.pdf + $ pdfimages -all imagemagick.pdf tmp + $ compare -metric AE original.jpg tmp-000.png null: + 0 + $ stat --format="%s %n" original.jpg img2pdf.pdf imagemagick.pdf + 1535837 original.jpg + 1536683 img2pdf.pdf + 9397809 imagemagick.pdf + +Comparison to pdfLaTeX +---------------------- + +pdfLaTeX performs a lossless conversion from included images to PDF by default. +If the input is a JPEG, then it simply embeds the JPEG into the PDF in the same +way as img2pdf does it. But for other image formats it uses flate compression +of the plain pixel data and thus needlessly increases the output file size: + + $ convert logo: -resize 8000x original.png + $ cat << END > pdflatex.tex + \documentclass{article} + \usepackage{graphicx} + \begin{document} + \includegraphics{original.png} + \end{document} + END + $ pdflatex pdflatex.tex + $ stat --format="%s %n" original.png pdflatex.pdf + 4500182 original.png + 9318120 pdflatex.pdf + +Comparison to podofoimg2pdf +--------------------------- + +Like pdfLaTeX, podofoimg2pdf is able to perform a lossless conversion from JPEG +to PDF by plainly embedding the JPEG data into the pdf container. But just like +pdfLaTeX it uses flate compression for all other file formats, thus sometimes +resulting in larger files than necessary. + + $ convert logo: -resize 8000x original.png + $ podofoimg2pdf out.pdf original.png + stat --format="%s %n" original.png out.pdf + 4500181 original.png + 9335629 out.pdf + +It also only supports JPEG, PNG and TIF as input and lacks many of the +convenience features of img2pdf like page sizes, borders, rotation and +metadata. + +Comparison to Tesseract OCR +--------------------------- + +Tesseract OCR comes closest to the functionality img2pdf provides. It is able +to convert JPEG and PNG input to PDF without needlessly increasing the filesize +and is at the same time lossless. So if your input is JPEG and PNG images, then +you should safely be able to use Tesseract instead of img2pdf. For other input, +Tesseract might not do a lossless conversion. For example it converts CMYK +input to RGB and removes the alpha channel from images with transparency. For +multipage TIFF or animated GIF, it will only convert the first frame. + -- cgit v1.2.3-59-g8ed1b