PDF::Builder::Annotation(3) | User Contributed Perl Documentation | PDF::Builder::Annotation(3) |
NAME¶
PDF::Builder::Annotation - Add annotations to a PDF
SYNOPSIS¶
my $pdf = PDF::Builder->new(); my $font = $pdf->font('Helvetica'); my $page1 = $pdf->page(); my $page2 = $pdf->page(); my $content = $page1->text(); my $message = 'Go to Page 2'; my $size = 18; $content->distance(1 * 72, 9 * 72); $content->font($font, $size); $content->text($message); my $annotation = $page1->annotation(); my $width = $content->text_width($message); $annotation->rect(1 * 72, 9 * 72, 1 * 72 + $width, 9 * 72 + $size); $annotation->link($page2); $pdf->save('sample.pdf');
METHODS¶
Note that the handling of annotations can vary from Reader to Reader. The available icon set may be larger or smaller than given here, and some Readers activate an annotation on a single mouse click, while others require a double click. Not all features provided here may be available on all PDF Readers.
new¶
$annotation = PDF::Builder::Annotation->new()
It is normally not necessary to explicitly call this method (see examples).
Annotation types¶
link
$annotation->link($page, %opts)
Note that $page is not a simple page number, but is a page structure such as "$pdf->openpage(page_number)", or a Named Destination defined elsewhere.
pdf, pdfile, pdf_file
$annotation->pdf($pdffile, $page_number, %opts)
$page_number is the physical page number, starting at 1: 1, 2,...
Alternate names: "pdfile" and "pdf_file"
Originally this method was named "pdfile", and then "pdf_file" but a recent PDF::API2 change made it "pdf". For compatibility, it has been changed to "pdf", with "pdfile" and "pdf_file" still available as aliases.
launch, file
$annotation->launch($file, %opts)
Alternate name: "file"
Originally this method was named "file", but a recent PDF::API2 change made it "launch". For compatibility, it has been changed to "launch", with "file" still available as an alias.
uri, url
$annotation->uri($url, %opts)
Alternate name: "url"
Originally this method was named "url", but a recent PDF::API2 change made it "uri". For compatibility, it has been changed to "uri", with "url" still available as an alias.
text
$annotation->text($text, %opts)
The option "text" is the popup's label string, not to be confused with the main $text.
The icon appears in the upper left corner of the "rect" selection rectangle, and its active clickable area is fixed by the icon (it is not equal to the rectangle). The icon size is fixed, and its fill color set by "color".
Additional options:
- icon => name_string
- icon => reference
- Specify the icon to be used. The default is Reader-specific
(usually "Note"), and others may be
defined by the Reader. "Comment",
"Key",
"Help",
"NewParagraph",
"Paragraph", and
"Insert" are also supposed to be
available on all PDF Readers. Note that the name case must exactly
match. The icon is of fixed size. Any AP dictionary entry will
override the icon setting.
A reference to an icon may be passed instead of a name.
- opacity => value
- Define the opacity (non-transparency, opaqueness) of the icon. This value ranges from 0.0 (transparent) to 1.0 (fully opaque), and applies to both the outline and the fill color. The default is 1.0.
markup
$annotation->markup($text, $PointList, $highlight, %opts)
"text" is the popup's label string, not to be confused with the main $text.
There is no icon. Instead, the annotated text marked by $PointList is highlighted in one of four ways specified by $highlight.
- $PointList => [ 8n numbers ]
- One or more sets of numeric coordinates are given, defining the
quadrilateral (usually a rectangle) around the text to be highlighted and
selectable (clickable, to bring up the annotation text). These are four
sets of "x,y" coordinates, given (for
Left-to-Right text) as the upper bound Upper Left to Upper Right and then
the lower bound Lower Left to Lower Right. Note that this is different
from what is (erroneously) documented in the PDF specification!
It is important that the coordinates be given in this order.
Multiple sets of quadrilateral corners may be given, such as for highlighted text that wraps around to new line(s). The minimum is one set (8 numbers). Any AP dictionary entry will override the $PointList setting. Finally, the "Rect" selection rectangle is created just outside the convex bounding box defined by $PointList.
- $highlight => 'string'
- The following highlighting effects are permitted. The "string" must be spelled and capitalized exactly as given:
- color => array of values
- If "color" is not given (an array of numbers in the range 0.0-1.0), a medium gray should be used by default. Named colors are not supported at this time.
- opacity => value
- Define the opacity (non-transparency, opaqueness) of the icon. This value ranges from 0.0 (transparent) to 1.0 (fully opaque), and applies to both the outline and the fill color. The default is 1.0.
movie
$annotation->movie($file, $contentType, %opts)
The "rect" rectangle also serves as the area where the movie is played, so it should be of usable size and aspect ratio. It does not use a separate popup player. It is known to play .avi and .wav files -- others have not been tested. Using Adobe Reader, it will not play .mpg files (unsupported type). More work is probably needed on this annotation method.
file_attachment
$annotation->file_attachment($file, %opts)
The file, along with its name, is embedded in the PDF document and may be extracted for viewing with the appropriate viewer.
This differs from the "file" method in that "file" looks for and launches a file already on the Reader's machine, while "file_attachment" embeds the file in the PDF, and makes it available on the Reader's machine for actions of the user's choosing.
Note 1: some Readers may only permit an "open" action, and may also restrict file types (extensions) that will be handled. This may be configurable with your Reader's security settings.
Note 2: the displayed file name (pop-up during mouse rollover of the target rectangle) is given with the path trimmed off (file name only). If you want the displayed name to exactly match the path that was passed to the call, including the path, give the "notrimpath" option.
Options:
- icon => name_string
- icon => reference
- Specify the icon to be used. The default is Reader-specific
(usually "PushPin"), and others may be
defined by the Reader. "Paperclip",
"Graph", and
"Tag" are also supposed to be available
on all PDF Readers. Note that the name case must exactly match.
"None" is a custom invisible icon
defined by PDF::Builder. The icon is stretched/squashed to fill the
defined target rectangle, so take care when defining
"rect" dimensions. Any AP
dictionary entry will override the icon setting.
A reference to an icon may be passed instead of a name.
- opacity => value
- Define the opacity (non-transparency, opaqueness) of the icon. This value ranges from 0.0 (transparent) to 1.0 (fully opaque), and applies to both the outline and the fill color. The default is 1.0.
- notrimpath => 1
- If given, show the entire path and file name on mouse rollover, rather than just the file name.
- text => string
- A text label for the popup (on mouseover) that contains the file name.
Note that while PDF permits different specifications (paths) to DOS/Windows, Mac, and Unix (including Linux) versions of a file, and different format copies to be embedded, at this time PDF::Builder only permits a single file (format of your choice) to be embedded. If there is user demand for multiple file formats to be referenced and/or embedded, we could look into providing this, although separate OS version paths may be considered obsolescent!.
Internal routines and common options¶
rect
$annotation->rect($llx,$lly, $urx,$ury)
The default clickable area is the icon itself.
Defining option. Note that this "option" is actually required.
- rect => [LLx, LLy, URx, URy]
- Set annotation rectangle at "[LLx,LLy]" to "[URx,URy]" (lower left and upper right coordinates). LL to UR is customary, but any diagonal is allowed.
border
$annotation->border(@b)
A border is used in annotations where text or some other material is put down, and a clickable rectangle is defined over it (rect). A border is not shown when an icon is being used to mark the clickable area.
A PDF Reader normally defaults to [0 0 1] (solid line of width 1, with sharp corners) if no border ("/Border") is specified. Keeping compatibility with PDF::API2's longstanding practice, PDF::Builder defaults to no visible border "[0 0 0]" (solid line of width 0, and thus invisible).
Defining option:
- border => [CRh, CRv, W]
- border => [CRh, CRv, W, [on, off...]]
- Note that the square brackets [ and ] are literally there,
indicating a vector or array of values. They do not indicate
optional values!
Set annotation border style of horizontal and vertical corner radii "CRh" and "CRv" (value 0 for squared corners) and width "W" (value 0 for no border). The PDF::Builder default is no border (while a PDF Reader typically defaults to no border ([0 0 0]), if no /Border entry is given). Optionally, a dash pattern array may be given ("on" length, "off" length, as one or more pairs). The default is a solid line.
The border vector seems to ignore the first two settings (corner radii), but the line thickness works, on basic Readers. The corner radii may work on some other Readers.
content
$annotation->content(@lines)
open
$annotation->open($bool)
Both are editable; the "open" form brings up the page with the entry area already open for editing, while "closed" has to be clicked on to edit it.
Defining option:
- open => boolean
- If true (1), the annotation will be marked as initially "open". If false (0), or the option is not given, the annotation is initially "closed".
dest
$annotation->dest($page, I<fit_setting>)
"xyz" is the default fit setting, with position (left and top) and zoom the same as the calling page's ([undef, undef, undef]).
$annotation->dest($name)
Color
$annotation->Color(@color)
For link and url annotations, this is the color of the rectangle border (border given with a width of at least 1).
If an invalid array length or numeric value is given, a medium gray ( [0.5] ) value is used, without any message. If no color is given, the usual fill color is black.
Defining option:
Named colors (e.g., 'black') are not supported at this time.
- color => [ ] or not 1, 3, or 4 numbers 0.0-1.0
- A medium gray (0.5 value) will be used if an invalid color is given.
- color => [ g ]
- If g is between 0.0 (black) and 1.0 (white), the fill color will be gray.
- color => [ r, g, b ]
- If r (red), g (green), and b (blue) are all between 0.0 and 1.0, the fill color will be the defined RGB hue. [ 0, 0, 0 ] is black, [ 1, 1, 0 ] is yellow, and [ 1, 1, 1 ] is white.
- color => [ c, m, y, k ]
- If c (red), m (magenta), y (yellow), and k (black) are all between 0.0 and 1.0, the fill color will be the defined CMYK hue. [ 0, 0, 0, 0 ] is white, [ 1, 0, 1, 0 ] is green, and [ 1, 1, 1, 1 ] is black.
text string
text => string
2024-03-08 | perl v5.40.0 |