Provided by: img2pdf_0.2.0-1_all bug

NAME

       img2pdf.py - lossless conversion of raster images to pdf

DESCRIPTION

       usage: img2pdf.py [-h] [-v] [-V] [-o out] [-C colorspace] [-D]

              [--without-pdfrw]  [-S  LxL]  [-s  LxL] [-b L[:L]] [-f FIT] [-a] [--title title] [--author author]
              [--creator  creator]  [--producer  producer]  [--creationdate  creationdate]  [--moddate  moddate]
              [--subject  subject]  [--keywords  kw [kw ...]] [--viewer-panes PANES] [--viewer-initial-page NUM]
              [--viewer-magnification     MAG]     [--viewer-page-layout      LAYOUT]      [--viewer-fit-window]
              [--viewer-center-window] [--viewer-fullscreen] [infile [infile ...]]

       Losslessly  convert  raster  images  to PDF without re-encoding JPEG and JPEG2000 images. This leads to a
       lossless conversion of JPEG and JPEG2000 images with the  only  added  file  size  coming  from  the  PDF
       container itself.

       Other  raster graphics formats are losslessly stored in a zip/flate encoding of their RGB representation.
       This might increase file size and does not store transparency. There is nothing that can  be  done  about
       that  until  the  PDF  format  allows  embedding other image formats like PNG. Thus, img2pdf is primarily
       useful to convert JPEG and JPEG2000 images to PDF.

       The output is sent to standard output so that it can be redirected into a file or to another  program  as
       part of a shell pipe. To directly write the output into a file, use the -o or --output option.

   positional arguments:
       infile Specifies the input file(s) in any format that can be read by the Python Imaging Library (PIL). If
              no  input  images are given, then a single image is read from standard input. The special filename
              "-" can be used once to read an image from standard input. To read a file in the current directory
              with the filename "-", pass it to img2pdf by explicitly stating its relative path like "./-".

   optional arguments:
       -h, --help
              show this help message and exit

       -v, --verbose
              Makes the program operate in verbose mode, printing messages on standard error.

       -V, --version
              Prints version information and exits.

       General output arguments:

       -o out, --output out
              Makes the program output to a file instead of standard output.

       -C colorspace, --colorspace colorspace
              Forces the PIL colorspace. See the epilogue for  a  list  of  possible  values.  Usually  the  PDF
              colorspace  would  be derived from the color space of the input image.  This option overwrites the
              automatically detected colorspace from the input image and thus forces a certain colorspace in the
              output PDF /ColorSpace property. This is useful for JPEG 2000 images with a  different  colorspace
              than RGB.

       -D, --nodate
              Suppresses  timestamps  in  the  output and thus makes the output deterministic between individual
              runs. You can also manually set a date using the --moddate and --creationdate options.

       --without-pdfrw
              By default, img2pdf uses the pdfrw library to create the output PDF if pdfrw is available. If  you
              want to use the internal PDF generator of img2pdf even if pdfrw is present, then pass this option.
              This  can  be  useful if you want to have unicode metadata values which pdfrw does not yet support
              (See https://github.com/pmaupin/pdfrw/issues/39) or if you want the PDF  code  to  be  more  human
              readable.

       Image and page size and layout arguments:

       Every input image will be placed on its own page.
              The image size is controlled

              by the dpi value of the input image or, if unset or missing, the default dpi of 96.00. By default,
              each  page  will  have the same size as the image it shows.  Thus, there will be no visible border
              between the image and the page border by default. If image size and page size are  made  different
              from  each  other  by  the  options  in  this  section,  the image will always be centered in both
              dimensions.

              The image size and page size can be explicitly set using the  --imgsize  and  --pagesize  options,
              respectively.   If  either  dimension of the image size is specified but the same dimension of the
              page size is not, then the latter will be derived  from  the  former  using  an  optional  minimal
              distance  between  the  image  and the page border (given by the --border option) and/or a certain
              fitting strategy (given by the --fit option). The converse happens if a dimension of the page size
              is set but the same dimension of the image size is not.

              Any length value in below options is represented by the meta variable L which is a floating  point
              value  with an optional unit appended (without a space between them). The default unit is pt (1/72
              inch, the PDF unit) and other allowed units are cm (centimeter), mm (millimeter), and in (inch).

              Any size argument of the format LxL in the options below specifies  the  width  and  height  of  a
              rectangle  where  the  first L represents the width and the second L represents the height with an
              optional unit following each value as described above.  Either width or height may be omitted  but
              in  that  case  the  separating  x  must  still be present. Instead of giving the width and height
              explicitly, you may also specify some (case-insensitive) common page sizes such as letter and  A4.
              See the epilogue at the bottom for a complete list of the valid sizes.

              The  --fit  option  scales  to  fit the image into a rectangle that is either derived from the the
              --imgsize option or otherwise from the --pagesize option.  If the  --border  option  is  given  in
              addition to the --imgsize option while the --pagesize option is not given, then the page size will
              be  calculated from the image size, respecting the border setting. If the --border option is given
              in addition to the --pagesize option while the --imgsize option is not given, then the image  size
              will  be  calculated  from the page size, respecting the border setting. If the --border option is
              given while both the --pagesize and --imgsize options are passed, then the --border option will be
              ignored.

       -S LxL, --pagesize LxL
              Sets the size of the PDF pages. The short-option is the upper case S because it is an mnemonic for
              being bigger than the image size.

       -s LxL, --imgsize LxL
              Sets the size of the images on the PDF pages. In addition, the unit dpi is allowed which will  set
              the  image  size  as a value of dots per inch. Instead of a unit, width and height values may also
              have a percentage sign appended, indicating  a  resize  of  the  image  by  that  percentage.  The
              short-option is the lower case s because it is an mnemonic for being smaller than the page size.

       -b L[:L], --border L[:L]
              Specifies  the  minimal  distance  between the image border and the PDF page border. This value Is
              overwritten by explicit values set by --pagesize  or  --imgsize.  The  value  will  be  used  when
              calculating  page  dimensions from the image dimensions or the other way round. One, or two length
              values can be given as an argument, separated by a colon. One value specifies the  minimal  border
              on  all  four  sides.  Two  values  specify  the  minimal border on the top/bottom and left/right,
              respectively. It is not possible to specify asymmetric  borders  because  images  will  always  be
              centered on the page.

       -f FIT, --fit FIT
              If  --imgsize  is  given, fits the image using these dimensions. Otherwise, fit the image into the
              dimensions given by --pagesize. FIT is one of into, fill, exact, shrink and enlarge.  The  default
              value is "into". See the epilogue at the bottom for a description of the FIT options.

       -a, --auto-orient
              If both dimensions of the page are given via --pagesize, conditionally swaps these dimensions such
              that the page orientation is the same as the orientation of the input image. If the orientation of
              a page gets flipped, then so do the values set via the --border option.

       Arguments setting metadata:

       --title title
              Sets the title metadata value

       --author author
              Sets the author metadata value

       --creator creator
              Sets the creator metadata value

       --producer producer
              Sets the producer metadata value

       --creationdate creationdate
              Sets  the UTC creation date metadata value in YYYY-MMDD or YYYY-MM-DDTHH:MM or YYYY-MM-DDTHH:MM:SS
              format or any format understood by python dateutil  module  or  any  format  understood  by  `date
              --date`

       --moddate moddate
              Sets   the   UTC   modification   date   metadata   value  in  YYYYMM-DD  or  YYYY-MM-DDTHH:MM  or
              YYYY-MM-DDTHH:MM:SS format or any format understood  by  python  dateutil  module  or  any  format
              understood by `date --date`

       --subject subject
              Sets the subject metadata value

       --keywords kw [kw ...]
              Sets the keywords metadata value (can be given multiple times)

   PDF viewer arguments:
              PDF files can specify how they are meant to be presented to the user by a PDF viewer

       --viewer-panes PANES
              Instruct the PDF viewer which side panes to show.  Valid values are "outlines" and "thumbs". It is
              not possible to specify both at the same time.

       --viewer-initial-page NUM
              Instead  of  showing  the first page, instruct the PDF viewer to show the given page instead. Page
              numbers start with 1.

       --viewer-magnification MAG
              Instruct the PDF viewer to open the PDF with a certain zoom  level.  Valid  values  are  either  a
              floating point number giving the exact zoom level, "fit" (zoom to fit whole page), "fith" (zoom to
              fit page width) and "fitbh" (zoom to fit visible page width).

       --viewer-page-layout LAYOUT
              Instruct the PDF viewer how to arrange the pages on the screen. Valid values are "single" (display
              single  pages), "onecolumn" (one continuous column), "twocolumnright" (two continuous columns with
              odd number pages on the right) and "twocolumnleft" (two continuous columns with odd numbered pages
              on the left)

       --viewer-fit-window
              Instruct the PDF viewer to resize the window to fit the page size

       --viewer-center-window
              Instruct the PDF viewer to center the PDF viewer window

       --viewer-fullscreen
              Instruct the PDF viewer to open the PDF in fullscreen mode

       Colorspace

              Currently, the colorspace must be forced for JPEG 2000 images that are not in the RGB  colorspace.
              Available colorspace options are based on Python Imaging Library (PIL) short handles.

       RGB    RGB color

       L      Grayscale

       1      Black and white (internally converted to grayscale)

       CMYK   CMYK color

       CMYK;I CMYK color with inversion (for CMYK JPEG files from Adobe)

       Paper sizes

              You  can  specify  the short hand paper size names shown in the first column in the table below as
              arguments to the --pagesize and --imgsize options.  The width and height they are  mapping  to  is
              shown  in  the second column.  Giving the value in the second column has the same effect as giving
              the short hand in the first column. Appending ^T (a caret/circumflex followed  by  the  letter  T)
              turns  the paper size from portrait into landscape. The postfix thus symbolizes the transpose. The
              values are case insensitive.

       A0     841mmx1189mm

       A1     594mmx841mm

       A2     420mmx594mm

       A3     297mmx420mm

       A4     210mmx297mm

       A5     148mmx210mm

       A6     105mmx148mm

       Letter 8.5inx11in

       Fit options

              The img2pdf options for the --fit argument are shown in the first column in the table  below.  The
              function  of  these  options can be mapped to the geometry operators of imagemagick. For users who
              are familiar with imagemagick, the corresponding operator is shown  in  the  second  column.   The
              third  column  shows  whether  or  not  the  aspect ratio is preserved for that option (same as in
              imagemagick). Just like imagemagick, img2pdf tries hard to preserve the aspect ratio,  so  if  the
              --fit  argument  is  not given, then the default is "into" which corresponds to the absence of any
              operator in imagemagick.  The value of the --fit option is case insensitive.

       into   |   | Y | The default. Width and height values specify maximum |   |   | values.

       ---------+---+---+----------------------------------------------------------

       fill   | ^ | Y | Width and height values specify the minimum values.

       ---------+---+---+----------------------------------------------------------

       exact  | ! | N | Width and height emphatically given.

       ---------+---+---+----------------------------------------------------------

       shrink
              | > | Y | Shrinks an image with dimensions larger than the given |   |    |  ones  (and  otherwise
              behaves like "into").

       ---------+---+---+----------------------------------------------------------

              enlarge | < | Y | Enlarges an image with dimensions smaller than the given

       |      |   | ones (and otherwise behaves like "into").

       Examples

              Lines  starting  with  a  dollar sign denote commands you can enter into your terminal. The dollar
              sign signifies your command prompt. It is not part of the command you type.

              Convert two scans in JPEG format to a PDF document.

              $ img2pdf --output out.pdf page1.jpg page2.jpg

              Convert a directory of JPEG images into a PDF with printable A4 pages in landscape mode.  On  each
              page,  the  photo  takes the maximum amount of space while preserving its aspect ratio and a print
              border of 2 cm on the top and bottom and 2.5 cm on the left and right hand side.

              $ img2pdf --output out.pdf --pagesize A4^T --border 2cm:2.5cm *.jpg

              On each A4 page, fit images into a 10 cm times 15 cm rectangle but keep the original image size if
              the image is smaller than that.

              $ img2pdf --output out.pdf -S A4 --imgsize 10cmx15cm --fit shrink *.jpg

              Prepare a directory of photos to be printed borderless on photo paper with a 3:2 aspect ratio  and
              rotate each page so that its orientation is the same as the input image.

              $ img2pdf --output out.pdf --pagesize 15cmx10cm --auto-orient *.jpg

              Encode  a grayscale JPEG2000 image. The colorspace has to be forced as img2pdf cannot read it from
              the JPEG2000 file automatically.

              $ img2pdf --output out.pdf --colorspace L input.jp2

       Argument parsing

              Argument long options can be abbreviated to a prefix if the abbreviation is anambiguous. That  is,
              the prefix must match a unique option.

              Beware of your shell interpreting argument values as special characters (like the semicolon in the
              CMYK;I colorspace option). If in doubt, put the argument values in single quotes.

              If  you  want  an argument value to start with one or more minus characters, you must use the long
              option name and join them with an equal sign like so:


              $ img2pdf --author=--test--
              If your input file name starts with one or more minus characters, either separate the input  files
              from the other arguments by two minus signs:

              $ img2pdf -- --my-file-starts-with-two-minuses.jpg

              Or be more explicit about its relative path by prepending a ./:

              $ img2pdf ./--my-file-starts-with-two-minuses.jpg

              The order of non-positional arguments (all arguments other than the input images) does not matter.

img2pdf.py 0.2                                    February 2016                                    IMG2PDF.PY(1)