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Command line tool for generating pdftk-style bookmark files in a user-friendly way, and (optionally) outputs a PDF file with the specified outline.

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pdfoutliner

Command line tool for generating pdftk-style bookmark files in a user-friendly way, and (optionally) outputs a PDF file with the specified outline.

Table of Contents

Why

Instead of requiring a TOC file like this, as pdftk does

BookmarkBegin
BookmarkTitle: PDF Reference (Version 1.5)
BookmarkLevel: 1
BookmarkPageNumber: 1
BookmarkBegin
BookmarkTitle: Contents
BookmarkLevel: 2
BookmarkPageNumber: 3

To create a PDF file with a structured/nested outline with the script, you only need a TOC file that looks like this:

PDF Reference (Version 1.5) 1
  Contents 3

or perhaps better, this:

1 PDF Reference (Version 1.5) 1
1.1 Contents 3

Installation

pip3 install pdfoutliner

Sample Usage

With PDF I/O:

pdfoutliner TOC --inpdf in.pdf -s START

where

  • START is the page in the PDF where p. 1 is supposed to start, and
  • TOC is the path to a table of contents file.

See section TOC Format for details on the syntax.

Writing a pdftk bookmark file only:

pdfoutliner TOC

For more options, see section Additional Options, or use

pdfoutliner -h

TOC Format

The default table of contents format is

1 Heading 1
1.2 Subheading 3
1.2.3 Subsubheading 5

Each line has a numbering (not necessarily numerical), a title, and a page number, separated by space characters.

The script will infer that "1 Heading" is level 1, "1.1 Subheading" is level 2, and so on.

Alternatively, you can specify the structure by indentation, or keep the PDF flat.

Specifying structure by subheading numbering

This is the default option. As mentioned, the format is

1 Heading 1
1.1 Subheading 3
1.1.1 Subsubheading 5

And the script will infer the structure from the numbering.

If your TOC file looks like

1. Heading 1
1.1. Subheading 3
1.1.1. Subsubheading 5

i.e., has a trailing dot after each numbering, you could specify the style of the heading with --style 1.2.

Specifying structure by indentation

You could also specify the structure of the outline by indentation with -d --indentation, followed by an escaped regex for 1 unit of indentation.

For example, suppose my TOC looks like

Heading 1
  Subheading 3
    Subsubheading 5

where the unit of indentation is 2 spaces, then use

pdfoutliner TOC -d \\s\\s

And the script will infer the structure from the subheading indentations.

Keeping PDF flat

Use -k --keepflat and the script will ignore any numbering or indentations. The output PDF will have a flat, unstructured outline.

Heading 1
Subheading 3
Subsubheading 5

Additional Options

usage: pdfoutliner [-h] [-o OUTMARKS] [-d INDENTATION] [-k]
                      [--style {1.2,1.2.}] [--outpdf OUTPDF] [--inpdf INPDF]
                      [-s START]
                      toc

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

bookmark I/O:
  toc                   path to TOC file
  -o OUTMARKS, --outmarks OUTMARKS
                        name for pdftk bookmarks file. default is original toc
                        name + "_outlined"

bookmark structure:
  if both -d and -k are specified, -d will take precedence over -k

  -d INDENTATION, --indentation INDENTATION
                        escaped regex for 1 unit of indentation
  -k, --keepflat       keep outline flat
  --style {1.2,1.2.}    heading style. with or without a trailing dot. default
                        "1.2", i.e., no trailing dot

PDF I/O:
  --outpdf OUTPDF       path to output PDF file. default is input pdf name +
                        "_outlined.pdf" in input PDF's directory
  --inpdf INPDF         path to input PDF file
  -s START, --start START
                        page in the pdf document where page 1 is. default 1

Dependency

  • pdftk
    • on macOS 10.11+, use the build here
  • (optional) Tabula
    • for extracting a usable TOC from PDF files (along with some additional regex golfing)

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Command line tool for generating pdftk-style bookmark files in a user-friendly way, and (optionally) outputs a PDF file with the specified outline.

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