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@allganize/react-pdf

Display PDFs in your React app as easily as if they were images.

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React-PDF

Display PDFs in your React app as easily as if they were images.

Lost?

This package is used to display existing PDFs. If you wish to create PDFs using React, you may be looking for @react-pdf/renderer.

tl;dr

  • Install by executing npm install react-pdf or yarn add react-pdf.
  • Import by adding import { Document } from 'react-pdf'.
  • Use by adding <Document file="..." />. file can be a URL, base64 content, Uint8Array, and more.
  • Put <Page /> components inside <Document /> to render pages.

Demo

A minimal demo page can be found in sample directory.

Online demo is also available!

Before you continue

React-PDF is under constant development. This documentation is written for React-PDF 6.x branch. If you want to see documentation for other versions of React-PDF, use dropdown on top of GitHub page to switch to an appropriate tag. Here are quick links to the newest docs from each branch:

Getting started

Compatibility

Browser support

React-PDF supports all modern browsers. It is tested with the latest versions of Chrome, Edge, Safari, Firefox, and Opera.

The following browsers are supported in React-PDF v6:

  • Chrome ≥76
  • Edge (Chromium-based)
  • Safari ≥14.1
  • Firefox ≥90(?)

You may extend the list of supported browsers by providing additional polyfills (e.g. for Promise.allSettled) and configuring your bundler to transpile pdfjs-dist.

If you need to support older browsers, you will need to use React-PDF v5.

If you need to support Internet Explorer 11, you will need to use React-PDF v4.

React

To use the latest version of React-PDF, your project needs to use React 16.8 or later.

If you use an older version of React, please refer to the table below to a find suitable React-PDF version.

React versionNewest compatible React-PDF version
≥16.8latest
≥16.35.x
≥15.54.x
Preact

React-PDF may be used with Preact.

Installation

Add React-PDF to your project by executing npm install react-pdf or yarn add react-pdf.

Usage

Here's an example of basic usage:

import React, { useState } from 'react';
import { Document, Page } from 'react-pdf';

function MyApp() {
  const [numPages, setNumPages] = useState(null);
  const [pageNumber, setPageNumber] = useState(1);

  function onDocumentLoadSuccess({ numPages }) {
    setNumPages(numPages);
  }

  return (
    <div>
      <Document file="somefile.pdf" onLoadSuccess={onDocumentLoadSuccess}>
        <Page pageNumber={pageNumber} />
      </Document>
      <p>
        Page {pageNumber} of {numPages}
      </p>
    </div>
  );
}

Check the sample directory in this repository for a full working example. For more examples and more advanced use cases, check Recipes in React-PDF Wiki.

Configure PDF.js worker

For React-PDF to work, PDF.js worker needs to be provided.

To make it easier, special entry files were prepared for most popular bundlers. You can find them in the table below.

For example, if you want to use React-PDF with Webpack 5, instead of writing:

import { Document, Page } from 'react-pdf';

write:

import { Document, Page } from 'react-pdf/dist/esm/entry.webpack5';
BundlerEntry file
Parcel 1react-pdf/dist/esm/entry.parcel
Parcel 2react-pdf/dist/esm/entry.parcel2
Vitereact-pdf/dist/esm/entry.vite
Webpack 4react-pdf/dist/esm/entry.webpack
Webpack 5react-pdf/dist/esm/entry.webpack5
Webpack 4

If you want to use React-PDF with Webpack 4, you'll need to manually install file-loader package.

Create React App

Create React App 4 (react-scripts@4.0.0) uses Webpack 4 under the hood, so you can use the entry file built for Webpack 4.

Create React App 5 (react-scripts@5.0.0) uses Webpack 5 under the hood, so the aim is to use the entry file built for Webpack 5. However, the way Webpack is configured in CRA 5 causes it to crash at build time on most machines with JavaScript heap out of memory error.

Standard instructions will also work with Create React App. Please note that in CRA, you can copy pdf.worker.js file from pdfjs-dist/build to public directory in order for it to be copied to your project's output folder at build time.

Standard (Browserify, esbuild and others)

If you use Browserify, esbuild, or other bundlers, you will have to make sure on your own that pdf.worker.js file from pdfjs-dist/build is copied to your project's output folder.

For example, you could use a custom script like:

import path from 'path';
import fs from 'fs';

const pdfjsDistPath = path.dirname(require.resolve('pdfjs-dist/package.json'));
const pdfWorkerPath = path.join(pdfjsDistPath, 'build', 'pdf.worker.js');

fs.copyFileSync(pdfWorkerPath, './dist/pdf.worker.js');

If you don't need to debug pdf.worker.js, you can use pdf.worker.min.js file instead, which is roughly half the size. For this to work, however, you will need to specify workerSrc manually like so:

import { pdfjs } from 'react-pdf';
pdfjs.GlobalWorkerOptions.workerSrc = 'pdf.worker.min.js';

Alternatively, you could use the minified pdf.worker.min.js from an external CDN:

import { pdfjs } from 'react-pdf';
pdfjs.GlobalWorkerOptions.workerSrc = `//unpkg.com/pdfjs-dist@${pdfjs.version}/build/pdf.worker.min.js`;

Support for annotations

If you want to use annotations (e.g. links) in PDFs rendered by React-PDF, then you would need to include stylesheet necessary for annotations to be correctly displayed like so:

import 'react-pdf/dist/esm/Page/AnnotationLayer.css';

Support for text layer

If you want to use text layer in PDFs rendered by React-PDF, then you would need to include stylesheet necessary for text layer to be correctly displayed like so:

import 'react-pdf/dist/esm/Page/TextLayer.css';

Support for non-latin characters

If you want to ensure that PDFs with non-latin characters will render perfectly, or you have encountered the following warning:

Warning: The CMap "baseUrl" parameter must be specified, ensure that the "cMapUrl" and "cMapPacked" API parameters are provided.

then you would also need to include cMaps in your build and tell React-PDF where they are.

Copying cMaps

First, you need to copy cMaps from pdfjs-dist (React-PDF's dependency - it should be in your node_modules if you have React-PDF installed). cMaps are located in pdfjs-dist/cmaps.

Webpack

Add copy-webpack-plugin to your project if you haven't already:

npm install copy-webpack-plugin --save-dev

Now, in your Webpack config, import the plugin:

import path from 'path';
import CopyWebpackPlugin from 'copy-webpack-plugin';

and in plugins section of your config, add the following:

new CopyWebpackPlugin({
  patterns: [
    {
      from: path.join(path.dirname(require.resolve('pdfjs-dist/package.json')), 'cmaps'),
      to: 'cmaps/'
    },
  ],
}),
Parcel, Browserify and others

If you use Parcel, Browserify or other bundling tools, you will have to make sure on your own that cMaps are copied to your project's output folder.

For example, you could use a custom script like:

import path from 'path';
import fs from 'fs';

const cMapsDir = path.join(path.dirname(require.resolve('pdfjs-dist/package.json')), 'cmaps');

function copyDir(from, to) {
  // Ensure target directory exists
  fs.mkdirSync(to, { recursive: true });

  const files = fs.readdirSync(from);
  files.forEach((file) => {
    fs.copyFileSync(path.join(from, file), path.join(to, file));
  });
}

copyDir(cMapsDir, 'dist/cmaps/');
Setting up React-PDF

Now that you have cMaps in your build, pass required options to Document component by using options prop, like so:

<Document
  options={{
    cMapUrl: 'cmaps/',
    cMapPacked: true,
  }}
/>

Alternatively, you could use cMaps from external CDN:

import { pdfjs } from 'react-pdf';

<Document
  options={{
    cMapUrl: `https://unpkg.com/pdfjs-dist@${pdfjs.version}/cmaps/`,
    cMapPacked: true,
  }}
/>;

Support for standard fonts

If you want to support PDFs using standard fonts (deprecated in PDF 1.5, but still around), then you would also need to include standard fonts in your build and tell React-PDF where they are.

Copying fonts

First, you need to copy standard fonts from pdfjs-dist (React-PDF's dependency - it should be in your node_modules if you have React-PDF installed). Standard fonts are located in pdfjs-dist/standard_fonts.

Webpack

Add copy-webpack-plugin to your project if you haven't already:

npm install copy-webpack-plugin --save-dev

Now, in your Webpack config, import the plugin:

import path from 'path';
import CopyWebpackPlugin from 'copy-webpack-plugin';

and in plugins section of your config, add the following:

new CopyWebpackPlugin({
  patterns: [
    {
      from: path.join(path.dirname(require.resolve('pdfjs-dist/package.json')), 'standard_fonts'),
      to: 'standard_fonts/'
    },
  ],
}),
Parcel, Browserify and others

If you use Parcel, Browserify or other bundling tools, you will have to make sure on your own that standard fonts are copied to your project's output folder.

For example, you could use a custom script like:

import path from 'path';
import fs from 'fs';

const standardFontsDir = path.join(
  path.dirname(require.resolve('pdfjs-dist/package.json')),
  'standard_fonts',
);

function copyDir(from, to) {
  // Ensure target directory exists
  fs.mkdirSync(to, { recursive: true });

  const files = fs.readdirSync(from);
  files.forEach((file) => {
    fs.copyFileSync(path.join(from, file), path.join(to, file));
  });
}

copyDir(standardFontsDir, 'dist/standard_fonts/');
Setting up React-PDF

Now that you have standard fonts in your build, pass required options to Document component by using options prop, like so:

<Document
  options={{
    standardFontDataUrl: 'standard_fonts/',
  }}
/>

Alternatively, you could use standard fonts from external CDN:

import { pdfjs } from 'react-pdf';

<Document
  options={{
    standardFontDataUrl: `https://unpkg.com/pdfjs-dist@${pdfjs.version}/standard_fonts`,
  }}
/>;

User guide

Document

Loads a document passed using file prop.

Props
Prop nameDescriptionDefault valueExample values
classNameClass name(s) that will be added to rendered element along with the default react-pdf__Document.n/a
  • String:
    "custom-class-name-1 custom-class-name-2"
  • Array of strings:
    ["custom-class-name-1", "custom-class-name-2"]
errorWhat the component should display in case of an error."Failed to load PDF file."
  • String:
    "An error occurred!"
  • React element:
    <div>An error occurred!</div>
  • Function:
    this.renderError
externalLinkRelLink rel for links rendered in annotations."noopener noreferrer nofollow"One of valid values for rel attribute.
  • "_self"
  • "_blank"
  • "_parent"
  • "_top"
externalLinkTargetLink target for external links rendered in annotations.unset, which means that default behavior will be usedOne of valid values for target attribute.
  • "_self"
  • "_blank"
  • "_parent"
  • "_top"
fileWhat PDF should be displayed.
Its value can be an URL, a file (imported using import ... from ... or from file input form element), or an object with parameters (url - URL; data - data, preferably Uint8Array; range - PDFDataRangeTransport; httpHeaders - custom request headers, e.g. for authorization), withCredentials - a boolean to indicate whether or not to include cookies in the request (defaults to false).
Warning: Since equality check (===) is used to determine if file object has changed, it must be memoized by setting it in component's state, useMemo or other similar technique.
n/a
  • URL:
    "http://example.com/sample.pdf"
  • File:
    import sample from '../static/sample.pdf' and then
    sample
  • Parameter object:
    { url: 'http://example.com/sample.pdf', httpHeaders: { 'X-CustomHeader': '40359820958024350238508234' }, withCredentials: true }
imageResourcesPathThe path used to prefix the src attributes of annotation SVGs.n/a (pdf.js will fallback to an empty string)"/public/images/"
inputRefA prop that behaves like ref, but it's passed to main <div> rendered by <Document> component.n/a
  • Function:
    (ref) => { this.myDocument = ref; }
  • Ref created using React.createRef:
    this.ref = React.createRef();

    inputRef={this.ref}
  • Ref created using React.useRef:
    const ref = React.useRef();

    inputRef={ref}
loadingWhat the component should display while loading."Loading PDF…"
  • String:
    "Please wait!"
  • React element:
    <div>Please wait!</div>
  • Function:
    this.renderLoader
noDataWhat the component should display in case of no data."No PDF file specified."
  • String:
    "Please select a file."
  • React element:
    <div>Please select a file.</div>
  • Function:
    this.renderNoData
onItemClickFunction called when an outline item has been clicked. Usually, you would like to use this callback to move the user wherever they requested to.n/a({ dest, pageIndex, pageNumber }) => alert('Clicked an item from page ' + pageNumber + '!')
onLoadErrorFunction called in case of an error while loading a document.n/a(error) => alert('Error while loading document! ' + error.message)
onLoadProgressFunction called, potentially multiple times, as the loading progresses.n/a({ loaded, total }) => alert('Loading a document: ' + (loaded / total) * 100 + '%');
onLoadSuccessFunction called when the document is successfully loaded.n/a(pdf) => alert('Loaded a file with ' + pdf.numPages + ' pages!')
onPasswordFunction called when a password-protected PDF is loaded.Function that prompts the user for password.(callback) => callback('s3cr3t_p4ssw0rd')
onSourceErrorFunction called in case of an error while retrieving document source from file prop.n/a(error) => alert('Error while retrieving document source! ' + error.message)
onSourceSuccessFunction called when document source is successfully retrieved from file prop.n/a() => alert('Document source retrieved!')
optionsAn object in which additional parameters to be passed to PDF.js can be defined. For a full list of possible parameters, check PDF.js documentation on DocumentInitParameters.n/a{ cMapUrl: 'cmaps/', cMapPacked: true }
renderModeRendering mode of the document. Can be "canvas", "svg" or "none".
Warning: SVG render mode is no longer maintained and may be removed in the future.
"canvas""svg"
rotateRotation of the document in degrees. If provided, will change rotation globally, even for the pages which were given rotate prop of their own. 90 = rotated to the right, 180 = upside down, 270 = rotated to the left.n/a90

Page

Displays a page. Should be placed inside <Document />. Alternatively, it can have pdf prop passed, which can be obtained from <Document />'s onLoadSuccess callback function, however some advanced functions like linking between pages inside a document may not be working correctly.

Props
Prop nameDescriptionDefault valueExample values
canvasBackgroundCanvas background color. Any valid canvas.fillStyle can be used. If you set renderMode to "svg" this prop will be ignored.n/a"transparent"
canvasRefA prop that behaves like ref, but it's passed to <canvas> rendered by <PageCanvas> component. If you set renderMode to "svg" this prop will be ignored.n/a
  • Function:
    (ref) => { this.myPage = ref; }
  • Ref created using React.createRef:
    this.ref = React.createRef();

    inputRef={this.ref}
  • Ref created using React.useRef:
    const ref = React.useRef();

    inputRef={ref}
classNameClass name(s) that will be added to rendered element along with the default react-pdf__Page.n/a
  • String:
    "custom-class-name-1 custom-class-name-2"
  • Array of strings:
    ["custom-class-name-1", "custom-class-name-2"]
customTextRendererFunction that customizes how a text layer is rendered.n/a({ str, itemIndex }) => str.replace(/ipsum/g, value => `<mark>${value}</mark>`)
devicePixelRatioThe ratio between physical pixels and device-independent pixels (DIPs) on the current device.window.devicePixelRatio1
errorWhat the component should display in case of an error."Failed to load the page."
  • String:
    "An error occurred!"
  • React element:
    <div>An error occurred!</div>
  • Function:
    this.renderError
heightPage height. If neither height nor width are defined, page will be rendered at the size defined in PDF. If you define width and height at the same time, height will be ignored. If you define height and scale at the same time, the height will be multiplied by a given factor.Page's default height300
imageResourcesPathThe path used to prefix the src attributes of annotation SVGs.n/a (pdf.js will fallback to an empty string)"/public/images/"
inputRefA prop that behaves like ref, but it's passed to main <div> rendered by <Page> component.n/a
  • Function:
    (ref) => { this.myPage = ref; }
  • Ref created using React.createRef:
    this.ref = React.createRef();

    inputRef={this.ref}
  • Ref created using React.useRef:
    const ref = React.useRef();

    inputRef={ref}
loadingWhat the component should display while loading."Loading page…"
  • String:
    "Please wait!"
  • React element:
    <div>Please wait!</div>
  • Function:
    this.renderLoader
noDataWhat the component should display in case of no data."No page specified."
  • String:
    "Please select a page."
  • React element:
    <div>Please select a page.</div>
  • Function:
    this.renderNoData
onLoadErrorFunction called in case of an error while loading the page.n/a(error) => alert('Error while loading page! ' + error.message)
onLoadSuccessFunction called when the page is successfully loaded.n/a(page) => alert('Now displaying a page number ' + page.pageNumber + '!')
onRenderErrorFunction called in case of an error while rendering the page.n/a(error) => alert('Error while loading page! ' + error.message)
onRenderSuccessFunction called when the page is successfully rendered on the screen.n/a() => alert('Rendered the page!')
onRenderTextLayerErrorFunction called in case of an error while rendering the text layer.n/a(error) => alert('Error while loading page! ' + error.message)
onRenderTextLayerSuccessFunction called when the text layer is successfully rendered on the screen.n/a() => alert('Rendered the page!')
onGetAnnotationsSuccessFunction called when annotations are successfully loaded.n/a(annotations) => alert('Now displaying ' + annotations.length + ' annotations!')
onGetAnnotationsErrorFunction called in case of an error while loading annotations.n/a(error) => alert('Error while loading annotations! ' + error.message)
onGetTextSuccessFunction called when text layer items are successfully loaded.n/a({ items, styles }) => alert('Now displaying ' + items.length + ' text layer items!')
onGetTextErrorFunction called in case of an error while loading text layer items.n/a(error) => alert('Error while loading text layer items! ' + error.message)
pageIndexWhich page from PDF file should be displayed, by page index.01
pageNumberWhich page from PDF file should be displayed, by page number. If provided, pageIndex prop will be ignored.12
renderAnnotationLayerWhether annotations (e.g. links) should be rendered.truefalse
renderFormsWhether forms should be rendered. renderAnnotationLayer prop must be set to true.falsetrue
renderModeRendering mode of the document. Can be "canvas", "svg" or "none"."canvas""svg"
renderTextLayerWhether a text layer should be rendered.truefalse
rotateRotation of the page in degrees. 90 = rotated to the right, 180 = upside down, 270 = rotated to the left.Page's default setting, usually 090
scalePage scale.1.00.5
widthPage width. If neither height nor width are defined, page will be rendered at the size defined in PDF. If you define width and height at the same time, height will be ignored. If you define width and scale at the same time, the width will be multiplied by a given factor.Page's default width300

Outline

Displays an outline (table of contents). Should be placed inside <Document />. Alternatively, it can have pdf prop passed, which can be obtained from <Document />'s onLoadSuccess callback function.

Props
Prop nameDescriptionDefault valueExample values
classNameClass name(s) that will be added to rendered element along with the default react-pdf__Outline.n/a
  • String:
    "custom-class-name-1 custom-class-name-2"
  • Array of strings:
    ["custom-class-name-1", "custom-class-name-2"]
inputRefA prop that behaves like ref, but it's passed to main <div> rendered by <Outline> component.n/a
  • Function:
    (ref) => { this.myOutline = ref; }
  • Ref created using React.createRef:
    this.ref = React.createRef();

    inputRef={this.ref}
  • Ref created using React.useRef:
    const ref = React.useRef();

    inputRef={ref}
onItemClickFunction called when an outline item has been clicked. Usually, you would like to use this callback to move the user wherever they requested to.n/a({ dest, pageIndex, pageNumber }) => alert('Clicked an item from page ' + pageNumber + '!')
onLoadErrorFunction called in case of an error while retrieving the outline.n/a(error) => alert('Error while retrieving the outline! ' + error.message)
onLoadSuccessFunction called when the outline is successfully retrieved.n/a(outline) => alert('The outline has been successfully retrieved.')

License

The MIT License.

Author

Wojciech Maj
kontakt@wojtekmaj.pl
https://wojtekmaj.pl

Thank you

This project wouldn't be possible without the awesome work of Niklas Närhinen niklas@narhinen.net who created its original version and without Mozilla, author of pdf.js. Thank you!

Sponsors

Thank you to all our sponsors! Become a sponsor and get your image on our README on GitHub.

Backers

Thank you to all our backers! Become a backer and get your image on our README on GitHub.

Top Contributors

Thank you to all our contributors that helped on this project!

Top Contributors

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Package last updated on 09 May 2024

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