PDFKit
A JavaScript PDF generation library for Node and the browser.
Description
PDFKit is a PDF document generation library for Node and the browser that makes creating complex, multi-page, printable
documents easy. The API embraces chainability, and includes both low level functions as well as abstractions for higher
level functionality. The PDFKit API is designed to be simple, so generating complex documents is often as simple as
a few function calls.
Check out some of the documentation and examples to see for yourself!
You can also read the guide as a self-generated PDF with example output displayed inline.
If you'd like to see how it was generated, check out the README in the docs
folder.
You can also try out an interactive in-browser demo of PDFKit here.
Installation
Installation uses the npm package manager. Just type the following command after installing npm.
npm install pdfkit
Features
- Vector graphics
- HTML5 canvas-like API
- Path operations
- SVG path parser for easy path creation
- Transformations
- Linear and radial gradients
- Text
- Line wrapping
- Text alignments
- Bulleted lists
- Font embedding
- Supports TrueType (.ttf), OpenType (.otf), WOFF, WOFF2, TrueType Collections (.ttc), and Datafork TrueType (.dfont) fonts
- Font subsetting
- See fontkit for more details on advanced glyph layout support.
- Image embedding
- Supports JPEG and PNG files (including indexed PNGs, and PNGs with transparency)
- Annotations
- Links
- Notes
- Highlights
- Underlines
- etc.
- AcroForms
- Outlines
- PDF security
- Encryption
- Access privileges (printing, copying, modifying, annotating, form filling, content accessibility, document assembly)
- Accessibility support (marked content, logical structure, Tagged PDF, PDF/UA)
Coming soon!
- Patterns fills
- Higher level APIs for creating tables and laying out content
- More performance optimizations
- Even more awesomeness, perhaps written by you! Please fork this repository and send me pull requests.
Example
const PDFDocument = require('pdfkit');
const fs = require('fs');
const doc = new PDFDocument();
doc.pipe(fs.createWriteStream('output.pdf'));
doc
.font('fonts/PalatinoBold.ttf')
.fontSize(25)
.text('Some text with an embedded font!', 100, 100);
doc.image('path/to/image.png', {
fit: [250, 300],
align: 'center',
valign: 'center'
});
doc
.addPage()
.fontSize(25)
.text('Here is some vector graphics...', 100, 100);
doc
.save()
.moveTo(100, 150)
.lineTo(100, 250)
.lineTo(200, 250)
.fill('#FF3300');
doc
.scale(0.6)
.translate(470, -380)
.path('M 250,75 L 323,301 131,161 369,161 177,301 z')
.fill('red', 'even-odd')
.restore();
doc
.addPage()
.fillColor('blue')
.text('Here is a link!', 100, 100)
.underline(100, 100, 160, 27, { color: '#0000FF' })
.link(100, 100, 160, 27, 'http://google.com/');
doc.end();
The PDF output from this example (with a few additions) shows the power of PDFKit — producing
complex documents with a very small amount of code. For more, see the demo
folder and the
PDFKit programming guide.
Browser Usage
There are three ways to use PDFKit in the browser:
In addition to PDFKit, you'll need somewhere to stream the output to. HTML5 has a
Blob object which can be used to store binary data, and
get URLs to this data in order to display PDF output inside an iframe, or upload to a server, etc. In order to
get a Blob from the output of PDFKit, you can use the blob-stream
module.
The following example uses Browserify or webpack to load PDFKit
and blob-stream
. See here and here for examples
of prebuilt version usage.
const PDFDocument = require('pdfkit');
const blobStream = require('blob-stream');
const doc = new PDFDocument();
const stream = doc.pipe(blobStream());
doc.end();
stream.on('finish', function() {
const blob = stream.toBlob('application/pdf');
const url = stream.toBlobURL('application/pdf');
iframe.src = url;
});
You can see an interactive in-browser demo of PDFKit here.
Note that in order to Browserify a project using PDFKit, you need to install the brfs
module with npm,
which is used to load built-in font data into the package. It is listed as a devDependency
in
PDFKit's package.json
, so it isn't installed by default for Node users.
If you forget to install it, Browserify will print an error message.
Documentation
For complete API documentation and more examples, see the PDFKit website.
License
PDFKit is available under the MIT license.