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You can use the GetInfo and SetInfo methods to
directly manipulate any PDF object in your document. However this
is not advisable unless you are reasonably familiar with the Adobe
PDF Specification.
Under normal situations ABCpdf ensures that your documents are
internally consistent. Using the SetInfo method with Dictionaries,
Values or Paths allows great flexibility in modifying documents but
also allows you to create invalid or corrupt documents.
Dictionaries
If your object is a dictionary you can specify a particular
dictionary entry for replacement or insertion (dictionary entries
always begin with a slash '/' character). So if you wanted to
change the type of an annotation you might use the following
code:
theDoc.SetInfo(theID, "/Subtype", "(Stamp)")
Values
Alternatively you can use the 'Value' selector to specify a
replacement for the entire object. However if you do this you must
ensure that the type of your new object is the same as the type of
your old one - you cannot replace a number with a string. For
example.
theDoc.SetInfo(theID, "Value", "<< /Font /Helvetica
/Size 10 >>")
Paths
Specifications can be chained together to form complete paths.
Dictionary entries are specified by preceding the entry name with a
slash. Array items are specified using square brackets containing
the index of the item you wish to reference (starting at zero).
For example the code below would return the first item in the
MediaBox array.
theDoc.GetInfo(theID, "/MediaBox[0]")
And the code below would return the count entry of the parent of
the object.
theDoc.GetInfo(theID, "/Parent/Count")
References
Sometimes you may wish to find a reference to a particular
object. Sometimes you may wish to skip through the reference and
jump straight into the object itself.
You can do this using an asterisk to de-reference an object
within a path. If the object is a reference it will be
de-referenced, if it is not then the operator will be ignored.
For example the code below might be used to return the content
stream of the first page of a document.
theDoc.GetInfo(theDoc.Root,
"/Pages*/Kids*[0]*/Contents")
SetInfo
You can use SetInfo to insert
values specified by paths. You can specify the type of object to be
inserted by appending an identifier to the path.
| Object Type
|
Description
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| :Bool |
A boolean value.
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| :Name |
A name value.
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| :Num |
A numeric value
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| :Text |
A string value.
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| :Ref |
An indirect reference to an object.
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| :Rect |
A rectangle. Internally rectangles are held as arrays of numbers
but this provides a convenient shortcut.
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| :Del |
This is a special entry. It does not insert an object. Instead
it ensures that the object specified by the path is deleted
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Suppose you wanted to insert an annotation into the page
annotations array. The following code will find the page entry
named "/Annots" (or it will create it if it doesn't exist). It will
then ensure that this entry references an array and it will insert
a reference Atom at the beginning (item zero) of the array.
theDoc.SetInfo(theDoc.Page, "/Annots[0]:Ref",
theID)
Alternatively if you want to insert your annotation at the end
of the array just leave out the array index:
theDoc.SetInfo(theDoc.Page, "/Annots[]:Ref", theID)
You can also locate items in an array from the end. Use -1 for
the last item, -2 for the second last item, and so on.
theDoc.GetInfo(theDoc.Page, "/Annots[-1]:Ref")
Insertions can be complex. The next example gets the entry
called "/Font" which contains a dictionary. This dictionary
includes an element called "/Names" which contains an array. The
call inserts the Name object "/Helvetica" at the start of this
array.
theDoc.SetInfo(theID, "/Font/Names[0]:Name",
"Helvetica")
GetInfo
You can use GetInfo to query
values specified by paths. The format of the return value is
exactly the same as would be output to your PDF file. You can
specify an alternative format by appending an identifier to the
string.
| Format Name
|
Description
|
| :ID |
The Object ID associated with an object reference.
Normally object references are returned in an extended format
(eg 23 0 R) however if you are only interested in the
Object ID then you use this format specifier to get only the Object
ID (eg 23).
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| :Obj |
The object value.
This is used to ensure that all indirect references are resolved
before the value of the object is returned. This ensures you always
get an object value rather than an object reference.
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| :Text |
The text of a name or string.
Names and strings may be encoded in a number of ways before
output to PDF. The text format specifier ensures that the unencoded
value is returned.
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| :Num |
The value of a number.
If the object referred to is not a number then no value is
returned.
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| :Rect |
The rect string for a rectangle object.
Rects are typically represented as an array. By specifying the
rect format you will get a string value you can place directly into
the XRect object.
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| :Count |
The number of items in an array.
The count specifier is a special directive which returns the
number of items in an array rather than an item from that
array.
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| :Keys |
The keys for a dictionary.
The keys specifier is a special directive which returns a comma
delimited list of the names of the entries in the dictionary.
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For example the code below could return the rect of the page
CropBox.
theDoc.GetInfo(theID, "/CropBox:Rect")
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