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So far here is the code I have (it is working and extracting text as it should.)

import pyPdf

def getPDFContent(path):
    content = ""
    # Load PDF into pyPDF
    pdf = pyPdf.PdfFileReader(file(path, "rb"))
    # Iterate pages
    for i in range(0, pdf.getNumPages()):
        # Extract text from page and add to content
        content += pdf.getPage(i).extractText() + "\n"
    # Collapse whitespace
    content = " ".join(content.replace(u"\xa0", " ").strip().split())
    return content

print getPDFContent("/home/nick/TAM_work/TAM_pdfs/2006-1.pdf").encode("ascii", "ignore")

I now need to add a for loop to get it to run on all PDF's in /TAM_pdfs, save the text as a CSV and (if possible) add something to count the pictures. Any help would be greatly appreciated. Thanks for looking.

Matt

2
  • Sorry about the failed indentation.
    – Matt
    Jan 6, 2010 at 22:27
  • Use the "code block" button to format your code. (Adds four spaces to each line)
    – pix0r
    Jan 6, 2010 at 22:28

3 Answers 3

4

Take a look at os.walk()

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for loop to get it to run on all PDF's in a directory: look at the glob module

save the text as a CSV: look at the csv module

count the pictures: look at the pyPDF module :-)

Two comments on this statement:

content = " ".join(content.replace(u"\xa0", " ").strip().split())

(1) It is not necessary to replace the NBSP (U+00A0) with a SPACE, because NBSP is (naturally) considered to be whitespace by unicode.split()

(2) Using strip() is redundant:

>>> u"  foo  bar  ".split()
[u'foo', u'bar']
>>>
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The glob module can help you find all files in a single directory that match a wildcard pattern.

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