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I have been searching a lot on Google about how to compress existing pdf (size). My problem is

  1. I can't use any application, because it needs to be done by a C# program.

  2. I can't use any paid library as my clients don't want to go out of Budget. So a PAID library is certainly a NO

I did my home-work for last 2 days and came upon a solution using iTextSharp, BitMiracle but to no avail as the former decrease just 1% of a file and later one is a paid.

I also came across PDFcompressNET and pdftk but i wasn't able to find their .dll.

Actually the pdf is insurance policy with 2-3 images (black and white) and around 70 pages accounting to size of 5 MB.

I need the output in pdf only(can't be in any other format)

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  • What's BitMiracle compression result?
    – Martheen
    Dec 5, 2012 at 9:43
  • I can't use bitmiracle as it is a paid library!!! Dec 5, 2012 at 9:48
  • 3
    Are you sure compression will help at all? Try to create some test cases of PDF files and compress them with various off-the-shelf programs/methods. What is the compression rate on these? Maybe you're trying to do something which isn't worth it/possible? Dec 5, 2012 at 9:49
  • 3
    If the file you referred to is representative, the step "merging of the 50 pdf files" unfortunately used the iTextSharp 4.1.2 library in the wrong way (using PdfWriter instead of PdfCopy for this task)... Well, at first glance, your main problem may be the 70 included font subset files; many of them in spite of compression require more than 80 KB each! Unfortunately recombining multiple different subsets of the same font generally is hard (the content of most pages of your document may have to be rewritten) and is not as such explicitly supported by iText(Sharp); this would be quite a feat!
    – mkl
    Dec 5, 2012 at 11:31
  • 1
    @Vijay without any further explanation I doubt your bounty is well-spent. A new question with your very requirements and attempts (I hope you have made attempts) would have been better.
    – mkl
    Oct 5, 2015 at 10:09

4 Answers 4

16

Here's an approach to do this (and this should work without regard to the toolkit you use):

If you have a 24-bit rgb or 32 bit cmyk image do the following:

  • determine if the image is really what it is. If it's cmyk, convert to rgb. If it's rgb and really gray, convert to gray. If it's gray or paletted and only has 2 real colors, convert to 1-bit. If it's gray and there is relatively little in the way of gray variations, consider converting to 1 bit with a suitable binarization technique.
  • measure the image dimensions in relation to how it is being placed on the page - if it's 300 dpi or greater, consider resampling the image to a smaller size depending on the bit depth of the image - for example, you can probably go from 300 dpi gray or rgb to 200 dpi and not lose too much detail.
  • if you have an rgb image that is really color, consider palettizing it.
  • Examine the contents of the image to see if you can help make it more compressible. For example, if you run through a color/gray image and fine a lot of colors that cluster, consider smoothing them. If it's gray or black and white and contains a number of specks, consider despeckling.
  • choose your final compression wisely. JPEG2000 can do better than JPEG. JBIG2 does much better than G4. Flate is probably the best non-destructive compression for gray. Most implementations of JPEG2000 and JBIG2 are not free.
  • if you're a rock star, you want to try to segment the image and break it into areas that are really black and white and really color.

That said, if you do can do all of this well in an unsupervised manner, you have a commercial product in its own right.

I will say that you can do most of this with Atalasoft dotImage (disclaimers: it's not free; I work there; I've written nearly all the PDF tools; I used to work on Acrobat).

One particular way to that with dotImage is to pull out all the pages that are image only, recompress them and save them out to a new PDF then build a new PDF by taking all the pages from the original document and replacing them the recompressed pages, then saving again. It's not that hard.

List<int> pagesToReplace = new List<int>();
PdfImageCollection pagesToEncode = new PdfImageCollection();

using (Document doc = new Document(sourceStream, password)) {

    for (int i=0; i < doc.Pages.Count; i++) {
        Page page = doc.Pages[i];
        if (page.SingleImageOnly) {
            pagesToReplace.Add(i);
            // a PDF image encapsulates an image an compression parameters
            PdfImage image = ProcessImage(sourceStream, doc, page, i);
            pagesToEncode.Add(i);
        }
    }

    PdfEncoder encoder = new PdfEncoder();
    encoder.Save(tempOutStream, pagesToEncode, null); // re-encoded pages
    tempOutStream.Seek(0, SeekOrigin.Begin);

    sourceStream.Seek(0, SeekOrigin.Begin);
    PdfDocument finalDoc = new PdfDocument(sourceStream, password);
    PdfDocument replacementPages = new PdfDocument(tempOutStream);

    for (int i=0; i < pagesToReplace.Count; i++) {
         finalDoc.Pages[pagesToReplace[i]] = replacementPages.Pages[i];
    }

    finalDoc.Save(finalOutputStream);

What's missing here is ProcessImage(). ProcessImage will rasterize the page (and you wouldn't need to understand that the image might have been scaled to be on the PDF) or extract the image (and track the transformation matrix on the image), and go through the steps listed above. This is non-trivial, but it's doable.

0
7

I think you might want to make your clients aware that any of the libraries you mentioned is not completely free:

  • iTextSharp is AGPL-licensed, so you must release source code of your solution or buy a commercial license.
  • PDFcompressNET is a commercial library.
  • pdftk is GPL-licensed, so you must release source code of your solution or buy a commercial license.
  • Docotic.Pdf is a commercial library.

Given all of the above I assume I can drop freeware requirement.

Docotic.Pdf can reduce size of compressed and uncompressed PDFs to different degrees without introducing any destructive changes.

Gains depend on the size and structure of a PDF: For small files or files that are mostly scanned images the reduction might not be that great, so you should try the library with your files and see for yourself.

If you are most concerned about size and there are many images in your files and you are fine with loosing some of the quality of those images then you can easily recompress existing images using Docotic.Pdf.

Here is the code that makes all images bilevel and compressed with fax compression:

static void RecompressExistingImages(string fileName, string outputName)
{
    using (PdfDocument doc = new PdfDocument(fileName))
    {
        foreach (PdfImage image in doc.Images)
            image.RecompressWithGroup4Fax();

        doc.Save(outputName);
    }
}

There are also RecompressWithFlate, RecompressWithGroup3Fax and RecompressWithJpeg methods.

The library will convert color images to bilevel ones if needed. You can specify deflate compression level, JPEG quality etc.

Docotic.Pdf can also resize big images (and recompress them at the same time) in PDF. This might be useful if images in a document are actually bigger then needed or if quality of images is not that important.

Below is a code that scales all images that have width or height greater or equal to 256. Scaled images are then encoded using JPEG compression.

public static void RecompressToJpeg(string path, string outputPath)
{
    using (PdfDocument doc = new PdfDocument(path))
    {
        foreach (PdfImage image in doc.Images)
        {
            // image that is used as mask or image with attached mask are
            // not good candidates for recompression
            if (!image.IsMask && image.Mask == null && (image.Width >= 256 || image.Height >= 256))
                image.Scale(0.5, PdfImageCompression.Jpeg, 65);
        }

        doc.Save(outputPath);
    }
}

Images can be resized to specified width and height using one of the ResizeTo methods. Please note that ResizeTo method won't try to preserve aspect ratio of images. You should calculate proper width and height yourself.

Disclaimer: I work for Bit Miracle.

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  • 3
    Be SUPER careful when you scale/recompress with JPEG and change the jpeg quality. I know of a programmer who was assigned this task with legal documents for archiving and the result was a number of court cases that had to be thrown out because the only copies of the documents were now unreadable.
    – plinth
    Dec 7, 2012 at 15:39
5

Using PdfSharp

public static void CompressPdf(string targetPath)
{
    using (var stream = new MemoryStream(File.ReadAllBytes(targetPath)) {Position = 0})
    using (var source = PdfReader.Open(stream, PdfDocumentOpenMode.Import))
    using (var document = new PdfDocument())
    {
        var options = document.Options;
        options.FlateEncodeMode = PdfFlateEncodeMode.BestCompression;
        options.UseFlateDecoderForJpegImages = PdfUseFlateDecoderForJpegImages.Automatic;
        options.CompressContentStreams = true;
        options.NoCompression = false;
        foreach (var page in source.Pages)
        {
            document.AddPage(page);
        }

        document.Save(targetPath);
    }
}
2
  • Thanks @Simon. It was my very first task (Which I failed terribly). Now I have started working on BI applications and Database Aug 8, 2019 at 5:18
  • I try this library on .NET Core 5 and lib version 1.50.5147. This code snippet is raising some errors.
    – toha
    May 17 at 4:18
3

GhostScript is AGPL licensed software that can compress PDFs. There is also an AGPL licensed C# wrapper for it on github here.

You could use the GhostscriptProcessor class from that wrapper to pass custom commands to GhostScript, like the ones found in this AskUbuntu answer describing PDF compression.

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