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I am using Python 3.4 and need to extract all the text from a PDF and then use it for text processing.

All the answers I have seen suggest options for Python 2.7.

I need something in Python 3.4.

Bonson

4
  • 3
    Not sure why the down vote. As I mentioned, I checked all available and also on google. The only one I found that can be used with Python 3.4 was in this xPDF detail all else are of version 2.7. I have found nothing on version 3.4 of Python. Request to also comment when down voted.
    – Bonson
    Sep 19, 2015 at 14:16
  • 2
    This a good yet blatantly off-topic question. Use SoftwareRecs for library recommendations.
    – Nino Filiu
    Jun 28, 2019 at 19:13
  • you can try this solution its work good in python 3 Link Dec 20, 2019 at 9:23
  • pdfplumber is the best option. [Reference] Mar 24, 2021 at 16:50

5 Answers 5

53

You need to install the pypdf package to be able to work with PDFs in Python. pypdf can extract text/images. The text is returned as a Python string. To install it, run pip install pypdf from the command line. This module name is case-sensitive so make sure to type all lowercase.

from pypdf import PdfReader

reader = PdfReader('my_file.pdf')
print(len(reader.pages))  # gives '56'
page = reader.pages[9]    #'9' is the page number
page.extract_text()

The last statement returns all the text that is available in page 9 of 'my_file.pdf' document.

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  • Hi Ritesh, By any chance you you know the anser to this question. Question .
    – Bonson
    Sep 25, 2015 at 3:07
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    Minor correction - think there shoudl be quotations for "rb" in the open command on line two rather than just rb.
    – kyrenia
    Aug 1, 2016 at 19:31
  • 4
    Furthermore, the pages in pypdf2 are zero-indexed, i.e. getPage(9) will get you page #10. Page numbers in the original document are completely ignored by pypdf2. Oct 28, 2016 at 7:42
  • 1
    CAUTION: a) Not supported in Py3 and b) It ignores entire word if it has an un-parsable unicode ( e.g " ) github.com/mstamy2/PyPDF2/issues/37 and it is unpredictable as commented by others above. It is a good tool, but not for production code sadly :( Dec 11, 2018 at 10:27
  • 1
    2 years and they haven't fixed this bug github.com/mstamy2/PyPDF2/issues/254 I'd prefer to find a package that is properly supported. This one can't handle python 3. Apr 19, 2019 at 23:41
7

pdfminer.six ( https://github.com/pdfminer/pdfminer.six ) has also been recommended elsewhere and is intended to support Python 3. I can't personally vouch for it though, since it failed during installation MacOS. (There's an open issue for that and it seems to be a recent problem, so there might be a quick fix.)

1
  • 1
    In 2023, I would no longer recommend pdfminer.six. pypdf / tika / PyMuPDF / pdfium2 are way better Mar 22, 2023 at 9:29
3

Complementing @Sarah's answer. PDFMiner is a pretty good choice. I have been using it from quite some time, and until now it works pretty good on extracting the text content from a PDF. What I did is to create a function which uses the CLI client from pdfminer, and then it saves the output into a variable (which I can use later on somewhere else). The Python version I am using is 3.6, and the function works pretty good and does the required job, so maybe this can work for you:

def pdf_to_text(filepath):
    print('Getting text content for {}...'.format(filepath))
    process = subprocess.Popen(['pdf2txt.py', filepath], stdout=subprocess.PIPE, stderr=subprocess.STDOUT)
    stdout, stderr = process.communicate()

    if process.returncode != 0 or stderr:
        raise OSError('Executing the command for {} caused an error:\nCode: {}\nOutput: {}\nError: {}'.format(filepath, process.returncode, stdout, stderr))

    return stdout.decode('utf-8')

You will have to import the subprocess module of course: import subprocess

1

slate3k is good for extracting text. I've tested it with a few PDF files using Python 3.7.3, and it's a lot more accurate than PyPDF2, for instance. It's a fork of slate, which is a wrapper for PDFMiner. Here's the code I am using:

import slate3k as slate

with open('Sample.pdf', 'rb') as f:
    doc = slate.PDF(f)

doc
#prints the full document as a list of strings
#each element of the list is a page in the document

doc[0]
#prints the first page of the document

Credit to this comment on GitHub: https://github.com/mstamy2/PyPDF2/issues/437#issuecomment-400491342

0
import pdfreader
pdfFileObj = open('/tmp/Test-test-test.pdf','rb')
viewer = SimplePDFViewer(pdfFileObject)
viewer.navigate(1)
viewer.render()
viewer.canvas.strings

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