问题
I'm trying to write metadata to a pdf file using the following python code:
from Foundation import *
from Quartz import *
url = NSURL.fileURLWithPath_("test.pdf")
pdfdoc = PDFDocument.alloc().initWithURL_(url)
assert pdfdoc, "failed to create document"
print "reading pdf file"
attrs = {}
attrs[PDFDocumentTitleAttribute] = "THIS IS THE TITLE"
attrs[PDFDocumentAuthorAttribute] = "A. Author and B. Author"
PDFDocumentTitleAttribute = "test"
pdfdoc.setDocumentAttributes_(attrs)
pdfdoc.writeToFile_("mynewfile.pdf")
print "pdf made"
This appears to work fine (no errors to the consoled), however when I examine the metadata of the file it is as follows:
PdfID0:
242b7e252f1d3fdd89b35751b3f72d3
PdfID1:
242b7e252f1d3fdd89b35751b3f72d3
NumberOfPages: 4
and the original file had the following metadata:
InfoKey: Creator
InfoValue: PScript5.dll Version 5.2.2
InfoKey: Title
InfoValue: Microsoft Word - PROGRESS ON THE GABION HOUSE Compressed.doc
InfoKey: Producer
InfoValue: GPL Ghostscript 8.15
InfoKey: Author
InfoValue: PWK
InfoKey: ModDate
InfoValue: D:20101021193627-05'00'
InfoKey: CreationDate
InfoValue: D:20101008152350Z
PdfID0: d5fd6d3960122ba72117db6c4d46cefa
PdfID1: 24bade63285c641b11a8248ada9f19
NumberOfPages: 4
So the problems are, it is not appending the metadata, and it is clearing the previous metadata structure. What do I need to do to get this to work? My objective is to append metadata that reference management systems can import.
回答1:
Mark is on the right track, but there are a few peculiarities that should be accounted for.
First, he is correct that pdfdoc.documentAttributes
is an NSDictionary
that contains the document metadata. You would like to modify that, but note that documentAttributes
gives you an NSDictionary
, which is immutable. You have to convert it to an NSMutableDictionary
as follows:
attrs = NSMutableDictionary.alloc().initWithDictionary_(pdfDoc.documentAttributes())
Now you can modify attrs
as you did. There is no need to write PDFDocument.PDFDocumentTitleAttribute
as Mark suggested, that one won't work, PDFDocumentTitleAttribute
is declared as a module-level constant, so just do as you did in your own code.
Here is the full code that works for me:
from Foundation import *
from Quartz import *
url = NSURL.fileURLWithPath_("test.pdf")
pdfdoc = PDFDocument.alloc().initWithURL_(url)
attrs = NSMutableDictionary.alloc().initWithDictionary_(pdfdoc.documentAttributes())
attrs[PDFDocumentTitleAttribute] = "THIS IS THE TITLE"
attrs[PDFDocumentAuthorAttribute] = "A. Author and B. Author"
pdfdoc.setDocumentAttributes_(attrs)
pdfdoc.writeToFile_("mynewfile.pdf")
回答2:
DISCLAIMER: I'm utterly new to Python, but an old hand at PDF.
To avoid smashing all the existing attributes, you need to start attrs
with pdfDoc.documentAttributes
, not {}
. setDocumentAttributes is almost certainly an overwrite rather than a merge (given your output here).
Second, all the PDFDocument*Attribute
constants are part of PDFDocument
. My Python ignorance is undoubtedly showing, but shouldn't you be referencing them as attributes rather than as bare variables? Like this:
attrs[PDFDocument.PDFDocumentTitleAttribute] = "THIS IS THE TITLE"
That you can assign to PDFDocumentTitleAttribute leads me to believe it's not a constant.
If I'm right, your attrs will have tried to assign numerous values to a null key. My Python is weak, so I don't know how you'd check that. Examining attrs
prior to calling pdfDoc.setDocumentAttributes_()
should be revealing.
来源:https://stackoverflow.com/questions/4100405/writing-metadata-to-a-pdf-using-pyobjc