PDFMiner's documentation says:
PDFMiner allows one to obtain the exact location of text in a page
However, I have not been able to find how to do this. PDFMiner's 'documentation' is rather sparse, so I have not understood how to do this.
You are looking for the bbox
property on every layout object. There is a little bit of information on how to parse the layout hierarchy in the PDFMiner documentation, but it doesn't cover everything.
Here's an example:
from pdfminer.pdfdocument import PDFDocument
from pdfminer.pdfpage import PDFPage
from pdfminer.pdfparser import PDFParser
from pdfminer.pdfinterp import PDFResourceManager, PDFPageInterpreter
from pdfminer.converter import PDFPageAggregator
from pdfminer.layout import LAParams, LTTextBox, LTTextLine, LTFigure
def parse_layout(layout):
"""Function to recursively parse the layout tree."""
for lt_obj in layout:
print(lt_obj.__class__.__name__)
print(lt_obj.bbox)
if isinstance(lt_obj, LTTextBox) or isinstance(lt_obj, LTTextLine):
print(lt_obj.get_text())
elif isinstance(lt_obj, LTFigure):
parse_layout(lt_obj) # Recursive
fp = open('example.pdf', 'rb')
parser = PDFParser(fp)
doc = PDFDocument(parser)
rsrcmgr = PDFResourceManager()
laparams = LAParams()
device = PDFPageAggregator(rsrcmgr, laparams=laparams)
interpreter = PDFPageInterpreter(rsrcmgr, device)
for page in PDFPage.create_pages(doc):
interpreter.process_page(page)
layout = device.get_result()
parse_layout(layout)
If you are interested in the location of individual LTChar
objects, you can recursively parse into the child layout objects of LTTextBox
and LTTextLine
just like what is done with LTFigure
in the above example.