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Setting auto-height/width for converted Jpeg from PDF using GhostScript

I am using GS to do conversion from PDF to JPEG and following is the command that I use:

gs -sDEVICE=jpeg -dNOPAUSE -dBATCH -g500x300 -dPDFFitPage -sOutputFile=image.jpg image.pdf

In this command as u can see -g500x300 is to set the converted image size (Width x Height).

Is there a way to just set the Width without having to input the Height so it will base on the width to scale the height using its original aspect ratio? I know it can be achieved by using ImageMagick convert where you simply put 0 on the height parameter i.e. -resize 500x0. I tried with GhostScript but I don't think that is the correct way to do it.

I decided not to use ImageMagick convert reason why because it is very slow when it comes to converting a big sized multiple page PDF.

Thanks for the help!

like image 989
Charlie Kee Avatar asked Apr 04 '12 04:04

Charlie Kee


2 Answers

This post explains why ghostscript is faster - https://serverfault.com/questions/167573/fast-pdf-to-jpg-conversion-on-linux-wanted, and the only workaround to fix it would involve modifying the imagemagick code.

Unfortunately, autodetermined output size is not supported by ghostscript. This is primarily because the -g option used is actually determining the device size that will hold the rendered output, and not the rendered output itself. That output size is changing because of the -dPDFFitPage switch which then tries to match the device size. And although you can define just the height of the jpeg 'device' using -dDEVICEHEIGHT=n, that will leave the device width at the unchanged default.

Although a somewhat tedious workaround, you can use ghostscript or imagemagick to get the width and height of the pdf page(s). To do this using ghostscript, see the answer to Using GhostScript to get page size. You can then calculate the proper width to set the -g flag to hold the aspect ratio. Bonus points if you can figure out a single set of commands to do all this :)

like image 120
PinnyM Avatar answered Nov 09 '22 09:11

PinnyM


You could write a PostScript program to do this readily enough. Here is a start:

%!
% usage: gs -sFile=____.pdf  scale.ps

/File where not {
  (\n   *** Missing source file. \(use -sFile=____.pdf\)\n) =
  Usage
} {
  pop
}ifelse

% Get the width and height of a PDF page
%
/GetSize {
  pdfgetpage currentpagedevice
  1 index get_any_box 
  exch pop dup 2 get exch 3 get
  /PDFHeight exch def
  /PDFWidth exch def
} def


%
% The main loop
% For every page in the original PDF file
%
1 1 PDFPageCount 
{
  /PDFPage exch def
  PDFPage GetSize

% In here, knowing the desired destination size
% calculate a scale factor for the PDF to fit
% either the width or height, or whatever
% The width and height are stored in PDFWidht and PDFHeight
  PDFPage pdfgetpage
  pdfshowpage
} for

pdfgetpage and pdfshowpage are internal Ghostscript extensions to the PostScript language for handling PDF files.

like image 43
KenS Avatar answered Nov 09 '22 07:11

KenS