pdftops - Portable Document Format (PDF) to PostScript converter
(version 3.03)
pdftops [options] <PDF-file> [<PS-file>]
Pdftops converts Portable Document Format (PDF) files to
PostScript so they can be printed.
Pdftops reads the PDF file, PDF-file, and writes a
PostScript file, PS-file. If PS-file is not specified, pdftops
converts file.pdf to file.ps (or file.eps with the -eps
option). If PS-file is ´-', the PostScript is sent to stdout.
If PDF-file is ´-', Pdftops reads the PDF file from stdin.
- -f number
- Specifies the first page to print.
- -l number
- Specifies the last page to print.
- -level1
- Generate Level 1 PostScript. The resulting PostScript files will be
significantly larger (if they contain images), but will print on Level 1
printers. This also converts all images to black and white. No more than
one of the PostScript level options (-level1, -level1sep, -level2,
-level2sep, -level3, -level3sep) may be given.
- -level1sep
- Generate Level 1 separable PostScript. All colors are converted to CMYK.
Images are written with separate stream data for the four components.
- -level2
- Generate Level 2 PostScript. Level 2 supports color images and image
compression. This is the default setting.
- -level2sep
- Generate Level 2 separable PostScript. All colors are converted to CMYK.
The PostScript separation convention operators are used to handle custom
(spot) colors.
- -level3
- Generate Level 3 PostScript. This enables all Level 2 features plus CID
font embedding.
- -level3sep
- Generate Level 3 separable PostScript. The separation handling is the same
as for -level2sep.
- -eps
- Generate an Encapsulated PostScript (EPS) file. An EPS file contains a
single image, so if you use this option with a multi-page PDF file, you
must use -f and -l to specify a single page. No more than one of the mode
options (-eps, -form) may be given.
- -form
- Generate a PostScript form which can be imported by software that
understands forms. A form contains a single page, so if you use this
option with a multi-page PDF file, you must use -f and -l to specify a
single page. The -level1 option cannot be used with -form. No more than
one of the mode options (-eps, -form) may be given.
- -opi
- Generate OPI comments for all images and forms which have OPI information.
(This option is only available if pdftops was compiled with OPI
support.)
- -binary
- Write binary data in Level 1 PostScript. By default, pdftops writes
hex-encoded data in Level 1 PostScript. Binary data is non-standard in
Level 1 PostScript but reduces the file size and can be useful when Level
1 PostScript is required only for its restricted use of PostScript
operators.
- -r number
- Set the resolution in DPI when pdftops rasterizes images with
transparencies or, for Level 1 PostScript, when pdftops rasterizes images
with color masks. By default, pdftops rasterizes images to 300 DPI.
- -noembt1
- By default, any Type 1 fonts which are embedded in the PDF file are copied
into the PostScript file. This option causes pdftops to substitute base
fonts instead. Embedded fonts make PostScript files larger, but may be
necessary for readable output.
- -noembtt
- By default, any TrueType fonts which are embedded in the PDF file are
copied into the PostScript file. This option causes pdftops to substitute
base fonts instead. Embedded fonts make PostScript files larger, but may
be necessary for readable output. Also, some PostScript interpreters do
not have TrueType rasterizers.
- -noembcidps
- By default, any CID PostScript fonts which are embedded in the PDF file
are copied into the PostScript file. This option disables that embedding.
No attempt is made to substitute for non-embedded CID PostScript
fonts.
- -noembcidtt
- By default, any CID TrueType fonts which are embedded in the PDF file are
copied into the PostScript file. This option disables that embedding. No
attempt is made to substitute for non-embedded CID TrueType fonts.
- -passfonts
- By default, references to non-embedded 8-bit fonts in the PDF file are
substituted with the closest "Helvetica",
"Times-Roman", or "Courier" font. This option passes
references to non-embedded fonts through to the PostScript file.
- -aaRaster
yes | no
- Enable or disable raster anti-aliasing. This defaults to "no".
pdftops may need to rasterize transparencies and pattern image masks in
the PDF. If the PostScript will be printed, leave -aaRaster disabled and
set -r to the resolution of the printer. If the PostScript will be viewed,
enabling -aaRaster may make rasterized text easier to read.
- -rasterize
always | never | whenneeded
- By default, pdftops rasterizes pages as needed, for example, if they
contain transparencies. To force rasterization, set -rasterize to
"always". Use this to eliminate fonts. To prevent rasterization,
set -rasterize to "never". This may produce files that display
incorrectly.
- -processcolorformat
MONO8 | CMYK8 | RGB8
- Sets the process color format as it is used during rasterization and
transparency reduction. The default depends on the other settings: For
-level1 the default is MONO8, for -level{1,2,3}sep or -overprint the
default is CMYK8, and in all other cases RGB8 is the default. If
-processcolorprofile is given then -processcolorformat is inferred from
the specified ICC profile.
- -processcolorprofile
filename
- Sets the ICC profile that is assumed during rasterization and transparency
reduction.
- -defaultgrayprofile
defaultgrayprofilefile
- If poppler is compiled with colour management support, this option sets
the DefaultGray color space to the ICC profile stored in
defaultgrayprofilefile.
- -defaultrgbprofile
defaultrgbprofilefile
- If poppler is compiled with colour management support, this option sets
the DefaultRGB color space to the ICC profile stored in
defaultrgbprofilefile.
- -defaultcmykprofile
defaultcmykprofilefile
- If poppler is compiled with colour management support, this option sets
the DefaultCMYK color space to the ICC profile stored in
defaultcmykprofilefile.
- -optimizecolorspace
- By default, bitmap images in the PDF pass through to the output PostScript
in their original color space, which produces predictable results. This
option converts RGB and CMYK images into Gray images if every pixel of the
image has equal components. This can fix problems when doing color
separations of PDFs that contain embedded black and white images encoded
as RGB.
- -preload
- preload images and forms
- -paper
size
- Set the paper size to one of "letter", "legal",
"A4", or "A3". This can also be set to
"match", which will set the paper size of each page to match the
size specified in the PDF file. If none the -paper, -paperw, or -paperh
options are specified the default is to match the paper size.
- -paperw
size
- Set the paper width, in points.
- -paperh
size
- Set the paper height, in points.
- -origpagesizes
- This option is the same as "-paper match".
- -nocrop
- By default, output is cropped to the CropBox specified in the PDF file.
This option disables cropping.
- -expand
- Expand PDF pages smaller than the paper to fill the paper. By default,
these pages are not scaled.
- -noshrink
- Don't scale PDF pages which are larger than the paper. By default, pages
larger than the paper are shrunk to fit.
- -nocenter
- By default, PDF pages smaller than the paper (after any scaling) are
centered on the paper. This option causes them to be aligned to the
lower-left corner of the paper instead.
- -duplex
- Set the Duplex pagedevice entry in the PostScript file. This tells
duplex-capable printers to enable duplexing.
- -opw
password
- Specify the owner password for the PDF file. Providing this will bypass
all security restrictions.
- -upw
password
- Specify the user password for the PDF file.
- -overprint
- Enable overprint emulation during rasterization. For -processcolorformat
being CMYK8 and the language level being higher than 2, this option is set
to true by default. Note: This option requires -processcolorformat to be
CMYK8.
- -q
- Don't print any messages or errors.
- -v
- Print copyright and version information.
- -h
- Print usage information. (-help and --help are
equivalent.)
The Xpdf tools use the following exit codes:
- 0
- No error.
- 1
- Error opening a PDF file.
- 2
- Error opening an output file.
- 3
- Error related to PDF permissions.
- 99
- Other error.
The pdftops software and documentation are copyright 1996-2011
Glyph & Cog, LLC.