On 2/3/23 10:01 AM, Bakul Shah wrote:

https://github.com/ocrmypdf/OCRmyPDF

It's a python script that runs most any unix and uses
tesseract. Its author's motivation seems similar to yours:

I searched the web for a free command line tool to OCR PDF files: I found many, but none of them were really satisfying:
    • Either they produced PDF files with misplaced text under the image (making copy/paste impossible)
    • Or they did not handle accents and multilingual characters
    • Or they changed the resolution of the embedded images
    • Or they generated ridiculously large PDF files
    • Or they crashed when trying to OCR
    • Or they did not produce valid PDF files
    • On top of that none of them produced PDF/A files (format dedicated for long time storage)
...so I decided to develop my own tool.

Nice. Off to checking out OCRmyPDF!

I rarely print PDFs any more.

I can't seem to get away from having to highlight and mark up the stuff I read. I love pdf's searchability of words, but not for quickly locating a section, or just browsing and studying them. I can flip pages much faster with paper than an ebook it seems :).

-will