table of contents
Text::PDF::Dict(3) | User Contributed Perl Documentation | Text::PDF::Dict(3) |
NAME¶
Text::PDF::Dict - PDF Dictionaries and Streams. Inherits from PDF::Objind
INSTANCE VARIABLES¶
There are various special instance variables which are used to look after, particularly, streams. Each begins with a space:
- stream
- Holds the stream contents for output
- streamfile
- Holds the stream contents in an external file rather than in memory. This is not the same as a PDF file stream. The data is stored in its unfiltered form.
- streamloc
- If both ' stream' and ' streamfile' are empty, this indicates where in the source PDF the stream starts.
METHODS¶
$d->outobjdeep($fh)¶
Outputs the contents of the dictionary to a PDF file. This is a recursive call.
It also outputs a stream if the dictionary has a stream element. If this occurs then this method will calculate the length of the stream and insert it into the stream's dictionary.
$d->read_stream($force_memory)¶
Reads in a stream from a PDF file. If the stream is greater than "PDF::Dict::mincache" (defaults to 32768) bytes to be stored, then the default action is to create a file for it somewhere and to use that file as a data cache. If $force_memory is set, this caching will not occur and the data will all be stored in the $self->{' stream'} variable.
$d->val¶
Returns the dictionary, which is itself.
$d->copy($inpdf, $res, $unique, $outpdf, %opts)¶
Copies an object. See Text::PDF::Objind::Copy() for details
POD ERRORS¶
Hey! The above document had some coding errors, which are explained below:
- Around line 30:
- '=item' outside of any '=over'
- Around line 44:
- You forgot a '=back' before '=head1'
2010-12-13 | perl v5.10.1 |