Where to find the complete documentation about BMP file structure? - structure

As you know from the question, I am trying to find a complete documentation with high definition about the BMP file structure. I tried Wikipedia but that didn't help at all. Can you mention any site/ebook that provides the mentioned information to me?

If the documentation in Wikipedia isn't sufficient, you may like to try the entry in the Encyclopedia of Graphics File Formats or the entry at fileformats.archiveteam.org.

Related

Decode serialized data - possibly google protobuff

I feel like I've tried everthing..
I have a file saved by some proprietary software. I would like to create my own file compatible with the software so I reached out to the developer.
The developer of this software stated that the saved file was created using google protocol buffers, but was unable to comprehend my request for the .proto file used. He also insisted that it was google protobuf that was used, and doesn't want to help me any further.
I've tried a few deoce tehniques found online but nothing seems to be reading any data from the file.
Can anyone help me open and edit this file?
https://filebin.ca/5lTSezDweL3w
Any help in the drection of doing this would be greatly appreciated.

Xcode - Document Based Application (Document Bundle)

I'm trying to find a somewhat more comprehensive writeup, or an example to refer to regarding a Document Based Application which saves it's contents to a document bundle rather than a single file.
A good example of what I mean by a document bundle is how Pages saves it's documents i.e.
Document Name.myextension\
directory1\
somefile.ext
somefile2.ext
directory2\
directory3\
file1.png
file2.png
As we know apples documentation, although extensive, can, at the best of times be somewhat daunting to work with :-/
Any help would be appreciated!
Thanks
Ade
Take a look at the following Stack Overflow question:
NSDocument to hold a complete folder?
If the answer to that question isn't detailed enough, you can read the following article on file packages:
Working with Cocoa File Packages
Regarding Apple's documentation, the relevant classes to look at are NSFileWrapper, NSData, and NSDocument.

How to extract info from a file

this may be a beginner's question. I've tried searching for info but couldn't find anything. Part of my work requires me to convert a specific, proprietary, file type. Unfortunately the software is no longer supported and can't be found. I have no idea where to start on this. I would like to write a little utility to basically convert the file for me to a standard file. Question is where do I start? Conceptually what am I looking at here? Is this even possible?
You could start by understanding what is stored in the file. Is there a pattern to the data, what is the pattern, how it is repeated, etc.
Then open the file in binary mode and try to find if there is indeed a pattern. If there is one, you should be able to see it, even if in binary mode.
And lots of patience :-)

Extracting bibliography from a PDF

I'm trying to see if it is possible to extract from a pdf file the bibliography (if it exists) contained in it (maybe in a .bib file format). I saw programs like mendeley or cb2Bib, but it seems to me that they only extract the bibliographical reference of the article itself but not the references contained in the article.
PS: If I'm off-topic, please forgive me and maybe address me to he correct topic.

Structure of a PDF file? [closed]

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For a small project I have to parse pdf files and take a specific part of them (a simple chain of characters). I'd like to use python to do this and I've found several libraries that are capable of doing what I want in some ways.
But now after a few researches, I'm wondering what is the real structure of a pdf file, does anyone know if there is a spec or some explanations anywhere online? I've found a link on adobe but it seems that it's a dead link :(
Here is a link to Adobe's reference material
http://www.adobe.com/devnet/pdf/pdf_reference.html
You should know though that PDF is only about presentation, not structure. Parsing will not come easy.
I found the GNU Introduction to PDF to be helpful in understanding the structure. It includes an easily readable example PDF file that they describe in complete detail.
Other helpful links:
PDF Succinctly book is longer and has helpful pictures.
Introduction to the Insides of PDF is a presentation that isn't as in-depth but gives a quick overview and has lots of pictures.
When I first started working with PDF, I found the PDF reference very hard to navigate.
It might help you to know that the overview of the file structure is found in syntax, and what Adobe call the document structure is the object structure and not the file structure. That is also found in Syntax. The description of operators is hidden away in Appendix A - very useful for understanding what is happening in content streams. If you ever have the pain of working with colour spaces you will find that hidden in Graphics! Hopefully these pointers will help you find things more quickly than I did.
If you are using windows, pdftron CosEdit allows you to browse the object structure to understand it. There is a free demo available that allows you to examine the file but not save it.
Here's the raw reference of PDF 1.7, and here's an article describing the structure of a PDF file. If you use Vim, the pdftk plugin is a good way to explore the document in an ever-so-slightly less raw form, and the pdftk utility itself (and its GPL source) is a great way to tease documents apart.
I'm trying to do pretty much the same thing. The PDF reference is a very difficult document to read. This tutorial is a better start I think.
This may help shed a little light:
(from page 11 of PDF32000.book)
PDF syntax is best understood by considering it as four parts, as shown in Figure 1:
• Objects. A PDF document is a data structure composed from a small set of basic types of data objects.
Sub-clause 7.2, "Lexical Conventions," describes the character set used to write objects and other
syntactic elements. Sub-clause 7.3, "Objects," describes the syntax and essential properties of the objects.
Sub-clause 7.3.8, "Stream Objects," provides complete details of the most complex data type, the stream
object.
• File structure. The PDF file structure determines how objects are stored in a PDF file, how they are
accessed, and how they are updated. This structure is independent of the semantics of the objects. Sub-
clause 7.5, "File Structure," describes the file structure. Sub-clause 7.6, "Encryption," describes a file-level
mechanism for protecting a document’s contents from unauthorized access.
• Document structure. The PDF document structure specifies how the basic object types are used to
represent components of a PDF document: pages, fonts, annotations, and so forth. Sub-clause 7.7,
"Document Structure," describes the overall document structure; later clauses address the detailed
semantics of the components.
• Content streams. A PDF content stream contains a sequence of instructions describing the appearance of
a page or other graphical entity. These instructions, while also represented as objects, are conceptually
distinct from the objects that represent the document structure and are described separately. Sub-clause
7.8, "Content Streams and Resources," discusses PDF content streams and their associated resources.
Looks like navigating a PDF file will require a little more than a passing effort.
If You want to parse PDF using Python please have a look at PDFMINER. This is the best library to parse PDF files till date.
Didier have a tool to parse the PDF:
http://didierstevens.com/files/software/pdf-parser_V0_4_3.zip
or here:
http://blog.didierstevens.com/programs/pdf-tools/ which cataloged several related pdf-analysis tools.
Another tool is here:
http://mshahzadlatif.wordpress.com/2011/09/28/view-pdf-structure-using-adobe-acrobat-or-a-free-tool-called-pdfxplorer/
Extracting text from PDF is a hard problem because PDF has such a layout-oriented structure. You can see the docs and source code of my barely-successful attempt on CPAN (my implementation is in Perl). The PDF data structure is very cool and well designed, but it's easier to write than read.
One way to get some clues is to create a PDF file consisting of a blank page. I have CutePDF Writer on my computer, and made a blank Wordpad document of one page. Printed to a .pdf file, and then opened the .pdf file using Notepad.
Next, use a copy of this file and eliminate lines or blocks of text that might be of interest, then reload in Acrobat Reader. You'd be surprised at how little information is needed to make a working one-page PDF document.
I'm trying to make up a spreadsheet to create a PDF form from code.
You need the PDF Reference manual to start reading about the details and structure of PDF files. I suggest to start with version 1.7.
On windows I used a free tool PDF Analyzer to see the internal structure of PDF files.
This will help in your understanding when reading the reference manual.
(I'm affiliated with PDF Analyzer, no intention to promote)
To extract text from a PDF, try this on Linux, BSD, etc. machine or use Cygwin if on Windows:
pdfinfo -layout some_pdf_file.pdf
A plain text file named some_pdf_file.txt is created. The simpler the PDF file layout, the more straightforward the .txt file output will be.
Hexadecimal characters are frequently present in the .txt file output and will look strange in text editors. These hexadecimal characters usually represent curly single and double quotes, bullet points, hyphens, etc. in the PDF.
To see the context where the hexadecimal characters appear, run this grep command, and keep the original PDF handy to see what character the codes represent in the PDF:
grep -a --color=always "\\\\[0-9][0-9][0-9]" some_pdf_file.txt
This will provide a unique list of the different octal codes in the document:
grep -ao "\\\\[0-9][0-9][0-9]" some_pdf_file.txt|sort|uniq
To convert these hexadecimal characters to ASCII equivalents, a combination of grep, sed, and bc can be used, I'll post the procedure to do that soon.