// Minimal PDF rendering and text-selection example using PDF.js by Vivin Suresh Paliath (http://vivin.net)
// This example uses a built version of PDF.js that contains all modules that it requires.
//
// The problem with understanding text selection was that the text selection code has heavily intertwined
// with viewer.html and viewer.js. I have extracted the parts I need out of viewer.js into a separate file
// which contains the bare minimum required to implement text selection. The key component is TextLayerBuilder,
// which is the object that handles the creation of text-selection divs. I have added this code as an external
// resource.
//
// This demo uses a PDF that only has one page. You can render other pages if you wish, but the focus here is
// just to show you how you can render a PDF with text selection. Hence the code only loads up one page.
//
// The CSS used here is also very important since it sets up the CSS for the text layer divs overlays that
// you actually end up selecting.
//
// NOTE: The original example was changed to remove jQuery usage, re-structure and add more comments.

window.onload = function () {
  if (typeof PDFJS === 'undefined') {
    alert('Built version of pdf.js is not found\nPlease run `node make generic`');
    return;
  }

  var scale = 1.5; //Set this to whatever you want. This is basically the "zoom" factor for the PDF.
  PDFJS.workerSrc = '../../build/generic/build/pdf.worker.js';

  function loadPdf(pdfPath) {
    var pdf = PDFJS.getDocument(pdfPath);
    return pdf.then(renderPdf);
  }

  function renderPdf(pdf) {
    return pdf.getPage(1).then(renderPage);
  }

  function renderPage(page) {
    var viewport = page.getViewport(scale);

    // Create and append the 'pdf-page' div to the pdf container.
    var pdfPage = document.createElement('div');
    pdfPage.className = 'pdfPage';
    var pdfContainer = document.getElementById('pdfContainer');
    pdfContainer.appendChild(pdfPage);

    // Set the canvas height and width to the height and width of the viewport.
    var canvas = document.createElement('canvas');
    var context = canvas.getContext('2d');

    // The following few lines of code set up scaling on the context, if we are
    // on a HiDPI display.
    var outputScale = getOutputScale(context);
    canvas.width = (Math.floor(viewport.width) * outputScale.sx) | 0;
    canvas.height = (Math.floor(viewport.height) * outputScale.sy) | 0;
    context._scaleX = outputScale.sx;
    context._scaleY = outputScale.sy;
    if (outputScale.scaled) {
      context.scale(outputScale.sx, outputScale.sy);
    }

    // The page, canvas and text layer elements will have the same size.
    canvas.style.width = Math.floor(viewport.width) + 'px';
    canvas.style.height = Math.floor(viewport.height) + 'px';

    pdfPage.style.width = canvas.style.width;
    pdfPage.style.height = canvas.style.height;
    pdfPage.appendChild(canvas);

    var textLayerDiv = document.createElement('div');
    textLayerDiv.className = 'textLayer';
    textLayerDiv.style.width = canvas.style.width;
    textLayerDiv.style.height = canvas.style.height;
    pdfPage.appendChild(textLayerDiv);

    // Painting the canvas...
    var renderContext = {
      canvasContext: context,
      viewport: viewport
    };
    var renderTask = page.render(renderContext);

    // ... and at the same time, getting the text and creating the text layer.
    var textLayerPromise = page.getTextContent().then(function (textContent) {
      var textLayerBuilder = new TextLayerBuilder({
        textLayerDiv: textLayerDiv,
        viewport: viewport,
        pageIndex: 0
      });
      textLayerBuilder.setTextContent(textContent);
    });

    // We might be interested when rendering complete and text layer is built.
    return Promise.all([renderTask.promise, textLayerPromise]);
  }

  loadPdf('pdf/TestDocument.pdf');
};