Rob Wu 94a49fa048 [CRX] Make textLayerMode pref visible and add migration logic
In a1cfa5f4d7c8fcf55e9f3b51a23885dca8782915, the textLayerMode
preference was introduced, to replace the disableTextLayer and
enhanceTextSelection preferences.

As a result, the text selection preference was no longer visible
in Chrome (because preferences are only rendered by default for
boolean preferences, not for enumerations).

This commit adds the necessary bits to
extensions/chromium/options/options.{html,js}
so that the textLayerMode preference can be changed again.

Also, migration logic has been added to move over preferences
from the old to the new names:
- In web/chromecom.js, the logic is added to translate
  preferences that were set by an administrator (it is read-only,
  so this layer is unavoidable).
- In extensions/chromium/options/migration.js, similar logic is
  added, except in this case the preference storage is writable,
  so this migration logic happens only once.

The "enhanced text selection" mode is still experimental, so it
has been marked as experimental to signal that there may be bugs.
The list of tasks that block promotion to stable is at #7584.
2018-02-22 14:39:58 +01:00
2017-11-30 09:50:00 +09:00
2018-02-05 12:23:54 +01:00
2017-11-29 22:24:08 +09:00
2017-10-23 13:31:36 -05:00
2015-02-17 11:07:37 -05:00
2017-10-30 08:18:25 -05:00

PDF.js

PDF.js is a Portable Document Format (PDF) viewer that is built with HTML5.

PDF.js is community-driven and supported by Mozilla Labs. Our goal is to create a general-purpose, web standards-based platform for parsing and rendering PDFs.

Contributing

PDF.js is an open source project and always looking for more contributors. To get involved, visit:

Feel free to stop by #pdfjs on irc.mozilla.org for questions or guidance.

Getting Started

Online demo

Browser Extensions

Firefox (and Seamonkey)

PDF.js is built into version 19+ of Firefox, however, one extension is still available:

  • Development Version - This extension is mainly intended for developers/testers, and it is updated every time new code is merged into the PDF.js codebase. It should be quite stable but might break from time to time.

Chrome

  • The official extension for Chrome can be installed from the Chrome Web Store. This extension is maintained by @Rob--W.
  • Build Your Own - Get the code as explained below and issue gulp chromium. Then open Chrome, go to Tools > Extension and load the (unpackaged) extension from the directory build/chromium.

Getting the Code

To get a local copy of the current code, clone it using git:

$ git clone git://github.com/mozilla/pdf.js.git
$ cd pdf.js

Next, install Node.js via the official package or via nvm. You need to install the gulp package globally (see also gulp's getting started):

$ npm install -g gulp-cli

If everything worked out, install all dependencies for PDF.js:

$ npm install

Finally, you need to start a local web server as some browsers do not allow opening PDF files using a file:// URL. Run:

$ gulp server

and then you can open:

Please keep in mind that this requires an ES6 compatible browser; refer to Building PDF.js for usage with older browsers.

It is also possible to view all test PDF files on the right side by opening:

Building PDF.js

In order to bundle all src/ files into two production scripts and build the generic viewer, run:

$ gulp generic

This will generate pdf.js and pdf.worker.js in the build/generic/build/ directory. Both scripts are needed but only pdf.js needs to be included since pdf.worker.js will be loaded by pdf.js. The PDF.js files are large and should be minified for production.

Using PDF.js in a web application

To use PDF.js in a web application you can choose to use a pre-built version of the library or to build it from source. We supply pre-built versions for usage with NPM and Bower under the pdfjs-dist name. For more information and examples please refer to the wiki page on this subject.

Including via a CDN

PDF.js is hosted on several free CDNs:

Learning

You can play with the PDF.js API directly from your browser using the live demos below:

The repository contains a hello world example that you can run locally:

More examples can be found in the examples folder. Some of them are using the pdfjs-dist package, which can be built and installed in this repo directory via gulp dist-install command.

For an introduction to the PDF.js code, check out the presentation by our contributor Julian Viereck:

More learning resources can be found at:

Questions

Check out our FAQs and get answers to common questions:

Talk to us on IRC (Internet Relay Chat):

  • #pdfjs on irc.mozilla.org

File an issue:

Follow us on twitter: @pdfjs

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