Can anyone suggest me how to create a PDF thumbnail which shows a miniature preview of the pdf file in html5. Something similar to the behaviour seen in Gmail while uploading pdf files.
Currently am using embed element, but it gives me unnecessary scrolls and not able to zoom in the file,which works across all browsers. If I set #zoom it works only in chrome.
This can be achieved using https://mozilla.github.io/pdf.js/
If the thumbnails are not compatible in browsers like IE, including compatibility.js from the same library would solve the problem.
We have to create a canvas and use the library utility to get the thumbnail in the canvas.
I'm thinking of creating a HTML5 app, which I also want to run well on iOS. I'm thinking of using parse.com as the backend, but apart from that I'm a little unsure where to start, can I use Adobe Dreamweaver with Parse? are there better options for creating a HTML5 app?
Thanks for any advice.
From looking at the Parse documentation, there aren't any specific tools to help you work with Parse in DreamWeaver.
If you're looking for a high-quality IDE for developing HTML5 and CSS3, see this question about open source HTML5/CSS3 IDEs.
Parse has blank XCode (for iOS), blank Android project (should work in Eclipse), and basic HTML5 project listed in their QuickStart guide. With the blank HTML5 project you can use any IDE you want to do the editing, and then open it in your browser to test it out.
is there any way to do a flash-like animation for the splash screen for iPad app in HTML5.
i have searched a lot for javascript but did not get anything.
The usual alternatives to Flash animation are canvas (which has its own API) and SVG (which is subject to standard DOM manipulation), both of which are supported by iOS Mobile Safari.
Adobe is developing an HTML/Javascript/CSS based alternative to Flash Builder called Adobe Edge, you can download it for free for a limited time for Adobe Labs. It doesn't have nearly as many features as Flash(at least not yet), but it provides enough basic functionality to accomplish what you are asking.
I have the need to play an MP3 file on my website downloaded via AJAX like the "Listen" button on the Google Translate page (in fact, I'm doing the exact same thing). How is this done? I don't believe it's facilitated by Flash, so that's not the answer.
I'd suggest loading an iFrame with the sound file embedded within. It's an ugly solution, but it's probably got the best crossbrowser support until HTML5 turns into a thing.
Is there is PDF viewer which I can embed into my HTML and which I can style as I want.
Actually I need to show some page of PDF file and customize my own UI (few buttons to turn over the pages and commenting).
And if there is any Ruby solution (It's not actually about programming, as I understand) it will be great.
I want to show pdf because:
User can copy text
Text is in original layout
So I don't want to show it as images or as a converted text. But I want to show page in simple design. Without Flex or whatever.
Yes, it is possible, with HTML5!
https://github.com/mozilla/pdf.js/
This is a pure-javascript library that uses HTML5 functions to open a PDF file and render it in the page.
I successfully test the library in following browsers:
IE9 and current version of Google Chrome, Firefox, Safari
IE8 and lower do not support pdf.js (lacking HTML5 functions)
Usage
Include the javascript libraries in the HTML file and add an -element ( is HTML5 element, so it will work only in HTML5 browsers):
<body>
<canvas id="the-canvas" style="border:1px solid black;"/>
</body>
Use a javascript call similar to this to render the PDF inside this canvas:
PDFJS.getDocument('your-file-goes-here.pdf').then(function(pdf) {
pdf.getPage(1).then(function(page) {
var scale = 1.5;
var viewport = page.getViewport(scale);
var canvas = document.getElementById('the-canvas');
var context = canvas.getContext('2d');
canvas.height = viewport.height;
canvas.width = viewport.width;
var renderContext = {
canvasContext: context,
viewport: viewport
};
page.render(renderContext);
});
});
Other than a few browsers that have PDF viewers built in (Chrome comes to mind), PDF display is handled by external plugins, over which you have no control. You can't embed a PDF into a page, other than via iframes, and even then it's a completely external app from the browser, and not subject to css styling rules.
I don't see what Ruby has to do with this, as that'd be a server-side operation, and you're talking about client-side preparing. You could use Ruby (or most any other language) to extract the PDF's text, but you explicitly say you don't want to do that.
The closest thing to what you're asking would be Google Doc Viewer. It at least doesn't require anything more than JavaScript.
You could alternatively convert the PDF into HTML5 and display those pages using the PDF2HTML5 product by IDRSolutions. The output can be placed inside your own CMS and you can add your own GUI or you could use the existing options. You can have a look at potential output on the free converter and trial it if you like, it's a 100% Java library though which may or may not be a problem.
Note: For the sake of transparency it's worth mentioning I am currently a developer on said product so am very familiar with it's capabilities.
It's also worth noting pdf.js doesn't always perfectly match the actual pdf but it is very difficult to get an exact match and still preserve some of the key features you want. However it does do quite a good job most of the time.
The only thing that I know of that would help you do that is Adobe Flashpaper (there could be open source alternatives? Not sure).
http://www.adobe.com/products/flashpaper/
Examples here:
http://www.adobe.com/products/flashpaper/examples/
Considering compatibility, the best is to use a genuine adobe software for rendering pdf. Third party renderers work most of the times, but occasionally have trouble with some aspect of formatting. You can just download pdf reader from the adobe website, do a simple setting on the web browser, and let the browser open a pdf file using the genuine pdf renderer. At least on Firefox, you can do that.
If you want to progmatically display a pdf file without using a web browser, that means you need a GUI toolkit that works with a pdf renderer. All I know is poppler on ruby/gnome2. I once was able to use it with ruby 1.8, but since I have moved to ruby 1.9, I have not tried it. Other standard GUI toolkits for ruby are wxruby, fxruby, ruby/qt, shoes etc., but I am not sure which of them has a pdf renderer.
Sorry if not helpful.
No need for external libraries. Much browsers support already multiple ways to vies the pdfs. Like object, iframe, embed. You can use an object, with an iframe fallback, which in return fallbacks on a download:
<object data="/pdf/sample-3pp.pdf#page=2" type="application/pdf" height="100%" width="100%">
<iframe src="/pdf/sample-3pp.pdf#page=2" style="border: none;" height="100%" width="100%">
This browser does not support PDFs. Please download the PDF to view it: Download PDF
</iframe>
</object>
Source