Java PDF Viewer
I am using java and RCP and I am trying to show pdf Document with Acrobat on my views. I don't need to change them. I have this error with this code. Any idea how to resolve this problem?. P.s.: it works good same times.
PDFFile pdfFile;
pdfFile = PdfFileLoader.loadPdf(file, new NullProgressMonitor());
PdfDocument pdfDocument = new OneDimensionalPdfDocument(pdfFile, new NullProgressMonitor());
pdfViewer.setPdfDocument(pdfDocument);
Error from PdfDocument pdfDocument = new OneDimensionalPdfDocument(pdfFile, new NullProgressMonitor()) : Unsupport CMap format: 6
java.nio.BufferUnderflowException
at java.nio.Buffer.nextGetIndex(Unknown Source)
at java.nio.HeapByteBuffer.getShort(Unknown Source)
at com.sun.pdfview.font.ttf.HmtxTable.setData(HmtxTable.java:79)
at com.sun.pdfview.font.ttf.TrueTypeTable.createTable(TrueTypeTable.java:113)
at com.sun.pdfview.font.ttf.TrueTypeFont.getTable(TrueTypeFont.java:106)
at com.sun.pdfview.font.TTFFont.getOutline(TTFFont.java:129)
at com.sun.pdfview.font.TTFFont.getOutline(TTFFont.java:89)
at com.sun.pdfview.font.OutlineFont.getGlyph(OutlineFont.java:118)
at com.sun.pdfview.font.PDFFont.getCachedGlyph(PDFFont.java:307)
at com.sun.pdfview.font.PDFFontEncoding.getGlyphFromEncoding(PDFFontEncoding.java:132)
at com.sun.pdfview.font.PDFFontEncoding.getGlyphs(PDFFontEncoding.java:98)
at com.sun.pdfview.font.PDFFont.getGlyphs(PDFFont.java:273)
at com.sun.pdfview.PDFTextFormat.doText(PDFTextFormat.java:283)
at com.sun.pdfview.PDFParser.iterate(PDFParser.java:742)
at com.sun.pdfview.BaseWatchable.run(BaseWatchable.java:88)
at java.lang.Thread.run(Unknown Source)
Regards, Haythem
Have a look at these free pdf renderer ...
Some links ...
http://www.icepdf.org/ (now at http://www.icesoft.org/java/projects/ICEpdf/overview.jsf - Apache 2 Open Source)
http://www.jpedal.org/support_siEclipse.php (now at https://www.idrsolutions.com/jpedal/ - commercial)
https://java.net/projects/pdf-renderer (still available https://github.com/yarick123/pdf-renderer - LGPL-2.1)
UPDATE
As per http://www.icepdf.org/ ,
ICEpdf is an open source Java PDF engine that can render, convert, or extract PDF content within any Java application or on a Web server.
For basic functionality you have to include icepdf-core.jar
and icepdf-viewer.jar
in your class path. Depending upon the requirement you can also add the SVG support.
Taken from iceface sample folder:
import org.icepdf.ri.common.SwingController;
import org.icepdf.ri.common.SwingViewBuilder;
import javax.swing.*;
/**
* The <code>ViewerComponentExample</code> class is an example of how to use
* <code>SwingController</code> and <code>SwingViewBuilder</code>
* to build a PDF viewer component. A file specified at the command line is
* opened in a JFrame which contains the viewer component.
*
* @since 2.0
*/
public class ViewerComponentExample {
public static void main(String[] args) {
// Get a file from the command line to open
String filePath = args[0];
// build a component controller
SwingController controller = new SwingController();
SwingViewBuilder factory = new SwingViewBuilder(controller);
JPanel viewerComponentPanel = factory.buildViewerPanel();
// add interactive mouse link annotation support via callback
controller.getDocumentViewController().setAnnotationCallback(
new org.icepdf.ri.common.MyAnnotationCallback(
controller.getDocumentViewController()));
JFrame applicationFrame = new JFrame();
applicationFrame.setDefaultCloseOperation(JFrame.EXIT_ON_CLOSE);
applicationFrame.getContentPane().add(viewerComponentPanel);
// Now that the GUI is all in place, we can try openning a PDF
controller.openDocument(filePath);
// show the component
applicationFrame.pack();
applicationFrame.setVisible(true);
}
}
The above code helps you in displaying a PDF on a swing component. You can do the same in the SWT environment (have a look at SwingViewBuilder
.. kind of hard, but will SWT look and feel ) or use org.eclipse.swt.awt.SWT_AWT
(kind of easy... but will have swing + swt look and feel)... though both approach will solve your purpose. Also check the applicable licenses in the license folder.
Hope this will help.
Here is another free, small and powerful PDF Viewer based on Eclipse SWT and jPod Renderer — JPview. It has strong rendering and low memory usage.