Looking for maintainers, I no longer do much if any PHP dev, I have moved on, mostly work in dotnet core, node.js & golang these days. If anyone is keen to take over these projects, get in touch - brad@bjc.id.au
PS. I know this is one of the more popular repos and I know some of you have been having a few issues with it. I use athenapdf for all my PDF generation needs these days.
This project started life as a DOCX templating engine. It has now envolved to also support converting HTML to PDF using a headless version of webkit, phantomjs.
The DOCX templating is great for documents that end clients update and manage over time, particularly text heavy documents. For example I use it to auto generate some legal contracts, where simple replacements are made for attributes like First Name, Last Name, Company Name & Address. The client, an insurance company, can provide updated template word documents that might contain subtle changes to policies & other conditions.
The HTML to PDF engine is great for cases where greater control over the design of the document is required. It's also more natural for us programmers, using standard HTML & CSS, with a splash of Javscript.
Installation via composer is easy:
composer require gears/pdf:*
You will also need to add the following to your root composer.json
file.
"scripts":
{
"post-install-cmd": ["PhantomInstaller\\Installer::installPhantomJS"],
"post-update-cmd": ["PhantomInstaller\\Installer::installPhantomJS"]
}
DOCX: If you are going to be using the DOCX templating you will need to install either libre-office-headless or unoconv on your host.
Both APIs are accessed through the main Pdf
class.
To convert a word document into a PDF without any templating:
$pdf = TualoPDFGear\Pdf::convert('/path/to/document.docx');
To save the generated PDF to a file:
TualoPDFGear\Pdf::convert('/path/to/document.docx', '/path/to/document.pdf');
To convert a html document into a PDF:
$pdf = TualoPDFGear\Pdf::convert('/path/to/document.html');
NOTE: The save to file works just the same for a HTML document.
By default the DOCX backend defaults to using libre-office-headless
,
to use unoconv
, override the converter like so:
$document = new TualoPDFGear\Pdf('/path/to/document.docx');
$document->converter = function()
{
return new TualoPDFGear\Pdf\Docx\Converter\Unoconv();
};
$document->save('/path/to/document.pdf');
NOTE: Currently the HTML backend only uses phantomjs.
There are several templating methods for the DOCX engine.
The first is setValue, this replaces all instances of
${FOO}
with BAR
$document->setValue('FOO', 'BAR');
To clone an entire block of DOCX xml, you surround your block with tags like:
${BLOCK_TO_CLONE}
& ${/BLOCK_TO_CLONE}
. Whatever content is
contained inside this block will be repeated 3 times in the generated PDF.
$document->cloneBlock('BLOCK_TO_CLONE', 3);
If you need to replace an entire block with custom DOCX xml you can. But you need to make sure your XML conforms to the DOCX standards. This is a very low level method and I wouldn't normally use this.
$document->replaceBlock('BLOCK_TO_REPLACE', '<docx><xml></xml></docx>');
To delete an entire block, for example you might have particular sections of the document that you only want to show to certian users.
$document->deleteBlock('BLOCK_TO_DELETE');
Finally the last method is useful for adding new rows to tables.
Similar to the cloneBlock
method. You place the tag in first cell
of the table. This row is the one that gets cloned.
$document->cloneRow('ROW_TO_CLONE', 5);
For more examples please see the Unit Tests. These contain the PHP code to generate the final PDF along with the original DOCX templates.
NOTE: The HTML to PDF converter does not have these same templating functions. Obviously it's just standard HTML that you can template how ever you like.
This is still in development and subject to radical change. So I won't document this section just yet...
The DOCX templating code originally came from PHPWord
You may still like to use PHPWord to generate your DOCX documents. And then use this package to convert the generated document to PDF.
Developed by Brad Jones - brad@bjc.id.au