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Vue 3 PDF Component

pdf-component-vue is an up-to-date PDFJS-based Vue JS component, primarily for rendering tiles (i.e. PDF pages) in a grid layout.

It is not a (full-blown) viewer, but could be used to make one.

npm install pdf-component-vue

npm version npm dl workflow e2e codeql codecov license

Important Notice About Hosting pdfjs

Starting in package 0.7.0 we are no longer bundling the pdfjs packages into our package; this is now your responsibility!

Some benefits:

  • our package is now very tiny.
  • we now operate with version 4.x, which had import issues due to top-level await. Importing these modules from your application's scope provides an appropriate top-level context to await in.
  • we will still operate with version 3.x for those clinging to SVG rendering, which is removed from 4.x.
  • you may now reference your pdfjs bundles from:
    • your application bundle
    • a CDN
    • copy of mjs modules (e.g. via the public folder)

Features

A growing feature list to accommodate your use cases, especially if you want to control resources and DOM size.

  • No pdfjs-dist in 0.7.0 and up.
  • Tailored for grid treatment.
    • Control CSS classes for all major layout elements.
    • Control row and column numbering of page cells.
  • Use slot for content injection.
    • Arbitrary content before/after page cell, e.g. page number.
    • Arbitrary content in the page cell.
  • Lots of $emit for flexibility on the consumer.
    • Pass through of key pdfjs events.
    • Navigation: PDF Link and Page cell clicks.
    • Loading and rendering status.
    • Visible pages (when scrolling is configured).
    • Resize (when resize is configured).
  • "Smart" auto-sizing based on containing element.
    • Specify "width" or "height" mode.
    • Use CSS to size page cells.
  • Display PDF layers: canvas, text, annotation.
  • Render via OffscreenCanvas and requestAnimationFrame for smooth updates.
  • DPI-aware: automatically scales up canvas to avoid blurriness.
  • Integrated support for PDF page labels; show up in slotProps.
  • Utility functions to work with PDF Outline, e.g. Table of Contents.
    • Does the dirty work of "resolving" page numbers from the arcane dest field.
    • Take the result and plug into your favorite Tree View!
  • "Smart" page management to control resource consumption.
    • Offscreen pages may have their elements unmounted to save DOM resources.
    • Placeholder pages do not use a canvas to save even more resources.
  • Just-in-time page rendering while scrolling via IntersectionObserver.
  • Re-render PDF layers on size changes via ResizeObserver.
  • Interact with the component without having a ref.
    • Everything works with (reactive) props and emits.
  • Commanding support.
    • OOTB commands for print and go to page.
    • Framework for making your own custom commands.

Demo Pages

The demo app that is part of the repo presents some common use cases. Below are sample screen captures.

Faux Viewer Demo

image

Tile Navigation Demo

image

Page Management Demo

image

WHY!?

Excellent question!

After using one of the existing components out there, we were left wanting more. After reviewing the rest of the field, we found this short list of reasons for proceeding:

  • Built with an old-old-old (2.x) version of pdfjs
  • Built for Vue 2
  • Do not leverage Vue's DOM management via reactivity and the component's template
  • Lack layout control
  • Lack resource management (render only one/all pages)

PDFJS

This assumes you may know a little about how pdfjs works; there is lots of glossing over.

You don't require any knowledge of pdfjs to use this control.

This link contains an excellent overview of the internals.

Unbundled PDFJS

You may use this component with 3.11.174 or any 4.x bundle of pdfjs because you are hosting it.

Core Logic

Those familiar with pdfjs know there are multiple "layers" involved:

  • layer with page image
    • use canvas or svg render mode
    • svg rendering has known deficiencies; use at your own risk
    • svg is available in v3 only
  • text layer containing "searchable" PDF text
  • annotation layer with the PDF annotations
  • xfa layer with XFA form layout (not currently supported)

There is also lots of bookkeeping to keep everything consistent:

  • Interaction between DOM elements and pdfjs
    • Graphic, text, and annotation layers.
    • DPI-awareness.
  • Mounting and unmounting while live.
    • DOM elements require bookkeeping while mounted and the zone changes.
  • Re-render on size changes.
    • Each rendering is fixed to the container's current size.
    • canvas rendering is especially affected by resizing.
  • "Bake in" the required CSS (via style) to make the layers render correctly.
    • The layers must be "stacked" correctly for visual presentation.

Page Events

Attach handlers to receive page clicks directly, e.g. track "selected" page(s). Alter the CSS styling of (specific) pages (pageContainerClass), e.g. "highlighting" a clicked page (see demo 3).

Auto-sizing

Some components require you to set (one of the) dimensions (usually in pixels not CSS units) to render properly, and this is not convenient.

Rather than telling the component what size to use, the component uses the DOM elements to compute the size desired. This allows you to set the size of the grid cells via CSS.

Sizing has these modes:

  • WIDTH - conform the document to the width of the container element. The height is dynamic.
  • HEIGHT - conform the document to the height of the container element. The width is dynamic.
  • SCALE - scale the document to specific scale factor. The container changes size to accommodate.

In all cases, aspect ratio is preserved.

Resizing

Because the canvas layer is literally a drawing of the page, it requires redrawing once the size of the page container element changes, for layout (conform to new size) resources (down size) and legibility (up size). This is tracked and handled internally when you activate Resize Management (see below).

Grid System

Since the grid concept is "baked in" there is some configuration required to use it. In return, you get convenient slotProps for binding to the grid-row and grid-column CSS properties in your grid layout. This is necessary to properly position slot content in the same cell as the page's DOM elements.

The document container element should use display:grid and specify row and column templates, and other grid properties as needed. For a finite grid, specify the overall height so grid track heights are defined and not auto. See the demos for examples.

Once the final set of tiles is calculated, the grid numbering is applied. The tileConfiguration is used to calculate the row and column coordinates for each tile.

If no tileConfiguration is given, no sequencing is applied: the grid-row and grid-column are both undefined (and produce no CSS).

The TileConfiguration class provides the following features:

  • Ordering row major and column major.
  • Fixed count in major and minor dimensions; build "finite" grids of fixed size.
  • Variable count in major dimension; allow for "auto" grids.

When the grid has auto for the major dimension, you may use any number of pages, because it is set up to number all tiles.

When the grid is finite, that number of tiles (maximum) is always generated.

Display Options

Using the grid system, you have options for layout:

  • Continuous - one continuous row/column of pages. The number of tiles "visible" depends on the height of the stack currently presenting. Use WIDTH mode (default) and a one-column grid (see below).
  • Tileset (n-up) - display a (finite) number of tiles in a grid pattern. Use HEIGHT mode and explicit grid rows and columns (see below).

Page Management

Because documents may be gigantic, and high-DPI devices require larger rendering, only some of the pages should be rendered at any point.

Page management divides pages into "zones":

  • Hot - fully materialized to the DOM.
  • Warm - "placeholder" pages primarily to make scrolling happen, and provide (correctly sized) space until pages go Hot.
  • Cold - outside the range of Hot and Warm pages.

The default settings make all pages hot, so the entire document is rendered upon loading. This may not be appropriate for your use case.

The zones may center around the page indicated by Page Management (zero by default). The Hot zone directly impacts resource consumption, because the canvas etc. are rendered from pdfjs. This is sized to provide a smooth UX while scrolling (i.e. moving the page a small amount).

Each time the pageManagement prop changes, the zones are recalculated, and pages transition between zones as detected. In particular, pages becoming hot are rendered, and previously hot pages get layers (text, annotation) unmounted (if enabled).

Current and Selected Pages

It is important to note that the component is strictly a tile-rendering engine, and has no sense of "current page" or "selected page(s)". Tracking this is left totally in your hands.

See the Page Management and Faux Viewer demos for how to manage a "current/selected page".

Invoking Page Management

The component has the pageManagement prop and implementations of the PageManagement class for you to invoke page management as necessary.

The primary goal of Page Management is to ensure the tiles visible to the user are rendered, and other tiles not rendered, in order to balance resources and performance.

See the Page Management Demo for an illustration of how the zones work.

The easiest way to provide Page Management is via a computed property that in turn is tied to reactive state.

If you do not specify pageManagement prop the default is used, which labels all pages hot to render the entire document upon loading.

Changing the Start Tile

As mentioned above, the component has no concept of "current page". However, there must still be a way to tell the component which tile to start rendering on, and Page Management is used for this as well.

See the Navigation Demo for details; it uses PageManagement_Scroll to "page" through a finite grid of 2x3 tiles.

Using Zones

If you are presenting a finite grid, it makes little sense to render pages not visible, so you should set the hot zone to the number of tiles. This prevents any other pages from being loaded with pdfjs. Be aware that simply accessing the page from pdfjs has a cost that should be minimized.

If you are in a "scrolling" scenario (e.g. a 1-column grid) then for the best control you should use Scroll Management (see below).

Very Large Documents

So why have 3 zones? Consider a document with 1000 pages viewed on a high-DPI mobile device. The number of DOM elements for just placeholders for every page may be too large for the user's device, so it is desirable to keep this to a reasonable number.

What this means is that for the 1000 page document, only N "pages" are represented in the DOM at any point (Hot + Warm), providing enough elements for scrolling to work.

Scrolling

With the Continuous layout option, it is important to host the component directly inside the element that provides scrolling, e.g. a div with overflow management so it has scroll bar(s). This element is used with an IntersectionObserver to determine what tiles are visible (see below).

The most common case is row-major-auto 1-column grid in WIDTH size mode (see below); the document container's width is used as the rendering width, and the height is calulated from that using the page's aspect ratio. The height should be auto in this case. The parent element of the document container will scroll (subject to CSS) vertically.

Activate Scroll Management

Activate Scroll Management by supplying a value to the scrollConfiguration prop, usually during the loaded event. Once set, the component emits visible-pages events back to you, via an IntersectionObserver it controls. You must arrange to receive this event, then configure a suitable PageManagement instance (in this case PageManagement_UpdateRange) and assign it to the pageManagement prop.

See the Faux Viewer demo for how to use Scroll Management.

Resizing

If your use case includes resizing of pages, e.g. because the window size changes on a desktop platform, you will run into several issues:

  • The canvas does not automatically redraw itself at the new size.
    • You get a rescaled version of the image from the original size you rendered at.
    • Most noticeable when going from smaller to larger size (blur).
  • The text and annotation layers do not rescale themselves to the new size.
    • pdfjs uses special CSS properties to calculate their CSS position.
    • The value of these special CSS properties depend on the containing element's dimensions (at time of rendering).

Needless to say, if you are anticipating dynamic page resizing, you must activate Resize Management.

Activate Resize Management

Activate Resize Management by supplying a value of type ResizeConfiguration to the resizeConfiguration prop. You must do this on or before the loaded event. Once set, the component uses a ResizeObserver to track the DOM. The options in resizeConfiguration determine when to trigger the resize logic.

Once set, the component emits resize-pages events back to you, via a ResizeObserver it controls. If you don't need to customize behavior, you may skip receiving this event. When receiving this event, you get an Array of resize page data, with the pages that will be affected.

  • page is the same information sent from the other events.
  • di delta inline change in px.
  • db delta block change in px.
  • upsize whether the element is increasing in size (since last render).
  • renderCanvas flag indicating desire to redraw the canvas; based on the upsize value (see below).

The important aspect of this is the redrawCanvas flag of each entry, which you must set to true for the pages that require a canvas redraw.

By default (no event handler) the component requests a canvas redraw when upsizing only.

Hot and Warm pages have the special CSS properties updated, and Hot pages with the redrawCanvas flag set get the canvas redrawn.

Commanding

Certain operations (like printing) typically require the component to "expose" methods for you to call. Another scenario is scrolling to a specific page, which requires reference to the DOM element.

In order to provide these, and other user-defined operations, there is a general framework for submitting "commands" to the component.

The commandPort prop is a reactive way to submit operations that are scheduled (via setTimeout) to execute in an organized fashion with access to parts of the component's internal state, e.g. to access pdfjs objects or DOM elements. The execution "context" handles collecting results and/or error information, and reports back via the command-complete event.

An example use case for custom commands is "unwrapping" the PDF document outline (if available) to display a Table of Contents in your favorite tree view UI. See the Faux Viewer demo for details on how to use the commandPort with the OOTB and custom commands.

Thanks

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VueJS Component on PDFJS for rendering PDFs in your Vue 3 application.

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