PDF Hacks

PDF Hacks

How to use iText in Action

About iText in Action


iText in Action will teach you about PDF, Adobe’s Portable Document Format, from a Java developer’s point of view. You’ll learn how to use iText in a Java/J2EE application for the production and/or manipulation of PDF documents. Along the way, you’ll become acquainted with lots of interesting PDF features and discover e-document functionalities you may not have known about before.

In addition to the many small code samples, iText in Action includes lots of XML-based, ready-made solutions that can easily be adapted and integrated into your projects.

If you’re a .NET developer using the C# or J# port of iText, iTextSharp or iText.NET, you can also benefit from this book, but you’ll have to adapt the examples.

How to use iText in Action

You can read this book chronologically, starting with the introductory part 1. Part 2 describes useful basic building blocks, and part 3 gets into iText’s core PDF functionality. You’ll finish with part 4, which discusses the interactive features of PDF.

If you haven’t convinced your project manager yet that PDF is the way to go, you’ll certainly benefit from reading chapters 1 and 3. It sums up some reasonable arguments that will help you help your manager make policy decisions regarding e-documents. Section 1.3 contains a roadmap to the ready-made solutions that are demonstrated throughout the book. The main function of this section is to offer you a menu composed of a series of screenshots, showing all kinds of documents: documents with flowing text, graphics, bookmarks, and so on. If you see something you like, you can use this book as a kind of ‘cookbook’ and jump to the ‘recipe’ that was used to create a similar document.

Readers who are new to iText will need to take the “Hello World” crash course in chapter 2. This chapter shows that iText can be used in many different ways. The first three chapters often refer to sections in parts 2, 3, and 4, where you’ll find an in-depth explanation of the specific functionality that is being introduced in one of the many “Hello World” examples.

You can also read iText in Action in random order or thematically, starting from the table of contents or the roadmap in chapter 1. Once you’re well acquainted with iText, you’ll probably use iText in Action as a reference manual, browsing for the many small standalone code samples that can be applied directly to your own code.

for details, please visit here.

P.S.

if you want to buy it online, please visit iText in Action on Amazon.

August 9, 2009 Posted by | Books | , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment