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Docling PDF conversion package

Project description

Docling

Docling

arXiv PyPI version Python Poetry Code style: black Imports: isort Pydantic v2 pre-commit License MIT

Docling bundles PDF document conversion to JSON and Markdown in an easy, self-contained package.

Features

  • ⚡ Converts any PDF document to JSON or Markdown format, stable and lightning fast
  • 📑 Understands detailed page layout, reading order and recovers table structures
  • 📝 Extracts metadata from the document, such as title, authors, references and language
  • 🔍 Optionally applies OCR (use with scanned PDFs)

Installation

To use Docling, simply install docling from your package manager, e.g. pip:

pip install docling

[!NOTE] Works on macOS and Linux environments. Windows platforms are currently not tested.

Use alternative PyTorch distributions

The Docling models depend on the PyTorch library. Depending on your architecture, you might want to use a different distribution of torch. For example, you might want support for different accelerator or for a cpu-only version. All the different ways for installing torch are listed on their website https://pytorch.org/.

One common situation is the installation on Linux systems with cpu-only support. In this case, we suggest the installation of Docling with the following options

# Example for installing on the Linux cpu-only version
pip install docling --extra-index-url https://download.pytorch.org/whl/cpu

Development setup

To develop for Docling, you need Python 3.10 / 3.11 / 3.12 and Poetry. You can then install from your local clone's root dir:

poetry install --all-extras

Usage

Convert a single document

To convert invidual PDF documents, use convert_single(), for example:

from docling.document_converter import DocumentConverter

source = "https://arxiv.org/pdf/2408.09869"  # PDF path or URL
converter = DocumentConverter()
result = converter.convert_single(source)
print(result.render_as_markdown())  # output: "## Docling Technical Report[...]"

Convert a batch of documents

For an example of batch-converting documents, see batch_convert.py.

From a local repo clone, you can run it with:

python examples/batch_convert.py

The output of the above command will be written to ./scratch.

Adjust pipeline features

The example file custom_convert.py contains multiple ways one can adjust the conversion pipeline and features.

Control pipeline options

You can control if table structure recognition or OCR should be performed by arguments passed to DocumentConverter:

doc_converter = DocumentConverter(
    artifacts_path=artifacts_path,
    pipeline_options=PipelineOptions(
        do_table_structure=False,  # controls if table structure is recovered
        do_ocr=True,  # controls if OCR is applied (ignores programmatic content)
    ),
)

Control table extraction options

You can control if table structure recognition should map the recognized structure back to PDF cells (default) or use text cells from the structure prediction itself. This can improve output quality if you find that multiple columns in extracted tables are erroneously merged into one.

pipeline_options = PipelineOptions(do_table_structure=True)
pipeline_options.table_structure_options.do_cell_matching = False  # uses text cells predicted from table structure model

doc_converter = DocumentConverter(
    artifacts_path=artifacts_path,
    pipeline_options=pipeline_options,
)

Impose limits on the document size

You can limit the file size and number of pages which should be allowed to process per document:

conv_input = DocumentConversionInput.from_paths(
    paths=[Path("./test/data/2206.01062.pdf")],
    limits=DocumentLimits(max_num_pages=100, max_file_size=20971520)
)

Convert from binary PDF streams

You can convert PDFs from a binary stream instead of from the filesystem as follows:

buf = BytesIO(your_binary_stream)
docs = [DocumentStream(filename="my_doc.pdf", stream=buf)]
conv_input = DocumentConversionInput.from_streams(docs)
results = doc_converter.convert(conv_input)

Limit resource usage

You can limit the CPU threads used by Docling by setting the environment variable OMP_NUM_THREADS accordingly. The default setting is using 4 CPU threads.

Contributing

Please read Contributing to Docling for details.

References

If you use Docling in your projects, please consider citing the following:

@techreport{Docling,
  author = {Deep Search Team},
  month = {8},
  title = {{Docling Technical Report}},
  url={https://arxiv.org/abs/2408.09869},
  eprint={2408.09869},
  doi = "10.48550/arXiv.2408.09869",
  version = {1.0.0},
  year = {2024}
}

License

The Docling codebase is under MIT license. For individual model usage, please refer to the model licenses found in the original packages.

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