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A library to manipulate Adobe(r) IDML(r) files.

Project description

https://img.shields.io/pypi/v/simpleidml.svg Supported Python versions License https://coveralls.io/repos/github/Starou/SimpleIDML/badge.svg?branch=master

Installation

Use pip:

pip install SimpleIDML

Or:

python setup.py build
sudo python setup.py install

Python support

  • Python 3: 3.6+

Any questions?

https://groups.google.com/forum/#!forum/simpleidml-users

Developers

vagrant up
vagrant ssh
cd tests
python runtests.py

What is SimpleIDML?

SimpleIDML is a Python library to manipulate Adobe® InDesign® IDML files. The main purpose being the ability to compose IDML files together and produce complex documents from simple pieces and to separate the data from the structure.

The philosophy behind SimpleIDML is to keep the content and structure separated and to use XML files to feed your documents by using the XML Structure in InDesign. Keeping this isolation is important to ease the debugging and to keep track of what is going on.

I urge you to take a look in the regressiontests directory for real-world examples.

Uses cases - success story(ies)

Le Figaro - FigaroClassifieds

SimpleIDML is used in production at Le Figaro aside in-house tools managing the content of Classifieds Ads magazines like Propriétés de France or Belles Maisons à louer. These tools produces XML files describing the page layout (which IDML templates and sub-templates to use) and the page content. The XML files feed another tool - the one using SimpleIDML - that compose the final page.

The steps of the (simplified) process of composition are:

  1. Get the main IDML template (the page) ;

  2. Ad the sub-templates (the ads) into the page template ;

  3. Import the content into the final IDML file ;

  4. Edit the file in InDesign ;

  5. Push the changesets back to the content management application and update the database.

There is a lot of cool features in this application. You can update a part of a page already or partially composed for example.

Architecture

These applications are web-applications. The communication is done by web-services feeding a task queue (RabbitMQ/Celery).

The performances are quite good. Composing a document requires a fraction of a second.

What are IDML files?

IDML (InDesign Markup Language) files are a Zip archives (Adobe calls them packages) storing essentially XML files. Adobe made a descent job because those files can completely express the content of the native (binary) documents. This is a small revolution in the print world when it comes to automatically processing files both from templates and database (Round-trip) without using the proprietary server-edition of Publishing Software.

What does SimpleIDML do?

Package exploration

You can discover the structure of your IDML files:

>>> from simple_idml import idml
>>> my_idml_package = idml.IDMLPackage("/path/to/my_main_document.idml")
>>> my_idml_package.spreads
[u'Spreads/Spread_ub6.xml', u'Spreads/Spread_ubc.xml', u'Spreads/Spread_uc3.xml']
>>> my_idml_package.stories
[u'Stories/Story_u139.xml', u'Stories/Story_u11b.xml',
 u'Stories/Story_u102.xml', u'Stories/Story_ue4.xml']

Some attributes are lxml.etree Elements or Documents:

>>> my_package.font_families
[<Element FontFamily at 0x1010048c0>,
 <Element FontFamily at 0x101004a50>,
 <Element FontFamily at 0x101004aa0>,
    <Element FontFamily at 0x101004af0>]
>>> [e.get("Name") for e in my_package.font_families]
['Minion Pro', 'Myriad Pro', 'Kozuka Mincho Pro', 'Vollkorn']

>>> my_package.xml_structure
<Element Root at 0x101004910>
>>> from lxml import etree
>>> # print my_package.xml_structure_pretty() is a shortcut for:
>>> print etree.tostring(my_package.xml_structure, pretty_print=True)
<Root Self="di2">
  <article XMLContent="u102" Self="di2i3">
    <Story XMLContent="ue4" Self="di2i3i1">
      <title Self="di2i3i1i1"/>
      <subtitle Self="di2i3i1i2"/>
    </Story>
    <content XMLContent="u11b" Self="di2i3i2"/>
    <illustration XMLContent="u135" Self="di2i3i3"/>
    <description XMLContent="u139" Self="di2i3i4"/>
  </article>
  <article XMLContent="udb" Self="di2i4"/>
  <article XMLContent="udd" Self="di2i5"/>
  <advertise XMLContent="udf" Self="di2i6"/>
</Root>

xml_structure attribute is a representation of the XML Structure of your InDesign XML-ready document (The one you want to use to populate the content with data from an external XML file having the same structure).

Build package

There is a convenient script to create an IDML package from a flat directory called simpleidml_create_package_from_dir.py which should be in your PATH.

Compose document

Important: You should always use a with context when using side-effect methods on IDMLPackage instances returning new instances.

For example, the following is bad because my_doc initial instance reference is lost and the associated file cannot be properly closed. This may raise an exception on Windows platform if you try to os.unlink() an unclosed file.

from simple_idml import idml
my_doc = idml.IDMLPackage("/path/to/my_main_document.idml")
my_doc = my_doc.prefix("main")

Instead, use:

from simple_idml import idml
my_doc = idml.IDMLPackage("/path/to/my_main_document.idml")
with my_doc.prefix("main") as f:
    # some code.

Insert elements

Using the XML Structure, SimpleIDML can insert the content of an XML tag from one document into an XML tag of another document. The tag paths are expressed using XPath syntax. Note that you should always make a copy of your idml files before altering them with shutil.copy2(src, dst) for instance and prefix your document before using insert_idml() to avoid reference collisions.

>>> from simple_idml import idml
>>> idml_main = idml.IDMLPackage("/path/to/my_main_document.idml")
>>> idml_module = idml.IDMLPackage("/path/to/my_small_document.idml")

>>> with idml_main.prefix("main") as p_idml_main, \
>>>      idml_module.prefix("article") as p_idml_article:

>>>     with p_idml_main.insert_idml(p_idml_article, at="/Root/article[3]",
                                     only="/Root/module[1]") as f:
>>>         f.stories
['Stories/Story_article1u188.xml', 'Stories/Story_article1u19f.xml',
 'Stories/Story_article1u1db.xml', 'Stories/Story_mainu102.xml',
 'Stories/Story_mainu11b.xml', 'Stories/Story_mainu139.xml',
 'Stories/Story_mainue4.xml']


>>>         print f.xml_structure_pretty()
<Root Self="maindi2">
  <article XMLContent="mainu102" Self="maindi2i3">
    <Story XMLContent="mainue4" Self="maindi2i3i1">
      <title Self="maindi2i3i1i1"/>
      <subtitle Self="maindi2i3i1i2"/>
    </Story>
    <content XMLContent="mainu11b" Self="maindi2i3i2"/>
    <illustration XMLContent="mainu135" Self="maindi2i3i3"/>
    <description XMLContent="mainu139" Self="maindi2i3i4"/>
  </article>
  <article XMLContent="mainudb" Self="maindi2i4"/>
  <article Self="maindi2i5">
    <module XMLContent="article1u1db" Self="article1di3i12">
      <main_picture XMLContent="article1u182" Self="article1di3i12i1"/>
      <headline XMLContent="article1u188" Self="article1di3i12i2"/>
      <Story XMLContent="article1u19f" Self="article1di3i12i3">
        <article Self="article1di3i12i3i2"/>
        <informations Self="article1di3i12i3i1"/>
      </Story>
    </module>
  </article>
  <advertise XMLContent="mainudf" Self="maindi2i6"/>
</Root>

Combine pages

You may need to gather pages from severals documents into a single one:

>>> edito_idml_file = IDMLPackage("magazineA-edito.idml")
>>> courrier_idml_file = IDMLPackage("magazineA-courrier-des-lecteurs.idml")

>>> # Always start by prefixing packages to avoid collision.
>>> with edito_idml_file.prefix("edito") as p_edito,\
>>>      courrier_idml_file.prefix("courrier") as p_courrier:
>>>     len(edito_idml_file.pages)
2

>>>     new_idml = p_edito.add_page_from_idml(p_courrier,
...                                           page_number=1,
...                                           at="/Root",
...                                           only="/Root/page[1]")
>>>     len(new_idml.pages)
3

# The XML Structure has integrated the new file.
>>>     print etree.tostring(new_idml.xml_structure, pretty_print=True)
<Root Self="editodi2">
  <page Self="editodi2ib">
    <article Self="editodi2ibif">
      <Story XMLContent="editoue4" Self="editodi2ibifi1f">
        <title Self="editodi2ibifi1fi1"/>
        <subtitle Self="editodi2ibifi1fi2"/>
      </Story>
      <content XMLContent="editou11b" Self="editodi2ibifi1e"/>
    </article>
  </page>
  <page Self="editodi2i10">
    <advertise XMLContent="editou1de" Self="editodi2i10i23"/>
  </page>
  <page Self="courrierdi2ib">
    <title XMLContent="courrieru1b2" Self="courrierdi2ibi34"/>
    <article XMLContent="courrieru1c9" Self="courrierdi2ibi33"/>
    <article XMLContent="courrieru1e0" Self="courrierdi2ibi32"/>
    <article XMLContent="courrieru1fb" Self="courrierdi2ibi31"/>
    <article XMLContent="courrieru212" Self="courrierdi2ibi30"/>
  </page>
</Root>

There is a convenient method to add several pages at once:

>>> edito_idml_file = IDMLPackage("magazineA-edito.idml")
>>> courrier_idml_file = IDMLPackage("magazineA-courrier-des-lecteurs.idml")
>>> bloc_notes_idml_file = IDMLPackage("magazineA-bloc-notes.idml")

>>> with edito_idml_file.prefix("edito") as p_edito,\
>>>      courrier_idml_file.prefix("courrier") as p_courrier,\
>>>      bloc_notes_idml_file.prefix("blocnotes") as p_bloc_notes:

>>>     packages_to_add = [
...         (p_courrier, 1, "/Root", "/Root/page[1]"),
...         (p_bloc_notes, 1, "/Root", "/Root/page[1]"),
...     ]

>>>     new_idml = p_edito.add_pages_from_idml(packages_to_add)
>>>     len(new_idml.pages)
4
>>>     new_idml.spreads
['Spreads/Spread_editoub6.xml',
 'Spreads/Spread_editoubc.xml',
 'Spreads/Spread_editoubd.xml']

Import/Export XML

Exporting as XML:

>>> idml_file = IDMLPackage("path/to/file.idml")
>>> print idml_file.export_xml()
<Root>
    <module>
        <main_picture/>
        <headline>Hello world!</headline>
        <Story>
            <article>Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, ...</article>
            <informations>Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet,</informations>
        </Story>
    </module>
</Root>

You can also import XML files into your InDesign® documents. The following rules applies:

  • A node having the attribute simpleidml-setcontent="false" will not update the content of the corresponding element into the idml document (but its children will be updated).

  • A node having the attribute simpleidml-ignorecontent="true" will not update the content of the corresponding element into the idml document and its children.

  • A node having the attribute simpleidml-setcontent="delete" will remove the corresponding element into the idml document (Story and Spread elements).

  • A node having the attribute simpleidml-setcontent="remove-previous-br" will remove the new-line characters before the element.

  • You can mix several flags using a comma (i.e.: simpleidml-setcontent="delete,remove-previous-br")

  • In a ignorecontent context the content of a child node can be turned on with the simpleidml-forcecontent="true" flag.

  • Image references are passed by the href attribute. An empty value will remove the corresponding page items into the document.

  • A nested tag will be created if they are mapped with a character-style.

  • The style applied to the newly created tag is a combination of the parent character-style and the mapped one.

Please take a look into the tests for in-depth examples.

Import PDF

A block can be used as a placeholder for a PDF file:

>>> with IDMLPackage("my_package.idml") as idml_file:
>>>     with idml_file.import_pdf("file:/path/to/file.pdf", at="/Root/modules/module[2]", crop="PDFCrop") as f:
>>>         f.export_xml()

The crop parameter should be one of the PDFCrop_EnumValue from the IDML Specification ("CropArt", "CropPDF", "CropTrim", "CropBleed", "CropMedia", "CropContentVisibleLayers", "CropContentAllLayers", "CropContent"). It defaults to CropContentVisibleLayers``

Use InDesign server SOAP interface to convert a file

This require an InDesign Server and a readable/writable working directory. The same directory must be accessible by the client either by the filesystem or over FTP.

The formats parameter is a list (of dicts) of formats and parameters you want your file to be exported into. The supported output formats are jpeg, idml, pdf, indd and zip (a zipped InDesign Package).

Export parameters are provided using the params key. Use simpleidml_indesign_save_as.py --help for a list of supported parameters.

The response is a list of binary strings matching formats provided:

from simple_idml.indesign import indesign

response = indesign.save_as("/path_to_file.idml", [{"fmt": "indd"}],
                            "http://url-to-indesign-server:port",
                            "/path/to/client/workdir",
                            "/path/to/indesign-server/workdir")[0]
with open("my_file.indd", "wb+") as f:
    f.write(response)

response = indesign.save_as("/path_to_file.indd", [{"fmt": "idml"}],
                            "http://url-to-indesign-server:port",
                            "/path/to/client/workdir",
                            "/path/to/indesign-server/workdir")[0]
with open("my_file.idml", "wb+") as f:
    f.write(response)

response = indesign.save_as("/path_to_file.indd", [{
                                "fmt": "pdf",
                                "params": {"colorSpace": "CMYK"},
                            }],
                            "http://url-to-indesign-server:port",
                            "/path/to/client/workdir",
                            "/path/to/indesign-server/workdir")[0]
with open("my_file.pdf", "wb+") as f:
    f.write(response)

pdf_response, jpeg_response, zip_response = indesign.save_as(
                                "/path_to_file.indd",
                                [{"fmt": "pdf"}, {"fmt": "jpeg"}, {"fmt": "zip"}],
                                "http://url-to-indesign-server:port",
                                "/path/to/client/workdir",
                                "/path/to/indesign-server/workdir")

To convert an InDesign Package, use indesign.export_package_as() instead.

If the InDesign Server instance is running on a Windows machine, set the indesign_server_path_style parameter to "windows".

If the client accesses the working directory via FTP, you must specify that in the ftp_params parameter:

{
    'auth': ("ftp://ftp.foo.org", "user_account", "s3cret-pa55word"),
    'passive': False,
    'keepalive': True,         # False by default (optional)
    'keepalive_interval': 30,  # set socket.TCP_KEEPINTVL (optional)
    'keepalive_idle': 45,      # set socket.TCP_KEEPIDLE  (optional)
    'polite': False,           # Unilaterally close ftp connection (optional)
}

A script (simpleidml_indesign_save_as.py) that wraps these functions is installed in your PATH.

Revisions

1.1.8

  • Bugfix (issue #73).

1.1.7

  • Manage border color in styles when composing documents.

1.1.5

  • Add a page_number parameter to IDMLPackage.import_pdf() so that you can choose which page from the PDF file to display.

1.1.4

  • PyLint refactorisation.

1.1.3

  • Catch and log exceptions to the InDesign Server when setting options in export.jsx. Thanks to @kylehodgson for the contribution.

1.1.2

New features

  • Add indesign.export_package_as() to convert an InDesign Package.

1.1.1

New features

  • Add the possiblity to remove new-line characters when importing XML by using the flag simpleidml-setcontent="remove-previous-br".

1.1.0

Removed Python 2 support.

New features

  • Add the possiblity to remove elements when importing XML by using the flag simpleidml-setcontent="delete".

  • The PDFCrop attribute is now parametrable when using import_pdf().

  • IDMLPackage.add_note(note, author, at=path) added.

1.0.5

Bug fixes

  • Fixed indesign.save_as() in Python 3 where the jsx file was opened in text mode instead of binary.

1.0.3

  • Use setuptools instead of distutils for a better integration with Pypi.

1.0.0

New features

  • Added support for Python 3

Backward incompatibilities

  • Removed support for Python 2.6

0.92.9

New features

  • Added simpleidml_indesign_profiles.py script to list the available joboptions files on the InDesign Server using the SOAP interface.

Bug fixes

  • Fix working directory cleaning of the SOAP server when an exception is raised. indesign.save_as() may be backward incompatible since the returned list may contains some None (instead of raising an exception before returning anything).

  • Give the list of available profiles (joboptions files) on the InDesign Server if the given ‘pdfExportPresetName’ is not found.

Backward incompatibilities

  • indesign.close_all_documents() has been replace the CloseAllDocuments class and its .execute() method.

  • Some util functions that wrap the basic file manipulations to manage the case of a ftp access to those files have been moved from indesign.py to a new ftp.py module.

0.92.8

New features

  • Added IDMLPackage.import_pdf() method.

Bug fixes

  • Fix bleedMarks in export.jsx.

0.92.7

Bug fixes

  • FillTint wasn’t managed.

  • Force lxml < 4 in dependencies.

0.92.6

Bug fixes

  • Catch errors when InDesign SOAP server fails to complete a task and raise an exception.

0.92.5

Bug fixes

  • Handle <PDF> in IDMLPackage._get_item_translation_for_insert()

0.92.4

Bug fixes

  • Fix issue #11: Parent CharacterStyle not applied in import_xml() in some cases.

0.92.2

New features

  • More ftp parameters for indesign.save_as() function. Hardcoded socket parameters are now modifiable. And you can set the flag polite to False if you encounter hanging problem on ftp.quit() as I do. Being unpolite calls an unilateral and rude ftp.close(). Please upgrade your code with explicite values if you rely on the previous default behavior.

0.92.1

Bug fixes

  • indesign.save_as() uses a dedicated temporary working directory to avoid concurrent access on files.

  • Added a logger to indesign.save_as() (‘simpleidml.indesign’) and some debug messages.

  • Fixed hanging ftp.retrbinary() in indesign.save_as() calls by tuning the socket.

0.91.8

New features

  • Added support for PDF export presets in indesign.save_as().

0.91.7

New features

  • Added IMDLPackage.merge_layers(with_name) (Refs#7).

  • Added a new script simpleidml_indesign_close_all_documents.py.

Bug fixes

  • In IDMLPackage.insert_idml(), Elements from the same layer (but not tagged in the structure) are now added in the Spread of the document of destination.

  • Better support for Windows platform.

  • Fixed character style mapping with tag when using insert_idml.

  • Fixed Export XML in some edge case.

  • Added parameters to simpleidml_indesign_save_as when exporting to PDF.

Backward incompatibilities

  • indesign.save_as() formats parameters is now a list of dictionaries.

0.91.6

New features

  • Add the simpleidml-ignorecontent and simpleidml-forcecontent tags (XML attributes) allowing one to carefully exclude a node and its children during the import XML process.

  • indesign.save_as() now works with a client working directory over a FTP. This require wget to be on your system if you want to create zip packages.

Backward incompatibilities

  • indesign.save_as() require both a client workdir and a server workdir parameter.

0.91.5.5

Bugfixes

  • <EPS> elements in Spread weren’t handled correctly.

  • All spread elements were added in the destination package when using insert_idml().

0.91.3

New features

Add a SOAP client to call a InDesign server to get INDD file and export in various formats.

0.91.2

New features

  • Ticket #20 - Suffix layers.

Backward incompatibilities

  • Ticket #22 - IDMLPackage.import_xml() parameter is a XML string and not a file object.

Bugfixes

Tickets #19, #21 (orphan layers), #23 (AssertXMLEqual), #24 (import_xml() failure).

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