Thank you, that was a valuable suggestion and I have tried to create
a new document from a current one and than delete unwanted
pages - but unfortunately with the same result.
The resulting 10 pages have the same size of 31 MB as the whole 1300-pages
large document.
I will wait until the end of th
On Thu, 2015-01-08 at 20:12 +0300, Yuliana Zigangirova wrote:
> I have taken a pdf from Adobe website - Adobe PDF Reference, 1.7,
> sixth
> edition - 31 MB large
> and have copied 10 pages from there to a new pdf file. The resulted
> PDF has the same 31MB and the copying of 10 pages took 35 mi
I have taken a pdf from Adobe website - Adobe PDF Reference, 1.7, sixth
edition - 31 MB large
and have copied 10 pages from there to a new pdf file. The resulted PDF
has the same 31MB and the copying of 10 pages took 35 minute!
I have tried to look at the pdf source - it looks like only referen
It may be that the producer of the PDF made all the resources shared
across all pages - instead of making them page-centric. In that case,
when any page is copied (either via XObject or standard page copying) the
entire set of resources comes along. That’s how PDF object copying is
done.
Ok, I have tried to copy pages from document1 to document2 with InsertPages;
You are right, there is no XObject wrapping, but I have found out
another problem.
I took a 20 000-pages-large PDF, which is ~43 MB heavy and have copied
10 pages
into another newly created PDF. The resulting PDF is
Page-level copying has nothing to do with Xobject wrapping.
Leonard
On 1/3/15, 2:36 PM, "Yuliana Zigangirova" wrote:
>Hello everyone!
>I am looking for a way to split an existing pdf document into the
>smaller ones
>without wrapping each page into a new XObject wrapper. The reason for
>th
Hello everyone!
I am looking for a way to split an existing pdf document into the
smaller ones
without wrapping each page into a new XObject wrapper. The reason for this
is to obtain more simple pdf structure as well as more efficient
resources handling.
I have found a similar thread here where