Docprompt is a library for Document AI. It aims to make enterprise-level document analysis easy thanks to the zero-shot capability of large language models.
- Common utilities for interacting with PDFs
- PDF loading and serialization
- PDF byte compression using Ghostscript 👻
- Fast rasterization 🔥 🚀
- Page splitting, re-export with PDFium
- Document Search, powered by Rust 🔥
- Support for most OCR providers with batched inference
- Google ✅
- Azure Document Intelligence 🔴
- Amazon Textract 🔴
- Tesseract 🔴
- Prompt Garden for common document analysis tasks zero-shot, including:
- Table Extraction
- Page Classification
- Segmentation
- Key-value extraction
Documents and large language models
- Documentation: https://docprompt.dev
- GitHub: https://github.com/Page-Leaf/docprompt
- PyPI: https://pypi.org/project/docprompt/
- Free software: Apache-2.0
- Representations for common document layout types -
TextBlock
,BoundingBox
, etc - Generic implementations of OCR providers
- Document Search powered by Rust and R-trees 🔥
Use the package manager pip to install Docprompt.
pip install docprompt
With an OCR provider
pip install "docprompt[google]
With search support
pip install "docprompt[search]"
from docprompt import load_document
# Load a document
document = load_document("path/to/my.pdf")
# Rasterize a single page using Ghostscript
page_number = 5
rastered = document.rasterize_page(page_number, dpi=120)
# Split a pdf based on a page range
document_2 = document.split(start=125, stop=130)
from docprompt import load_document, DocumentNode
from docprompt.tasks.ocr.gcp import GoogleOcrProvider
provider = GoogleOcrProvider.from_service_account_file(
project_id=my_project_id,
processor_id=my_processor_id,
service_account_file=path_to_service_file
)
document = load_document("path/to/my.pdf")
# A container holds derived data for a document, like OCR or classification results
document_node = DocumentNode.from_document(document)
provider.process_document_node(document_node) # Caches results on the document_node
document_node[0].ocr_result # Access OCR results
When a large language model returns a result, we might want to highlight that result for our users. However, language models return results as text, while what we need to show our users requires a page number and a bounding box.
After extracting text from a PDF, we can support this pattern using DocumentProvenanceLocator
, which lives on a DocumentNode
from docprompt import load_document, DocumentNode
from docprompt.tasks.ocr.gcp import GoogleOcrProvider
provider = GoogleOcrProvider.from_service_account_file(
project_id=my_project_id,
processor_id=my_processor_id,
service_account_file=path_to_service_file
)
document = load_document("path/to/my.pdf")
# A container holds derived data for a document, like OCR or classification results
document_node = DocumentNode.from_document(document)
provider.process_document_node(document_node) # Caches results on the document_node
# With OCR results available, we can now instantiate a locator and search through documents.
document_node.locator.search("John Doe") # This will return a list of all terms across the document that contain "John Doe"
document_node.locator.search("Jane Doe", page_number=4) # Just return results a list of matching results from page 4
This functionality uses a combination of rtree
and the Rust library tantivy
, allowing you to perform thousands of searches in seconds 🔥 🚀