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images.md

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Images in PDFKit

Adding images to PDFKit documents is an easy task. Just pass an image path, buffer, or data uri with base64 encoded data to the image method along with some optional arguments. PDFKit supports the JPEG and PNG formats. If an X and Y position are not provided, the image is rendered at the current point in the text flow (below the last line of text). Otherwise, it is positioned absolutely at the specified point. The image will be scaled according to the following options.

  • Neither width or height provided - image is rendered at full size
  • width provided but not height - image is scaled proportionally to fit in the provided width
  • height provided but not width - image is scaled proportionally to fit in the provided height
  • Both width and height provided - image is stretched to the dimensions provided
  • scale factor provided - image is scaled proportionally by the provided scale factor
  • fit array provided - image is scaled proportionally to fit within the passed width and height
  • cover array provided - image is scaled proportionally to completely cover the rectangle defined by the passed width and height
  • link - a URL to link this image to (shortcut to create an annotation)
  • goTo - go to anchor (shortcut to create an annotation)
  • destination - create anchor to this image
  • ignoreOrientation - (true/false) ignore JPEG EXIF orientation. By default, images with JPEG EXIF orientation are properly rotated and/or flipped. Defaults to false, unless ignoreOrientation option set to true when creating the PDFDocument object (e.g. new PDFDocument({ignoreOrientation: true}))

When a fit or cover array is provided, PDFKit accepts these additional options:

  • align - horizontally align the image, the possible values are 'left', 'center' and 'right'
  • valign - vertically align the image, the possible values are 'top', 'center' and 'bottom'

Here is an example showing some of these options.

// Scale proprotionally to the specified width
doc.image('images/test.jpeg', 0, 15, {width: 300})
   .text('Proportional to width', 0, 0);

// Fit the image within the dimensions
doc.image('images/test.jpeg', 320, 15, {fit: [100, 100]})
   .rect(320, 15, 100, 100)
   .stroke()
   .text('Fit', 320, 0);

// Stretch the image
doc.image('images/test.jpeg', 320, 145, {width: 200, height: 100})
   .text('Stretch', 320, 130);

// Scale the image
doc.image('images/test.jpeg', 320, 280, {scale: 0.25})
   .text('Scale', 320, 265);

// Fit the image in the dimensions, and center it both horizontally and vertically
doc.image('images/test.jpeg', 430, 15, {fit: [100, 100], align: 'center', valign: 'center'})
   .rect(430, 15, 100, 100).stroke()
   .text('Centered', 430, 0);

This example produces the following output:

0

That is all there is to adding images to your PDF documents with PDFKit. Now let's look at adding outlines.