Weasy Print
Weasyprint is a python library, for creating PDF documents from HTML + CSS documents.
It supports CSS 2.1 Specification, including the Paged media properties, making one the best tools around to produce PDF documents from HTML + CCS.
Documentation
https://weasyprint.readthedocs.io
Installing weasyprint
Follow the installation instructions in https://weasyprint.readthedocs.io/en/stable/install.html
After installing Weasyprint dependencies, for your operating system
Install Weasyprint using Python package installed: pip
pip install Weasyprint --user
or
pip3 install WeasyPrint
Testing Weasy Print
At the first glance Weasy Print sounds promising, so why not try to see how well does it performs conversions from HTML to PDF?
The following PDF results from the conversion of the Beyond Social's article Eiland van Brienenoord onto a PDF using Weasy Print.
The CSS style-sheet that gave origin the PDF is located at the end of this page
Running
The standalone command weasyprint
can produce a PDF, simply with the instructions:
weasyprint EilandvanBrienenoord.html -s style.css ouput.pdf
Where:
EilandvanBrienenoord.html
- is the souce HTML file (could also be a URL)-s
- is the option for a CSS stylesheetouput.pdf
- the resulting PDF
@page
@page CSS rule that determines orientation and page size is successfully rendered in the PDF.
@page {
size: A5 portrait;
}
@page left @page right
Option for the left and right pages, such as the margin sizes, which have to alternate in order to produce a bound work, are correctly rendered.
@page:right {
margin-left: 3cm; /*inner margin*/
margin-right:1cm; /*outer margin*/
}
@page:left {
margin-right: 3cm; /*inner margin*/
margin-left:1cm; /*outer margin*/
}
@bottom
Weasy-print also applies consistently @bottom
rules, including page counting.
@bottom-right {
margin: 10pt 0 30pt 0;
border-top: .25pt solid #FF05F6;
content: "Testing WeasyPrint";
font-size: 6pt;
color: #00FFF2;
}
@bottom-center {
margin: 10pt 0 30pt 0;
content: counter(page);
font-size: 6pt;
}
CSS Custom Fonts
Weasy Print does not support CSS's (@font-face
) rule.
Yet it can use fonts available in your system.
On Linux `fc-list` will give you a list of fonts installed in your system
Imposition
There is no mechanism to performs page impositions.
However, it is possible to perform imposition over the Weasy Print-generated PDF with software such as BookletImposer, jPDF Tweak, pdftool, or PDFtk.
More is needed
These tests and prototypes are far from exhaustive.
It is still unclear whether Weasy Print, CSS and HTML can produce quality PDFs, ready to be sent to a printer in order to produce paper-bound publication. Yet the results seem promising.
More experimentation, prototypes, and feedback is needed in order to make a informed critique.
And contributions to Weasy Print, can only help.
CSS style-sheet
@page {
size: A5 portrait;
}
@page:right {
margin-left: 3cm; /*inner*/
margin-right:1cm; /*outer*/
@bottom-right {
margin: 10pt 0 30pt 0;
border-top: .25pt solid #FF05F6;
content: "Testing WeasyPrint";
font-size: 6pt;
color: #00FFF2;
}
@bottom-center {
margin: 10pt 0 30pt 0;
content: counter(page);
font-size: 6pt;
}
}
@page:left {
margin-right: 3cm; /*inner*/
margin-left:1cm; /*outer*/
@bottom-left {
margin: 10pt 0 30pt 0;
border-top: .25pt solid #00FFF2;
content: "Testing WeasyPrint";
font-size: 6pt;
color: #FF05F6;
}
@bottom-center {
margin: 10pt 0 30pt 0;
content: counter(page);
font-size: 6pt;
}
}
@page:first {
@bottom-center { content: ""; }
@bottom-right { content: ""; }
}
body{
font-size:8pt;
font-family: sans;
padding: 0.5cm;
}
a, a:visited, a:hover {color:#00FFF2;}
hr { color:#00FFF2;
border:solid 1px #00FFF2;
}
div.title-beyond h1 {font-size:4em;
margin-top:-40px;
} /*title*/
h1,h2,h3,h4,h5 {color:#FF05F6; }
figure {
margin-left:0px;
padding-top:0.5cm;
}
img{ width: 6cm; }
figcaption { font-size:0.8em;
width:6cm;
}
tutorials & posts on Weasy Print
http://diethardsteiner.github.io/reporting/2015/02/17/CSS-for-print.html