本文转自:http://pdfobject.com/index.php
When possible, use standardized HTML markup and avoid JavaScript
In an ideal world, you would always embed your PDF files using an <object> element hard-coded in your HTML markup. Why? For starters, avoiding JavaScript usually means greater accessibility, greater searchability (important for those concerned with search engine optimization), and fewer browser compatibility issues. Since no JavaScript is being used, standardized markup is also quicker to load and less of a drain on computer and network resources.
Click here to learn more about embedding PDFs using standardized HTML markup.
Sometimes you need a little JavaScript. When you do, try PDFObject.
Some projects will require dynamically embedded PDFs. PDFObject was designed for this purpose, and makes embedding PDFs quick and easy while maintaining a healthy respect for standards.
PDFObject uses JavaScript to generate the same standards-compliant <object> markup you would normally write yourself, then inserts the <object> into your HTML element of choice. You can fill the entire browser window, or insert the PDF into a <div> or other block-level element.
Here's a very simple no-frills example of PDFObject; this example will make the PDF fill the entire browser window:
<html>
<head>
<title>PDFObject example</title>
<script type="text/javascript" src="pdfobject.js"></script><script type="text/javascript">
window.onload = function (){
var success = new PDFObject({ url: "sample.pdf" }).embed();
};
</script> </head>
<body>
<p>It appears you don't have Adobe Reader or PDF support in this web
browser. <a href="sample.pdf">Click here to download the PDF</a></p>
</body>
</html>
Embedding a PDF can't get much easier! There are also many other embed options available; visit the code generator to see what's possible.
- Click here to read detailed instructions for using PDFObject.
- Click here to see examples of PDFObject in action.
Features
- Detection of PDF plugin or PDF file-handling support.
- Checks for Adobe Reader.
- Checks for generic support via the application/pdf mime type.
- Only attempts to embed PDF if support is detected.
- if PDF support is detected, the <object> is embedded with all specified parameters;
- if PDF support is not found, the <object> will not be embedded, and the fallback content is left as-is.
- Returns reference to the HTML <object> (similar to getElementById) or null.
- If no element ID is passed into the embed() call, PDFObject will default to document.body, filling the entire browser window.
- Accepts optional embed parameters, including size, id, and most PDF open parameters.
- Automatically appends extra CSS needed for full-window PDF embeds
- Removes padding and margins
- Fixes 100% height issue in some browsers
Compatibility
Please note this compatibility chart has not been updated to reflect PDFObject 1.2.
PDFObject is compatible with every major browser capable of displaying PDFs. Please note these results are from internal testing of PDFObject using Adobe Reader; no open-source PDF browser plugins were used during testing.
Windows XP (Professional) | Windows Vista (Business) | Mac OS X 10.5 (Leopard) | Ubuntu 8.04 (Hardy Heron) | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Internet Explorer 6 | X | not applicable | not applicable | not applicable |
Internet Explorer 7 | X | X | not applicable | not applicable |
Mozilla Firefox 3 | X | X | no Adobe Reader plugin | X |
Apple Safari 3.1 | X | X | X | not applicable |
Opera 9.5 | X | X | no Adobe Reader plugin | X |
not applicable: Specified browser is not produced for this operating system. no Adobe Reader plugin: Adobe Reader unavailable for this browser/OS combination.
Syntax
PDFObject's syntax will feel very familiar to users of JavaScript frameworks such as jQuery and MooTools. Here's a typical example:
var myPDF = new PDFObject({ url: "sample.pdf", id: "myPDF", "500px", height: "300px", pdfOpenParams: { navpanes: 1, statusbar: 0, view: "FitH", pagemode: "thumbs" } }).embed("mydiv");
Here's another example:
var myParams = { url: "sample.pdf", pdfOpenParams: { view: "FitV" } }; var myPDF = new PDFObject(myParams).embed("mydiv"); //returns reference to new HTML <object>
Note that embed is chained on to the new PDFObject statement. You can also use them separately:
var myParams = { url: "sample.pdf", pdfOpenParams: { view: "FitV" } }; var myPDF = new PDFObject(myParams); //returns reference to JavaScript object myPDF.embed("mydiv"); //returns reference to new HTML <object>
Properties and methods
PDFObject contains the following properties and methods.
Name | Type | Description |
---|---|---|
PDFObject(obj) | constructor |
Use an object for passing arguments. obj can contain the following arguments:
Returns reference to self (this). |
PDFObject.embed(targetID) | method | Embeds PDF. Returns HTML <object> element or false if embed not successful. |
PDFObject.get(prop) | method |
Returns value of property. If property is not found or has no value, returns null. Available properties:
|
pipwerks.pdfUTILS.detect.hasReader() | support function | Returns boolean indicating whether navigator.plugins version of Adobe Reader has been found. |
pipwerks.pdfUTILS.detect.hasReaderActiveX() | support function | Returns boolean indicating whether ActiveX version of Adobe Reader has been found. |
pipwerks.pdfUTILS.detect.hasGeneric() | support function | Returns boolean indicating whether application/pdf mime type is supported via navigator.mimeTypes |
pipwerks.pdfUTILS.detect.pluginFound() | support function | Returns string "Adobe" or "generic". Returns null if none found. |
pipwerks.pdfUTILS.setCssForFullWindowPdf() | support function | sets the following style properties: html.style.height = "100%"; html.style.overflow = "hidden"; body.style.margin = 0; body.style.padding = 0; body.style.height = "100%"; body.style.overflow = "hidden"; These properties need to be set in order to remove margins/padding in the document, and to enable the object to stretch to 100% vertically. |
pipwerks.pdfUTILS.buildQueryString(pdfOpenParams) | support function | Takes properties of pdfOpenParams object and 'stringifies' them. |
pipwerks.pdfUTILS.termFound(strToSearch, term) | support function | Returns boolean shortcut for strToSearch.indexOf("term") !== -1 |
Known issues
PDFObject has no known issues at this time. The biggest issue you may face is browser support for Adobe Reader and/or funky behavior in Reader. This is beyond the scope of this simple embed script. Shortcomings encountered with Reader during testing included:
- Crashes/hanging when trying to replace an embedded PDF with a second PDF (by replacing the first <object> element with a new <object>).
- Crashes/hanging when attempting to embed more than one PDF on a single HTML page (FYI this behavior can be avoided by using iframes).
Important note: PDFObject does NOT include version detection
PDFObject does not allow you to target a specific version of Adobe Reader, such as version 7 and higher. While version detection is possible, it is a very cumbersome task and nearly impossible to maintain or make future-proof, largely due to Adobe frequently changing the plugin's name and description. For instance, in Safari, Adobe Reader 8.1's name is reported as "Adobe Acrobat and Reader Plug-in," while the name in the Windows version of Firefox is "Adobe PDF Plug-In For Firefox and Netscape." Until version reporting is consistent in Adobe Reader (across browsers and operating systems), PDFObject will not include version detection.
Tip of the cap
PDFObject was built using information, code, tools, or inspiration provided by others, including (in no particular order):
- SWFObject (Geoff Stearns and Bobby van der Sluis)
- Douglas Crockford's JSLint
- The JavaScript Compressor
- Documentation provided by Adobe at adobe.com
- Detecting plugins in Internet Explorer (and a few hints for all the others)
- http://www.howtocreate.co.uk/wrongWithIE/?chapter=navigator.plugins (Mark Wilton-Jones)
- Determining Adobe Acrobat PDF Reader Plugin Support Using JavaScript
Thanks, guys!