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  2. How to convert PDF to image? - Ask Ubuntu

    askubuntu.com/questions/50170

    To get a single page from gm convert, add [N] (with N the page number starting at 0) to the PDF name, ie gm convert foo.pdf[11] out.png to get the 12th page from the PDF. For pdftoppm use -f N -singlefile, where N is the page number starting at 1, ie pdftoppm -f 12 -singlefile foo.pdf out for the same result. It appears to always add ".png" to ...

  3. 0. It seems that the easiest way is using Acrobat Pro. Open the PDf in Acrobat Pro. Once the file is opened, go to File → Export → Image → JPEG, it will export each page as a single JPG. Place all the JPGs in a folder. Zip the folder. Manually change the extension at the end of the zipped file from .zip to .cbz.

  4. 7. In order to skip outputting all the pages to respective JPGs, one must -append in the statement. My final, working statement is. convert -density 300 -append source.pdf output.jpg. Share. Improve this answer. answered Dec 14, 2017 at 16:50. unknown6708. 121 1 5.

  5. conversion - Convert PDF to image - Ask Ubuntu

    askubuntu.com/questions/100994

    When converting to jpg, you can use the -quality option. The "best" quality would be -quality 100. There is a much simpler way to split multipage pdfs into a jpg: convert -quality 100 -density 600x600 multipage.pdf single%d.jpg. The -density option defines the quality the pdf is rendered before the convert > here 600dpi.

  6. So as an alternative you can run the following commands in a terminal while being in the folder where the jpg files are. ls *.jpg | xargs -I% img2pdf -o %.pdf %. This converts each image to a single page pdf, one by one, without overloading the system. Then: pdfunite *.pdf output.pdf && rm *.jpg.pdf.

  7. convert jpg to pdf - Ask Ubuntu

    askubuntu.com/questions/1200965/convert-jpg-to-pdf

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  8. I know that the command convert *.jpg myPdf1.pdf can convert multiple JPEG files into a single PDF. But I would like to convert multiple JPEGs into multiple PDFs, for example: myJPG1.jpg → myPDF1.pdf myJPG2.jpg → myPDF2.pdf myJPG3.jpg → myPDF3.pdf Is there any decent way to manage something like that?

  9. Stack Exchange Network. Stack Exchange network consists of 183 Q&A communities including Stack Overflow, the largest, most trusted online community for developers to learn, share their knowledge, and build their careers.

  10. 3. Use print assistant from Gwenview (KDE image viewer). Open Gwenview, then Plugins -> Images -> Print assistant. Add all the images that you want to print, reorder them as you like, choose number of images per page, other print options, etc. and print to PDF directly or with CUPS-PDF.

  11. sudo apt install imagemagick. then you can do: convert image1.jpg image2.png text.txt PDFfile.pdf outputFileName.pdf. or as another example: convert *.jpg outputJpgFiles.pdf. It worked for me, but the problem is it converts the text.txt file into an image, so you can't highlight the text in the resulting pdf. Share.