Gabriel:


I have used Readiris, although for smaller texts for classroom.
It is rather powerful and that means it has a lot of commands at your disposal 
– some I never used.

 

Mark

 

From: [email protected] 
<[email protected]> On Behalf Of Gabriel 
Ellsworth
Sent: Saturday, February 21, 2026 3:35 AM
To: Lilypond-User Mailing List <[email protected]>
Subject: OCR to Transcribe Text PDF in LaTeX

 

Here is my situation.

1.      I am trying to typeset a new edition of a public-domain book.
2.      I have a PDF that contains a scanned copy of a 20th century printing of 
this book (about 700 pages).
3.      My output will contain a bit of LilyPond output, but music notation 
will not be “the main actor” (to borrow Lucas’s very apt phrase below). I 
estimate that the book will be 97% text and 3% LilyPond.
4.      Based on past helpful input from this list, I suspect that LaTeX will 
be the best way to create this book.
5.      I have never used LaTeX before.
6.      I know almost nothing about how OCR software or AI works on the back 
end.

My question:

Is there a good program or site out there that can take my existing PDF, “read” 
it, and help me transcribe it in (convert it to) LaTeX code?

 

The “3% music” portion of my output will be easy for me to code myself in 
LilyPond. But I’m hoping to save several hours of work coding the “97% text” 
component of this 700-page book.

 

Gabriel

 

 

---------- Forwarded message ---------
From: Lucas Pinke
Date: Tue, 20 Jan 2026
Subject: Re: Wrapping Lengthy Text around a Score-as-Markup
Cc: Lilypond-User Mailing List <[email protected] 
<mailto:[email protected]> >

 

I strongly recommend trying out lylua! As you can import Lilypond files 
straight to the processor, you only headbutt the TeX processor and the TeX 
language.

 

Like I said, TeX and lylua work best when notation ain't the main actor: 
Cherubini's treaty could be written without any notation and still would be 
somewhat understandable. It isn't in this, but that's the beauty of things: 
diverse alternatives.

 

As per Kieren's question, I'm using Urs Liska's lyluatex package (available in 
CTAN). I don't know of another Lilypond code integration in TeX; other options 
would be importing the output images or using specific environments of the TeX 
language. Side note: unfortunately, I didn't get to know Urs before his 
passing... However, I always cite him with regards to TeX and serialist music!

 

My programming knowledge is limited, but I've managed to like and understand 
TeX and the lylua integration. I'd said lylua works best than LibreOffice's 
oOOOoLilypond plugin (which is still a great plugin!).

 

Em ter., 20 de jan. de 2026, 16:36, Gabriel Ellsworth escreveu:

I think Gabriel wants to stay in native Lilypond for the moment — @Gabriel: 
Correct me if I’m wrong! — but @Gabriel: Ultimately, something like LuaLaTeX 
is, I believe, something you’ll want to eventually have as your platform.

 

Thank you, Raphael and Lucas!

 

I have never used a TeX processor but am intrigued to learn more. For my 
current project, native LilyPond is working just fine. And at present I am 
intimidated by TeX — as I was by LilyPond for years until I discovered 
Frescobaldi!

 

But at some point I imagine that it will be worth it for me to learn LuaTeX.

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