Tilman, Thanks for the update. I thought that might be the answer, but wanted to ask in case I had missed seeing something.
I'll let you know how it turns out. Dave P On Tue, Oct 17, 2017 at 3:33 AM, Tilman Hausherr <[email protected]> wrote: > Hi, > There are classes for this but no examples. You're mostly on your own > there, i.e. read and understand the PDF specification and look for the > appropriate classes. The best would be that you create a PDF with WORD or > Excel that has the extras and then look with PDFDebugger what is needed. > Tilman > > > Am 16.10.2017 um 20:22 schrieb David Patterson: > >> I've done some research on my search. What I'm trying to find out is >> whether there is any code in PDFBox for dealing with content for >> "Assistive >> Technology". That kind of text is put into "tags" and used with a screen >> reader application. My hope was to be able to create a PDF that had the >> assistive content "cooked into the pdf" rather than have a "normal" PDF >> that had to go through an expensive, slow process of manually tagging the >> content with Adobe Acrobat Pro to insert the content. >> >> In the case of the documents I want to produce, they mimic spreadsheets >> with many cells that are "merged" (some are multiple grid positions wide >> or >> multiple grid positions tall). >> >> Is this capability something that pdfbox can help produce or not? >> >> Thanks. >> >> Dave Patterson >> >> > > --------------------------------------------------------------------- > To unsubscribe, e-mail: [email protected] > For additional commands, e-mail: [email protected] > >

