Adobe PDF Library SDK
Global OEMs, SaaS and enterprise end-users rely on Adobe PDF Library to automate the creation, editing and management of PDFs. An Adobe partner, our SDK uses the same source code as Acrobat for stability, reliability and quality results.
Languages: .NET, .NET Framework, Java and C/C++
Platforms: Windows, Linux & MacOS
Package managers: NuGet & Maven
Capabilities include but are not limited to:
-Annotations
-Content creation
-Content modification
-Color management
-Extraction - text, images, forms
-Compression/optimize
-Conversion - PDF/A, PDF/X, EPS, PostScript, XPS, ZUGFeRD, color
-Display, Printing
-Extract text, images & other content
-Forms - Import, export, flatten static & dynamic XFA forms, AcroForms
-Images - extract, import/export, thumbnails, render/rasterize pages, separations
-Optimization - size, content, images, etc.
-OCR - add text to document, add text to image
-PDF to Office Documents (Word, Excel, PPT)
-Security - Viewer settings, redactions, password, encrypt/decryption, watermark
Pricing options for OEMs, SaaS & end-users are flexible and based on usage.
Shorten development times & get to market faster with Adobe PDF Library. Free trial - download today.
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QVscribe
QRA’s tools streamline engineering artifact generation, evaluation, and prediction, refocusing engineers from tedious work to critical path development.
Our solutions automate the creation of risk-free project artifacts for high-stakes engineering.
Engineers often spend excessive time on the mundane task of refining requirements, with quality metrics varying across industries. QVscribe, QRA's flagship product, streamlines this by automatically consolidating these metrics and applying them to your documentation, identifying risks, errors, and ambiguities. This efficiency allows engineers to focus on more complex challenges.
To further simplify requirement authoring, QRA introduced a pioneering five-point scoring system that instills confidence in engineers. A perfect score confirms accurate structure and phrasing, while lower scores prompt corrective guidance. This feature not only refines current requirements but also reduces common errors and enhances authoring skills over time.
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BASIC
BASIC, which stands for Beginners' All-purpose Symbolic Instruction Code, represents a collection of high-level programming languages that prioritize user-friendliness. In its early days, BASIC primarily focused on facilitating simple mathematical computations, initially incorporating batch processing for matrix arithmetic and later expanding to include character string capabilities by 1965. The introduction of BASIC was a key part of the broader transition to time-sharing computing systems. Certain variants of BASIC featured support for matrices and related operations, enabling users to tackle systems of simultaneous linear equations effectively. These variants allowed for various matrix operations, including assignment, addition, multiplication (for compatible types), and determinant evaluation. However, as the 1990s approached, BASIC's popularity waned due to the emergence of more powerful microcomputers and the rising adoption of programming languages like Pascal and C, which offered more sophisticated features suitable for modern computing demands. Consequently, the shift towards these advanced languages marked a significant turning point in the programming landscape during that era.
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APL
APL is a programming language focused on arrays that can transform your perspective on problem-solving and data manipulation. Its expressive and succinct syntax empowers you to write more compact code, allowing you to concentrate more on the issues at hand rather than the intricacies of coding them for a machine. This focus on abstraction fosters a deeper understanding of the underlying concepts.
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