PyMuPDF4LLM is a library designed to convert PDFs into Markdown format. Here, I’ll share my experience testing this library.
Start by installing the library using the following command:
pip install pymupdf4llm
The basic usage is quite simple, requiring just three lines of code to convert a PDF to Markdown:
import pymupdf4llm md_text = pymupdf4llm.to_markdown("input.pdf") print(md_text)
You can specify arguments to adjust how content is extracted.
By default, the entire PDF is converted into a single text output. However, you can extract text page by page by specifying page_chunks=True.
md_text = pymupdf4llm.to_markdown("input.pdf", page_chunks=True)
To extract images as files, use the write_images=True option:
md_text = pymupdf4llm.to_markdown("input.pdf", write_images=True)
It’s also possible to embed images directly in the Markdown using base64 encoding:
md_text = pymupdf4llm.to_markdown("input.pdf", embed_images=True)
For testing, various PDFs with different Markdown elements were used.
Headers are correctly converted into Markdown format. Here is a portion of the result:
# Sample Markdown Guide This is a sample markdown file that includes various features for quick reference. ## 1. Headers ... ## 3. Lists
Bold and italic formatting is also properly converted:
**Bold: **Bold Text**** _Italic: *Italic Text*_ **_Bold and Italic: ***Bold and Italic***_**
Ordered lists at the first level are converted without issues, but nested lists and unordered lists are not accurately converted.
## 3. Lists ### Unordered List Item 1 Item 2 Sub-item 1 Sub-item 2 ### Ordered List 1. First item 2. Second item 1. Sub-item A 2. Sub-item B
The URLs of links are extracted, but the entire line containing the link becomes a hyperlink, deviating from the original format.
## 4. Links and Images [You can add links using [Link Text](URL).](https://www.example.com/)
Images are not extracted by default but can be saved locally with write_images=True.
md_text = pymupdf4llm.to_markdown("input.pdf", write_images=True)
The saved images are then referenced in the Markdown as follows:
<p>### Image Example</p> <p>![](input.pdf-1-0.png)</p>
Simple tables without vertical borders are not accurately converted (likely because ambiguous column boundaries result in tables being treated as plain text).
<p>## 5. Tables</p> <p>**Column 1** **Column 2** **Column 3**</p> <p>Row 1 Data A Data B</p> <p>Row 2 Data C Data D</p>
Code blocks are correctly converted, but language specification (e.g., python) is not retained. Inline code conversion also has issues.
<p>## 6. Code</p> <p>### Inline Code</p> <p>Use backticks for inline code: print("Hello, world!")</p> <p>### Code Block</p> <p>Use triple backticks for code blocks:</p> <p>```<br> def greet(name):<br> return f"Hello, {name}!"<br> print(greet("Markdown"))<br> ```</p>
For multi-line text, the line breaks are preserved as they appear in the original PDF.
<p>Markdown is a lightweight and versatile markup language favored by developers, writers, and bloggers alike</p> <p>due to its simplicity in formatting text, enabling users to create readable and well-structured documents—</p> <p>whether for documentation, blog posts, or articles—without the complexity of HTML, while also offering the</p> <p>ability to convert content seamlessly into other formats like HTML, PDF, and even slideshows, making it an</p> <p>ideal choice for projects that require both clarity and flexibility in presentation.</p>
Despite challenges in accurately converting lists and links, PyMuPDF4LLM is a useful tool for converting PDFs to Markdown. It can work locally without the need for external language models, making it suitable for environments where internet access is unavailable.
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