Reputation: 1293
Is there a reasonable way to extract plain text from a Word file that doesn't depend on COM automation? (This is a a feature for a web app deployed on a non-Windows platform - that's non-negotiable in this case.)
Antiword seems like it might be a reasonable option, but it seems like it might be abandoned.
A Python solution would be ideal, but doesn't appear to be available.
Upvotes: 25
Views: 80293
Reputation: 46
Like Etienne's answer.
With python 3.9 getiterator
was deprecated in ET, so you need to replace it with iter
:
def get_docx_text(path):
"""
Take the path of a docx file as argument, return the text in unicode.
"""
document = zipfile.ZipFile(path)
xml_content = document.read('word/document.xml')
document.close()
tree = XML(xml_content)
paragraphs = []
for paragraph in tree.iter(PARA):
texts = [node.text
for node in paragraph.iter(TEXT)
if node.text]
if texts:
paragraphs.append(''.join(texts))
return '\n\n'.join(paragraphs)
Upvotes: 0
Reputation: 6979
There is also pandoc the swiss-army-knife of documents. It converts from every format to nearly every other format. From the demos page
pandoc -s input_file.docx -o output_file.txt
Upvotes: 0
Reputation: 1
Textract-Plus
Use textract-plus which can extract text from most of the document extensions including doc , docm , dotx and docx. (It uses antiword as a backend for doc files) refer docs
Install-
pip install textract-plus
Sample-
import textractplus as tp
text=tp.process('path/to/yourfile.doc')
Upvotes: 0
Reputation: 123048
(Same answer as extracting text from MS word files in python)
Use the native Python docx module which I made this week. Here's how to extract all the text from a doc:
document = opendocx('Hello world.docx')
# This location is where most document content lives
docbody = document.xpath('/w:document/w:body', namespaces=wordnamespaces)[0]
# Extract all text
print getdocumenttext(document)
See Python DocX site
100% Python, no COM, no .net, no Java, no parsing serialized XML with regexs.
Upvotes: 21
Reputation: 25
Just in case if someone wants to do in Java language there is Apache poi api. extractor.getText() will extract plane text from docx . Here is the link https://www.tutorialspoint.com/apache_poi_word/apache_poi_word_text_extraction.htm
Upvotes: 0
Reputation: 934
Honestly don't use "pip install tika", this has been developed for mono-user (one developper working on his laptop) and not for multi-users (multi-developpers).
The small class TikaWrapper.py bellow which uses Tika in command line is widely enough to meet our needs.
You just have to instanciate this class with JAVA_HOME path and the Tika jar path, that's all ! And it works perfectly for lot of formats (e.g: PDF, DOCX, ODT, XLSX, PPT, etc.).
#!/bin/python
# -*- coding: utf-8 -*-
# Class to extract metadata and text from different file types (such as PPT, XLS, and PDF)
# Developed by Philippe ROSSIGNOL
#####################
# TikaWrapper class #
#####################
class TikaWrapper:
java_home = None
tikalib_path = None
# Constructor
def __init__(self, java_home, tikalib_path):
self.java_home = java_home
self.tika_lib_path = tikalib_path
def extractMetadata(self, filePath, encoding="UTF-8", returnTuple=False):
'''
- Description:
Extract metadata from a document
- Params:
filePath: The document file path
encoding: The encoding (default = "UTF-8")
returnTuple: If True return a tuple which contains both the output and the error (default = False)
- Examples:
metadata = extractMetadata(filePath="MyDocument.docx")
metadata, error = extractMetadata(filePath="MyDocument.docx", encoding="UTF-8", returnTuple=True)
'''
cmd = self._getCmd(self._cmdExtractMetadata, filePath, encoding)
out, err = self._execute(cmd, encoding)
if (returnTuple): return out, err
return out
def extractText(self, filePath, encoding="UTF-8", returnTuple=False):
'''
- Description:
Extract text from a document
- Params:
filePath: The document file path
encoding: The encoding (default = "UTF-8")
returnTuple: If True return a tuple which contains both the output and the error (default = False)
- Examples:
text = extractText(filePath="MyDocument.docx")
text, error = extractText(filePath="MyDocument.docx", encoding="UTF-8", returnTuple=True)
'''
cmd = self._getCmd(self._cmdExtractText, filePath, encoding)
out, err = self._execute(cmd, encoding)
return out, err
# ===========
# = PRIVATE =
# ===========
_cmdExtractMetadata = "${JAVA_HOME}/bin/java -jar ${TIKALIB_PATH} --metadata ${FILE_PATH}"
_cmdExtractText = "${JAVA_HOME}/bin/java -jar ${TIKALIB_PATH} --encoding=${ENCODING} --text ${FILE_PATH}"
def _getCmd(self, cmdModel, filePath, encoding):
cmd = cmdModel.replace("${JAVA_HOME}", self.java_home)
cmd = cmd.replace("${TIKALIB_PATH}", self.tika_lib_path)
cmd = cmd.replace("${ENCODING}", encoding)
cmd = cmd.replace("${FILE_PATH}", filePath)
return cmd
def _execute(self, cmd, encoding):
import subprocess
process = subprocess.Popen(cmd, shell=True, stdout=subprocess.PIPE, stderr=subprocess.PIPE)
out, err = process.communicate()
out = out.decode(encoding=encoding)
err = err.decode(encoding=encoding)
return out, err
Upvotes: 0
Reputation: 101
tika-python
A Python port of the Apache Tika library, According to the documentation Apache tika supports text extraction from over 1500 file formats.
Note: It also works charmingly with pyinstaller
Install with pip :
pip install tika
Sample:
#!/usr/bin/env python
from tika import parser
parsed = parser.from_file('/path/to/file')
print(parsed["metadata"]) #To get the meta data of the file
print(parsed["content"]) # To get the content of the file
Link to official GitHub
Upvotes: 2
Reputation: 1384
This worked well for .doc and .odt.
It calls openoffice on the command line to convert your file to text, which you can then simply load into python.
(It seems to have other format options, though they are not apparenlty documented.)
Upvotes: 1
Reputation: 12580
If all you want to do is extracting text from Word files (.docx), it's possible to do it only with Python. Like Guy Starbuck wrote it, you just need to unzip the file and then parse the XML. Inspired by python-docx
, I have written a simple function to do this:
try:
from xml.etree.cElementTree import XML
except ImportError:
from xml.etree.ElementTree import XML
import zipfile
"""
Module that extract text from MS XML Word document (.docx).
(Inspired by python-docx <https://github.com/mikemaccana/python-docx>)
"""
WORD_NAMESPACE = '{http://schemas.openxmlformats.org/wordprocessingml/2006/main}'
PARA = WORD_NAMESPACE + 'p'
TEXT = WORD_NAMESPACE + 't'
def get_docx_text(path):
"""
Take the path of a docx file as argument, return the text in unicode.
"""
document = zipfile.ZipFile(path)
xml_content = document.read('word/document.xml')
document.close()
tree = XML(xml_content)
paragraphs = []
for paragraph in tree.getiterator(PARA):
texts = [node.text
for node in paragraph.getiterator(TEXT)
if node.text]
if texts:
paragraphs.append(''.join(texts))
return '\n\n'.join(paragraphs)
Upvotes: 4
Reputation:
For docx files, check out the Python script docx2txt available at
http://cobweb.ecn.purdue.edu/~kak/distMisc/docx2txt
for extracting the plain text from a docx document.
Upvotes: 1
Reputation: 100756
I use catdoc or antiword for this, whatever gives the result that is the easiest to parse. I have embedded this in python functions, so it is easy to use from the parsing system (which is written in python).
import os
def doc_to_text_catdoc(filename):
(fi, fo, fe) = os.popen3('catdoc -w "%s"' % filename)
fi.close()
retval = fo.read()
erroroutput = fe.read()
fo.close()
fe.close()
if not erroroutput:
return retval
else:
raise OSError("Executing the command caused an error: %s" % erroroutput)
# similar doc_to_text_antiword()
The -w switch to catdoc turns off line wrapping, BTW.
Upvotes: 16
Reputation: 2615
Using the OpenOffice API, and Python, and Andrew Pitonyak's excellent online macro book I managed to do this. Section 7.16.4 is the place to start.
One other tip to make it work without needing the screen at all is to use the Hidden property:
RO = PropertyValue('ReadOnly', 0, True, 0)
Hidden = PropertyValue('Hidden', 0, True, 0)
xDoc = desktop.loadComponentFromURL( docpath,"_blank", 0, (RO, Hidden,) )
Otherwise the document flicks up on the screen (probably on the webserver console) when you open it.
Upvotes: 3