![]() ![]() To re-compress the expanded.pdf again after editing, you can run: qpdf expanded.pdf orig2.pdf ![]() (There may still be some binary blobs in there: for example, font files and ICC profiles, which wouldn't make sense for QPDF to expand). Now you can open your PDF in any text editor. The following command de-compresses all streams and all object streams: qpdf -qdf -object-streams=disable orig.pdf expanded.pdf My favorite tool for this is QPDF, available on all major OS platforms. Regarding your 1st question ("viewing source code, but no binary"): there are a few options which you have in order to de-compress the internal binary streams which are attached to many objects. ![]()
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