It is not open source, but it supports Linux and the basic version is free: https://code-industry.net/masterpdfeditor/ Master PDF Editor is a great tool. I highly recommend it. It's actually the only non-open-source software I installed on my OS. The editors are very open to feedback. They also post detailed changelogs: https://code-industry.net/what-is-new-in-master-pdf-editor-4/ I know I sound like a fanboy here, but I've written some picky comments to the developers, and they responded immediately and improved each one for the next release. On top of it, the devs seemed like good people. I just wish there were a better command-line interface to it. It would be nice to automate certain edits, or to see underlying commands when I make GUI edits so that I could copy those and reuse them, or something like that. But I don't think there are plans for this wish.
Epá, que resposta de merda.
Sugeres procurar no Google, mas não te deste ao trabalho de procurar o que significa PDF (Portable Document Format).
E ao contrário do que afirmas, podes editar ficheiros PDF. Lá está, se procurasses no Google, eras capaz de encontrar aplicações como o Master PDF Editor.
E a parte final da tua resposta, é como quem diz: >Epá, eu não percebo um caralho disto, mas aqui fica um conselho.
I stopped working with xournal and started using Master PDF Editor. There's a free version that I think does what you're asking. I use the paid version and know it does what you're asking. I haven't had any problems even using Adobe Livecycle documents.
I haven't used adobe over feature, but there are many applications that can ocr scanned pdf. Paperwork, gImageReader, gscan2pdf but with limited edit features afaik.
Not open source but Master PDF Editor seems to have ocr and edit features.
https://code-industry.net/masterpdfeditor/
Master PDF is what I use,
the free version will leave a watermark for some functions but I find it works very well
This is sadly not a free option, and I don't know if it will really work:
https://kbpdfstudio.qoppa.com/signing-pdfs-with-cac-under-linux/
https://code-industry.net/masterpdfeditor/
Edit: You can look into this list as well, there may be something free that works: https://github.com/OpenSC/OpenSC/wiki/Using-smart-cards-with-applications#application-specific-document-signing
Try <strong>PDF Master Editor</strong> (free for non commercial use). Currently my personal choice when it comes to complex PDF editing. The price and the licensing terms are VERY attractive.
I don’t really know. I know that is a closed source pdf editor with both a free and a pay version. It is supposed to have advanced pdf editing features, like Acrobat Pro or whatever it’s called.
Try to see if ypu can find the features you need:
Not as far as I know. There are commercial closed source editors available that support signing, but I do not know any open source viewers that can add signatures.
https://code-industry.net/masterpdfeditor/ and https://www.qoppa.com/pdfstudio/
I have no idea about foxit, but the linux version has less features. Maybe you can get lucky with wine.
Master PDF Editor is mostly free. It's not open source, though. I think in the new version (version 5) there are watermarks, but if you download version 4 from somewhere, you don't have that issue.
Your best bet would be to use wine and use acrobat in Linux but I'm not sure how well it works. I think no FOSS pdf editor sophisticated enough exists to cover your needs. There are however two proprietary programs you should look into:
Am I not understanding the question?
https://code-industry.net/masterpdfeditor-help/transformation-matrix/
Learning the identity transformation as an "autoencoder" with an n*m*3 bottleneck layer isn't a terrible benchmark for optimization strategies IMO.
I don't see any reason you couldn't learn an MLP that does the same thing for a different form of linear operation through gradient descent.
Throwing Convolutions at these sorts of problems seems like overkill. Throwing a trillion parameters at CIFAR10 is going to have predictably bad results.
Master PDF Editor has OCR. I think it uses tesseract (at least on linux). The results are dependent on the quality of your source material.
If you are on linux, you can also use pdfsandwich, which ale does some preprocessing if necessary (like sanned books). Again, quality of OCR really depends on the quality of your source material.
May I suggest Master PDF Editor, I tried a bunch of pdf readers available for *nix/Linux, none of them could convince me, but this one.
The only thing, it's closed source.