![]() ![]() The enhancement did not remove the ability to create single-page files. You can achieve your goal of having individual single-page files by just specifying -split-pages without an option or by explicitly saying -split-pages=1. This is just a generalization of what I implemented the first time. The argument to -split-pages is the number of pages per file, and if not specified, it is 1. The reason that each file here contains 5 pages is because -split-pages=5 was given. Regarding my example that qpdf -split-pages=5 11-pages-in.pdf out.pdf would generate out-01-05.pdf, out-06-10.pdf, out-11-11.pdf, this is correct. This would generate out-01.pdf through out-38.pdf, each consisting of a single page in the order specified for the same reason is item 2. To do the same but only with pages 1-5, 11, 60, and 70-100, you would run qpdf in.pdf out.pdf -pages in.pdf 1-5,11,60,70-100 -split-pages. The result is what you would get if you did this in two separate commands. The files would be called out-001.pdf through out-146.pdf because qpdf does all the page selection first and the splitting at the end. To do the above but only on pages 5 through 150, you would run qpdf in.pdf out.pdf -pages in.pdf 5-150 -split-pages. This would generate files out-001.pdf through out-200.pdf, each containing a single page. To split a 200 page PDF into 200 individual one-page PDF files, you would run qpdf in.pdf out.pdf -split-pages. ![]() This is what documented in the manual ! Isn't it or I'm wrong ? Please correct to me.
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