SYNOPSIS

tesseract imagename textbase [configfile] [-l lang]

DESCRIPTION

tesseract(1) is a commercial quality OCR engine originally developed at HP between 1985 and 1995. In 1995, this engine was among the top 3 evaluated by UNLV. It was open-sourced by HP and UNLV in 2005, and has been developed by Google since then.

OPTIONS

imagename The name of the input image

textbase The basename of the output file (to which the appropriate extension will be appended)

configfile The config to use. A config is a plaintext file which contains a list of variables and their values, one per line, with a space separating variable from value.

-l lang The language to use. If none is specified, English is assumed. Tesseract uses 3-character ISO 639-2 language codes. (See LANGUAGES)

-v Returns the current version of the tesseract(1) executable.

LANGUAGES

There are currently language packs available for the following languages:

bul

Bulgarian

cat

Catalan

ces

Czech

chi_sim

Simplified Chinese

chi_tra

Traditional Chinese

dan

Danish

dan-frak

Danish (Fraktur)

deu

German

ell

Greek

eng

English

fin

Finnish

fra

French

hun

Hungarian

ind

Indonesian

ita

Italian

jpn

Japanese

kor

Korean

lav

Latvian

lit

Lithuanian

nld

Dutch

nor

Norwegian

pol

Polish

por

Portuguese

ron

Romanian

rus

Russian

slk

Slovakian

slv

Slovenian

spa

Spanish

srp

Serbian

swe

Swedish

tgl

Tagalog

tha

Thai

tur

Turkish

ukr

Ukrainian

vie

Vietnamese

HISTORY

The engine was developed at Hewlett Packard Laboratories Bristol and at Hewlett Packard Co, Greeley Colorado between 1985 and 1994, with some more changes made in 1996 to port to Windows, and some C++izing in 1998. A lot of the code was written in C, and then some more was written in C++. Since then all the code has been converted to at least compile with a C++ compiler. Currently it builds under Linux with gcc4.0, gcc4.1 and under Windows with VC++6 and VC++Express. The C++ code makes heavy use of a list system using macros. This predates stl, was portable before stl, and is more efficient than stl lists, but has the big negative that if you do get a segmentation violation, it is hard to debug. Another "feature" of the C/C++ split is that the C++ data structures get converted to C data structures to call the low-level C code. This is ugly, and the C++izing of the C code is a step towards eliminating the conversion, but it has not happened yet.

The most important changes in version 2.00 were that Tesseract can now recognize 6 languages, is fully UTF8 capable, and is fully trainable. See http://code.google.com/p/tesseract-ocr/wiki/TrainingTesseract for more information on training.

Tesseract was included in UNLV’s Fourth Annual Test of OCR Accuracy. See http://www.isri.unlv.edu/downloads/AT-1995.pdf. With Tesseract 2.00, scripts are now included to allow anyone to reproduce some of these tests. See http://code.google.com/p/tesseract-ocr/wiki/TestingTesseract for more details.

Tesseract 3.00 adds a number of new languages, including Chinese, Japanese, and Korean. It also introduces a new, single-file based system of managing language data. For further details, see the file ReleaseNotes included with the distribution.

SEE ALSO

tesseract(1)

COPYING

Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0