remarks
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Extract annotations (highlights and scribbles) from PDF, EPUB, and notebooks marked with reMarkable tablets. Export to Markdown, PDF, PNG, SVG
remarks
Extract your marks (highlights, scribbles, annotations) and convert them to Markdown, PDF, PNG, and SVG.
remarks works with PDFs annotated on reMarkable™ paper tablets, both 1st and 2nd generation.
Please note that remarks is still highly experimental software. In any case, pull requests are warmly welcome!
Some use cases
-
In: PDF highlighted on reMarkable → Out: PDF with parseable highlights
Someone who highlights lots of PDFs (e.g., researchers, academics, etc) can export their highlights for processing with a reference management tool, like Zotero [#2]. -
Extract highlighted text from PDF to Markdown
Infovores of the world can export highlighted text to Markdown and insert them into their preferred "tool for networked thought", like Obsidian or Roam Research. -
Export annotated PDF pages to full-page images
Sometimes having just the textual content is not enough, sometimes you need the actual (visual) context around your annotation. To help you in such situations,remarkscan export each annotated PDF page to a PNG image file. Images can be easily uploaded or embedded anywhere, from personal websites to "tools for networked thought".
A visual example
Highlight and annotate PDFs with your Marker on your reMarkable tablet:
And then use remarks to export annotated pages to Markdown, PDF, PNG, or SVG on your computer.
PDF:
- The
--targets pdfflag outputs a directory with single-pagePDFfiles for each annotated page. - The
--combined_pdfflag outputs an all-in-onePDFfile (the originalPDFwith all annotated pages). - The
--modified_pdfflag outputs anPDFfile with just the annotated pages.
PNG:
Markdown:
WHAT IS LIFE?
Based on lectures delivered under the auspices of the Dublin Institute for Advanced Studies at Trinity College, Dublin, in February 1943
To the memory of My Parents
SVG:
- Please note that the
SVGimage file includes only the annotations, not the original PDF content.
Compatibility and dependencies
Because remarks depends only on PyMuPDF and Shapely, there is no need to install imagemagick, opencv, or any additional image library. Both PyMuPDF and Shapely have pre-built wheels [1, 2] for several platforms (macOS, Linux, Windows) and recent Python versions, so their installation should be easy and smooth for most setups.
I use remarks with a reMarkable 1 tablet running software version 2.6.2.75 on macOS Catalina (10.15.x) with CPython 3.8.x. I don't have other devices to test it thoroughly, but I expect remarks to work just fine in all common setups, including with remarkable 2.
Incidentally, please help me keep track of remarks compatibility across different setups:
- If it is working well for you, make a quick comment with your setup
- If you run into any problems, raise an issue
If OCRmyPDF is available on your computer, remarks may (optionally) use it to OCR PDFs before extracting their highlighted text.
Setup
To get remarks up and running on your local machine, follow the instructions below:
1. Copy reMarkable's files to your computer
In order to reconstruct your highlights and annotations, remarks relies on specific files that are created by the reMarkable device as you use it. Because these specific files are internal to the reMarkable device, first we need to transfer them to your computer.
There are, broadly speaking, four options for getting them to your computer. Choose the one that fits you the best:
-
Copy from reMarkable's official desktop application
If you have a reMarkable's official desktop app installed, the files we need are already easily available on your computer. For macOS users, the files are located at~/Library/Application\ Support/remarkable/desktop. To avoid interfering with reMarkable's official app, copy and paste all the contents of~/Library/Application\ Support/remarkable/desktopto another directory (one that you can safely interact with, say,~/Documents/remarkable/docs). -
Use
rsync(about)
Check out the repository @lucasrla/remarkable-utils for the SSH &rsyncsetup I use (which includes automatic backups based oncron). -
Use
scp(about)
On your reMarkable tablet, go toMenu > Settings > Help > About, then tap onCopyrights and licenses. InGeneral information, right after the section titled "GPLv3 Compliance", there will be the username (root), password and IP addresses needed forSSH. Using these credentials,scpthe contents of/home/root/.local/share/remarkable/xochitlfrom your reMarkable to a directory on your computer. (Copying may take a while depending on the size of your document collection and the quality of your WiFi network.) To prevent any unintented interruptions, you can (optionally) switch off theAuto sleepfeature inMenu > Settings > Batterybefore transferring your files. -
Use @juruen/rmapi or @subutux/rmapy
Both are free and open source software that allow you to access your reMarkable tablet files through reMarkable's cloud service.
2. Clone this repository and install the dependencies
⚠️ Users on macOS Big Sur:
### 2.1 Clone
git clone https://github.com/lucasrla/remarks.git && cd remarks
### 2.2 Create a virtual environment
# I like pyenv [https://github.com/pyenv/pyenv]
# and pyenv-virtualenv [https://github.com/pyenv/pyenv-virtualenv]:
pyenv virtualenv remarks && pyenv local remarks
# But of course you are free to use any of the many alternatives
# e.g. virtualenv, virtualenvwrapper
### 2.3 Install the dependencies
# Personally, I prefer using poetry [http://python-poetry.org] for managing dependencies:
poetry install
# But pip works fine as well:
pip install -r requirements.txt
Usage and Demo
Run remarks and check out what arguments are available:
python -m remarks --help
Next, for a quick hands-on experience of remarks, run the demo:
# Alan Turing's 1936 foundational paper (with a few highlights and scribbles)
# Original PDF file downloaded from:
# "On Computable Numbers, with an Application to the Entscheidungsproblem"
# https://londmathsoc.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/abs/10.1112/plms/s2-42.1.230
python -m remarks demo/on-computable-numbers/xochitl demo/on-computable-numbers --targets png md pdf --combined_pdf
A few other examples:
# Assuming your `xochitl` files are at `~/backups/remarkable/xochitl/`
python -m remarks ~/backups/remarkable/xochitl/ example_1/ --ann_type highlights --targets md --combined_pdf
python -m remarks ~/backups/remarkable/xochitl/ example_2/ --targets png
Credits and Acknowledgements
-
@JorjMcKie who wrote and maintains the great PyMuPDF
-
u/stucule who posted to r/RemarkableTablet the first account (that I could find online) about reverse engineering
.rmfiles -
@ax3l who wrote lines-are-rusty / lines-are-beautiful and also contributed to reverse engineering of
.rmfiles -
@edupont, @Liblor, @florian-wagner, and @jackjackk for their contributions to rM2svg
-
@ericsfraga, @jmiserez, @peerdavid, @phill777 and @lschwetlick for updating rM2svg to the most recent
.rmformat -
@lschwetlick who wrote rMsync and also two blog posts about reMarkable-related software [1, 2]
-
@soulisalmed who wrote biff
-
@benlongo who wrote remarkable-highlights
For more reMarkable resources, check out awesome-reMarkable and remarkablewiki.com.
License
remarks is Free Software distributed under the GNU General Public License v3.0.
Disclaimers
This is a hobby project of an enthusiastic reMarkable user. There is no warranty whatsoever. Use it at your own risk.
The author(s) and contributor(s) are not associated with reMarkable AS, Norway. reMarkable is a registered trademark of reMarkable AS in some countries. Please see https://remarkable.com for their products.