Show HN: Nano PDF – A CLI Tool to Edit PDFs with Gemini's Nano Banana

github.com

146 points by GavCo 19 hours ago

The new Gemini 3 Pro Image model (aka Nano Banana) is incredible at generating slides, so I thought it would be fun to build a CLI tool that lets you edit PDF presentations using plain English. The tool converts the page you want to edit into an image, sends it to the model API together with your prompt to generate an edited image, then converts the updated image back and stitches into the original document.

Examples:

- `nano-pdf edit deck.pdf 5 "Update the revenue chart to show Q3 at $2.5M"`

- `nano-pdf add deck.pdf 15 "Create an executive summary slide with 5 bullet points"`

Features:

- Edit multiple pages in parallel

- Add entirely new slides that match your deck's style

- Google Search enabled by default so the model can look up current data

- Preserves text layer for copy/paste and search

It can work with any kind of PDF but I expect it would be most useful for a quick edit to a deck or something similar.

GitHub: https://github.com/gavrielc/Nano-PDF

tecoholic 18 hours ago

> Converts an image to a single-page PDF with a hidden text layer using Tesseract. This is the 'State Preservation' step.

Does this mean the text only pdf page is transformed into an image that covers the full page, but the text is still under there. So, any machine based extraction would still get the text, but would probably loose all the bounding box information and regular users cannot just use their mouse to select text anymore?

  • kumarm 16 hours ago

    Seems true and really wish the project included some sample PDF output.

    My Text to Speech app uses bounding box to display what text in PDF is being read and would not work well PDF's from this project.

    • GavCo 6 hours ago

      OP here, I added a sample PDF output in the project assets and put screenshots in the ReadMe. The text is selectable after rehydration. would this work with your app?

      • tecoholic 4 hours ago

        Wait! what? This is incredible. Amazing work.

lxe 19 hours ago

This is nuts and I absolutely love this. So you convert the PDF into image, edit the image, then convert the image back into a PDF.

  • thenthenthen 14 hours ago

    This is the usual workflow dealing with pdfs (unfortunately)

moezd 9 hours ago

Behold, the might of LLMs! Instead of ushering the age of AGI as advertised 6 months ago, now it cleans your PDFs for you.

Many thanks to humanity for failing to standardise PDF and this project for paying interest on that tech debt with datacenter levels of energy consumption.

shevis 18 hours ago

A side effect of replacing entire pages with images is that the file size will expand dramatically. Most PDFs only contain a couple of images

  • falcor84 11 hours ago

    It might be feasible to have an intermediate AI call take the generated image and slice it into individual text and image elements that it would then render into the pdf page

treetalker 19 hours ago

I'd love to see clearer examples: a video, or original pdf / command / result pdf. Very cool!

perfectritone 14 hours ago

It's incredible how many hacks there are to make PDFs semi-usable.

Zopieux 2 hours ago

I am disappointed that this doesn't modify the underlying pdf structure (which is a horror show, I know) but instead relies on fairly lossy OCR back&fourths.

I wish an agent with a validation and rendering tools could instead manipulate the structure to accomplish those edits way less destructively, checking its progress with the tools.

iamflimflam1 12 hours ago

The lack of examples makes me very reluctant to commit any time to trying this out - despite it being something that I’m interested in.

Has anyone given any it a go? Does it work?

  • stingraycharles 12 hours ago

    What? There are examples in the repo and even in OP’s post.

    I haven’t tried it, but there are plenty of examples.

    • albert_e 12 hours ago

      Do you mean example commands? we see those examples on the githib README, yes,

      But people here are probably also looking for example input and output PDFs (or images/screenshots) showing the actual work done to get a sense of what to expect.

      • iamflimflam1 11 hours ago

        Exactly - if these examples work really well, then include some screenshots.

itsmevictor 19 hours ago

Very nice! I wonder whether that could be used to get LLMs to annotate pdfs. Say an "agentic" CLI like Claude Code or Gemini-cli reviews a pdf and finds typos, could it use this to annotate the pdf like underlining them in red or something of that sort? That could be nice.

McNulty2 15 hours ago

I like the example of updating latest market data. Updating a deck one-off is tedious. Keeping it updated long-term was never going to happen. But now it can

toddmorey 15 hours ago

I thought it was kinda funny that Google Slide’s own built in “beautify this slide” button converts the whole slide into an uneditable image.

  • albert_e 12 hours ago

    AFAIK -- even the "Designer" feature of Microsoft Powerpoint (now folded under Copilot license I believe) gives slide deigns with shapes etc that are not editable. Thankfully the text remains editable. But if we wnat to ever so slightly modify the suggested design my removing or reshaping some if the shapes ... nopes. Feels like they are worried about humans with taste ripping-off the AI output :D

mentalgear 19 hours ago

Nice - but consider adding an animated screengrap like: https://github.com/pythops/oryx

  • yoavm 17 hours ago

    Please don't add an animated gif to your README. Nothing worse than an autoplaying video with no controls, that has 10 frames but takes 5.4MB to download. Github supports normal video files. It allows the user to rewind or pause, and it results in a much smaller file size.

    • varenc 16 hours ago

      Generally agreed! though fun point of info: you can use the .avif format to get something that behaves just like a gif (auto-playing, no sound, no controls) but supports modern features (HDR/transparency channel) and is compressed as well as a modern video is, since its just AV1. And it's supported in most all modern browsers these days: https://caniuse.com/?search=avif

      • ornornor 9 hours ago

        I tend to use webm but I’m curious, is avif better (performance, size) for gif?

vood 9 hours ago

Congratulations on the release; that's a really good job.

mlpoknbji 16 hours ago

Somewhat unrelated but can anyone recommend a way to edit the text of a PDF using LLM? Something like AI + acrobat pro?

informal007 14 hours ago

it will be more excited if i can use this feature in application with GUI, it’s now convenient to check the result after edit the PDF, i need to transfer between CLI and PDF reader

John7878781 18 hours ago

Love this.

After several iterations of edits, would the image quality decrease?

ThrowawayTestr 18 hours ago

I recently tried to change a single word in a PDF and nearly tore my hair out (thank you LibreOffice) I'll definitely keep this in mind for next time, thank you.

  • tkfoss 18 hours ago

    Try photopea next time

    • albert_e 12 hours ago

      Wow - didnt know about this tool for PDF editing - thanks!

      https://www.photopea.com/

      PS: in my quick test of editing a PDF text -- the output PDF had weirdly added an extra "&" symbol at the end of every existing line of text. will try out more to see if it was something in the input PDF that was causing it.