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How to Convert TIFF Files to PDF Using Java

Vyom Srivastava
Illustration: How to Convert TIFF Files to PDF Using Java

In this post, you’ll learn how to convert the TIFF file format to PDF using PSPDFKit’s TIFF to PDF Java API. With our API, you can convert up to 100 files per month for free. All you need to do is create a free account to get access to your API key.

PSPDFKit API

Converting from TIFF to PDF is just one of our 30+ PDF API tools. You can combine our conversion tool with other tools to create complex document processing workflows. You’ll be able to convert various file formats into PDFs and then:

  • Merge several resulting PDFs into one

  • OCR, watermark, or flatten PDFs

  • Remove or duplicate specific PDF pages

Once you create your account, you’ll be able to access all our PDF API tools.

Step 1 — Creating a Free Account on PSPDFKit

Go to our website, where you’ll see the page below, prompting you to create your free account.

Free account PSPDFKit API

Once you’ve created your account, you’ll be welcomed by the page below, which shows an overview of your plan details.

Free plan PSPDFKit API

As you can see in the bottom-left corner, you’ll start with 100 documents to process, and you’ll be able to access all our PDF API tools.

Step 2 — Obtaining the API Key

After you’ve verified your email, you can get your API key from the dashboard. In the menu on the left, click API Keys. You’ll see the following page, which is an overview of your keys:

Convert TIFF to PDF Java API Key

Copy the Live API Key, because you’ll need this for the TIFF to PDF API.

Step 3 — Setting Up Folders and Files

For this tutorial, you’ll use IntelliJ IDEA as your primary code editor. To get started, create a new project called tiff_to_pdf. You can choose any location, but make sure to select Java as the language, Gradle as the build system, and Groovy as the Gradle DSL.

TIFF to PDF Java API Key

Create a new directory in your project. Right-click on your project’s name and select New > Directory. From there, choose the src/main/java option. Once done, create a class file inside the src/main/java folder called processor.java, and create two folders called input_documents and processed_documents in the root folder.

Next, copy your TIFF file to the input_documents folder and rename it to image.tiff. You can use our demo image as an example.

Your folder structure will look like this:

tiff_to_pdf
├── input_documents
|    └── image.tiff
├── processed_documents
├── src
|    └── main
|        └── java
|            └── processor.java

Step 4 — Installing Dependencies

Next, you’ll install two libraries:

  • OkHttp — This library makes API requests.

  • JSON — This library will parse the JSON payload.

Open the build.gradle file and add the following dependencies to your project:

dependencies {
    implementation 'com.squareup.okhttp3:okhttp:4.9.2'
    implementation 'org.json:json:20210307'
}

Once done, click the Add Configuration button in IntelliJ IDEA. This will open a dropdown menu.

TIFF to PDF Java API Add Configuration

Next, select Application from the menu.

TIFF to PDF Java API Application

Now, fill the form with the required details. Most of the fields will be prefilled, but you need to select java 18 in the module field and add -cp tiff_to_pdf.main as the main class and Processor in the field below it.

TIFF to PDF Java API Setup

To apply settings, click the Apply button.

Step 5 — Writing the Code

Now, open the processor.java file and paste the code below into it:

import java.io.File;
import java.io.IOException;
import java.nio.file.FileSystems;
import java.nio.file.Files;
import java.nio.file.StandardCopyOption;

import org.json.JSONArray;
import org.json.JSONObject;

import okhttp3.MediaType;
import okhttp3.MultipartBody;
import okhttp3.OkHttpClient;
import okhttp3.Request;
import okhttp3.RequestBody;
import okhttp3.Response;

public final class Processor {
    public static void main(final String[] args) throws IOException {
        final RequestBody body = new MultipartBody.Builder()
                .setType(MultipartBody.FORM)
                .addFormDataPart(
                        "image",
                        "image.tiff",
                        RequestBody.create(
                                new File("input_documents/image.tiff"),
                                MediaType.parse("image/tiff")
                        )
                )
                .addFormDataPart(
                        "instructions",
                        new JSONObject()
                                .put("parts", new JSONArray()
                                        .put(new JSONObject()
                                                .put("file", "image")
                                        )
                                ).toString()
                )
                .build();

        final Request request = new Request.Builder()
                .url("https://api.pspdfkit.com/build")
                .method("POST", body)
                .addHeader("Authorization", "Bearer YOUR_API_KEY_HERE")
                .build();

        final OkHttpClient client = new OkHttpClient()
                .newBuilder()
                .build();

        final Response response = client.newCall(request).execute();

        if (response.isSuccessful()) {
            Files.copy(
                    response.body().byteStream(),
                    FileSystems.getDefault().getPath("processed_documents/result.pdf"),
                    StandardCopyOption.REPLACE_EXISTING
            );
        } else {
            // Handle the error.
            throw new IOException(response.body().string());
        }
    }
}

ℹ️ Note: Make sure to replace YOUR_API_KEY_HERE with your API key.

Code Explanation

In the code above, you’re importing all the packages required to run the code and creating a class called processor. In the main function, you’re first creating the request body for the API call that contains all the instructions for the conversion of TIFF to PDF. After that, you’re calling the API to process the instructions.

You’re then calling the execute() function and passing the request variable. The response of the API is then stored in the folder called processed_documents.

Output

To execute the code, click the Run button (which is a little green arrow). This is next to the field that says Processor, which is where you set the configuration.

TIFF to PDF Java API Output

On successful execution of the code, you’ll see a new processed file named result.pdf in the processed_documents folder.

The folder structure will look like this:

tiff_to_pdf
├── input_documents
|    └── image.tiff
├── processed_documents
|    └── result.pdf
├── src
|    └── main
|        └── java
|            └── processor.java

Final Words

In this post, you learned how to seamlessly integrate our TIFF to PDF API into your Java application and programmatically convert TIFF files to PDF documents.

In addition to document conversion, you can integrate multiple API tools into your existing applications. With the same API token, you can perform other operations, such as merging several documents into a single PDF, adding watermarks, and more. To get started with a free trial, sign up here.

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