On 2015-09-27 23:33, Paul Koning wrote:
On Sep 26, 2015, at 5:42 PM, Toby Thain <toby
at telegraphics.com.au> wrote:
...
Software which "recreates" the typography of a document from OCR does not
produce an acceptable substitute, I've yet to see a book that wasn't ruined by it.
True. But that's not the biggest problem with OCR. The biggest problem is that even
professional grade OCR programs have rather low accuracy. Maybe they do acceptably well
on really high grade scans of very clean new documents, but on books, typewritten
documents, etc., even after you use the "train" feature you need to spend a long
time cleaning up. It may be faster than retyping things, if you're lucky. Not if
you're not; two of us recently retyped 300 pages of line printer listing because that
was faster and more accurate than OCR on that particular printout.
Well, all I can say is that the OCRing I did of the book I posted a link
to required some minor cleanup, but it was very light. So the accuracy
was very good there.
Given that OCR can only do, at best, a just barely
acceptable recognition of the letters of the alphabet, it follows that accurately
recognizing the actual font used will be vastly less accurate. And indeed you can see
that clearly.
The program I used back then obviously correctly picked not just the
letters, but also which font to use very accurately.
I wonder if there are OCR programs that can be told to
choose among 2 or 3 fonts, as opposed to guess from the entire inventory of the machine.
If so, and if they are sufficiently distinct, then maybe you'd stand a chance.
Especially if it also added heuristics like "never change fonts in mid-word" --
an obvious rule but not one I have seen implemented.
That would be possible, I guess. But I would so like to remember, refind
what I used back then. The results it produced was pretty much identical
to the original. Manuals, in comparison, would be pretty straight
forward. (Less fonts, and less strange layouts than books, in my eye.
Figures still needs to be bitmaps, though.)
Johnny
--
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|| on a psychedelic trip
email: bqt at softjar.se || Reading murder books
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