A general purpose PSD parser written in Coffeescript. Based off of PSD.rb. It allows you to work with a Photoshop document in a manageable tree structure and find out important data such as:
- Document structure
- Document size
- Layer/folder size + positioning
- Layer/folder names
- Layer/folder visibility and opacity
- Font data (via psd-enginedata)
- Text area contents
- Font names, sizes, and colors
- Color mode and bit-depth
- Vector mask data
- Flattened image data
- Layer comps
Runs in both NodeJS and the browser (using browserify). There are still some pieces missing that are present in PSD.rb, such as layer comp filtering, a built-in renderer, and many layer info blocks. The eventual goal is full feature parity with PSD.rb.
PSD.js has no native dependencies. Simply add psd
to your package.json or run npm install psd
.
Note: work in progress
Annotated source code documentation is available here. PROTIP: if you're wondering how to access various metadata from a layer, you'll want to see this file.
PSD.js works almost exactly the same in the browser and NodeJS.
var PSD = require('psd');
var psd = PSD.fromFile("path/to/file.psd");
psd.parse();
console.log(psd.tree().export());
console.log(psd.tree().childrenAtPath('A/B/C')[0].export());
// You can also use promises syntax for opening and parsing
PSD.open("path/to/file.psd").then(function (psd) {
return psd.image.saveAsPng('./output.png');
}).then(function () {
console.log("Finished!");
});
var PSD = require('psd');
// Load from URL
PSD.fromURL("/path/to/file.psd").then(function(psd) {
document.getElementById('ImageContainer').appendChild(psd.image.toPng());
});
// Load from event, e.g. drag & drop
function onDrop(evt) {
PSD.fromEvent(evt).then(function (psd) {
console.log(psd.tree().export());
});
}
To access the document as a tree structure, use psd.tree()
to get the root node. From there, work with the tree using any of these methods:
root()
: get the root node from anywhere in the treeisRoot()
: is this the root node?children()
: get all immediate children of the nodehasChildren()
: does this node have any children?childless()
: opposite ofhasChildren()
ancestors()
: get all ancestors in the path of this node (excluding the root)siblings()
: get all sibling tree nodes including the current one (e.g. all layers in a folder)nextSibling()
: gets the sibling immediately following the current nodeprevSibling()
: gets the sibling immediately before the current nodehasSiblings()
: does this node have any siblings?onlyChild()
: opposite ofhasSiblings()
descendants()
: get all descendant nodes not including the current onesubtree()
: same as descendants but starts with the current nodedepth()
: calculate the depth of the current node (root node is 0)path()
: gets the path to the current node
If you know the path to a group or layer within the tree, you can search by that path. Note that this always returns an Array because layer/group names do not have to be unique. The search is always scoped to the descendants of the current node, as well.
psd.tree().childrenAtPath('Version A/Matte');
psd.tree().childrenAtPath(['Version A', 'Matte']);
To get data such as the name or dimensions of a layer:
node = psd.tree().descendants()[0];
node.get('name');
node.get('width');
PSD files also store various pieces of information in "layer info" blocks. See this file for all of the possible layer info blocks that PSD.js parses (in LAYER_INFO
). Which blocks a layer has varies from layer-to-layer, but to access them you can do:
node = psd.tree().descendants()[0]
node.get('typeTool').export()
node.get('vectorMask').export()
When working with the tree structure, you can recursively export any node to an object. This does not dump everything, but it does include the most commonly accessed information.
console.log(psd.tree().export());
Which produces something like:
{ children:
[ { type: 'group',
visible: false,
opacity: 1,
blendingMode: 'normal',
name: 'Version D',
left: 0,
right: 900,
top: 0,
bottom: 600,
height: 600,
width: 900,
children:
[ { type: 'layer',
visible: true,
opacity: 1,
blendingMode: 'normal',
name: 'Make a change and save.',
left: 275,
right: 636,
top: 435,
bottom: 466,
height: 31,
width: 361,
mask: {},
text:
{ value: 'Make a change and save.',
font:
{ name: 'HelveticaNeue-Light',
sizes: [ 33 ],
colors: [ [ 85, 96, 110, 255 ] ],
alignment: [ 'center' ] },
left: 0,
top: 0,
right: 0,
bottom: 0,
transform: { xx: 1, xy: 0, yx: 0, yy: 1, tx: 456, ty: 459 } },
image: {} } ] } ],
document:
{ width: 900,
height: 600,
resources:
{ layerComps:
[ { id: 692243163, name: 'Version A', capturedInfo: 1 },
{ id: 725235304, name: 'Version B', capturedInfo: 1 },
{ id: 730932877, name: 'Version C', capturedInfo: 1 } ],
guides: [],
slices: [] } } }
You can also export the PSD to a flattened image. Please note that, at this time, not all image modes + depths are supported.
png = psd.image.toPng(); // get PNG object
psd.image.saveAsPng('path/to/output.png').then(function () {
console.log('Exported!');
});
This uses the full rasterized preview provided by Photoshop. If the file was not saved with Compatibility Mode enabled, this will return an empty image.