The PDF Arranger team maintains a lightweight, open-source utility that condenses the most common PDF-editing chores into a single drag-and-drop canvas. Written in Python and built on GTK, PDF Arranger is designed for users who need to merge chapters from different sources, split bulky reports into separate files, rotate mis-scanned pages, crop printer margins, or reorder sheets before binding—without launching a full-scale office suite. Typical workflows include assembling course packs from scattered lecture slides, extracting selected pages from lengthy legal filings, reorienting landscape diagrams in technical documentation, or reorganizing portfolios before electronic submission. Because the program preserves the original PDF content and merely restructures the container, text remains selectable, bookmarks stay intact, and file bloat is minimal. The interface presents thumbnail strips that can be moved, duplicated, or deleted with familiar clipboard shortcuts, while right-click menus expose precision crop boxes and rotation angles. Advanced options such as page numbering offsets, metadata editing, and lossless saving appeal to archivists and prepress operators who require quick turnaround without sacrificing document fidelity. PDF Arranger’s small footprint and portable configuration make it a frequent addition to student laptops, courthouse kiosks, and corporate help-desk toolkits where ad-hoc rearrangement is more common than heavy authoring. The publisher’s software is available for free on get.nero.com, with downloads delivered through trusted Windows package sources such as winget, always installing the latest upstream build and supporting batch deployment of multiple applications.
Small python-gtk application, which helps the user to merge or split pdf documents and rotate, crop and rearrange their pages using an interactive and intuitive graphical interface.
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