Show HN: PlutoPrint – Generate PDFs and PNGs from HTML with Python
17 comments
·August 20, 2025phonon
It would be great if you could run it against the tests at https://www.print-css.rocks/
They would give a much better idea of its complex printing capabilities.
pac0
It should be required to run these tests for these libraries. It's really frustrating to have to discover it trying to make it work.
eterps
How does it differ from https://weasyprint.org ?
iamgopal
Comparing it to typst ?
okm
This is so efficient, i just tested it ,far better than weasyprint, and it has both python and c++ repo, bro am amazed, Are you open for sponsorship?
socalgal2
Maybe this isn't the same but it's a relatively few lines of code to use puppeteer to use an actual browser to render pages to PDFs/PNGs. Advantages would be everything is supported. Every new feature in CSS, HTML, SVG, Canvas2D, WebGL, WebGPU, etc... (though for WebGL/WebGPU you might need to pass in some flags to use llvmpipe/mesa/warp etc...
Asking your favorite LLM will give you da codez
PS: I'm not trying to discount this tool. I'm only pointing out an alternative that might be useful
sammycage
That’s a good point. Using Puppeteer or a headless browser gives you essentially full web platform support. The tradeoff is that it comes with a heavier runtime and more moving parts (Chromium, Node, etc.). PlutoPrint aims to be much lighter: no browser dependency, just a compact C++ engine with a Python wrapper. It does not cover the entire browser feature set but it is fast, portable, and easy to drop into projects without the overhead of a full browser.
nicoburns
Interesting. I was not aware of PlutoBook!
We're doing a very similar thing (custom lightweight engine) over at https://github.com/DioxusLabs/blitz. We have more of a focus on UI, but there's definitely overlap (we support rendering to image, but don't have pagination/fragmentation implemented).
Have you run the WPT tests against your engine to test spec conformance?
slig
Exactly what I was wondering. I use puppeteer to render these [1] printable puzzles pages, and I use SVG, JavaScript to dynamically resize the text to fit a page, etc. Just works.
[1]: https://ahapdf.nyc3.cdn.digitaloceanspaces.com/samplers/logi... (PDF)
pac0
Does this support full flexbox styling?
What are the known issues or the unsupported css this library has?
Humphrey
Does anybody have any experience migrating to PlutoPrint from WeasyPrint? Is it seamless? Faster? Any teething issues? Are their reasons to stay with WeasyPrint?
ge96
Might need this wkhtmltopdf being bound to bookworm
klaxce
I’m also looking at this as a replacement for wkhtmltopdf as well. I had reimplemented with Puppeteer, but it’s very ram heavy for the 200-500 page PDFs I generate. I’m hoping this renders what I need properly.
richfreedman
Nice! I think that it would be great if this could take markdown as input, without having to convert to HTML first
moelf
for a second I thought it's this Pluto (note)book https://plutojl.org/
Hi everyone, I built PlutoPrint because I needed a simple way to generate beautiful PDFs and images directly from HTML with Python. Most of the tools I tried felt heavy, tricky to set up, or produced results that didn’t look great, so I wanted something lightweight, modern, and fast. PlutoPrint is built on top of PlutoBook’s rendering engine, which is designed for paged media, and then wrapped with a Python API that makes it easy to turn HTML or XML into crisp PDFs and PNGs. I’ve used it for things like invoices, reports, tickets, and even snapshots, and it can also integrate with Matplotlib to render charts directly into documents.
I’d be glad to hear what you think. If you’ve ever had to wrestle with generating PDFs or images from HTML, I hope this feels like a smoother option. Feedback, ideas, or even just impressions are all very welcome, and I’d love to learn how PlutoPrint could be more useful for you.