Beyond the Page Range

Most tools treat PDFs like paper. We treat them like data.

Abstract representation of document flow

When we talk about "splitting" a PDF, most people think of a guillotine: "cut here at page 10." But in the real world, you don't care about page numbers. You care about context.

I wanted to build a way to split files that actually respects the content inside them. If a section starts mid-page or spans three documents, the tool should be smart enough to handle it.


Logical Splitting vs. Physical Splitting

Physical splitting is rigid. Logical splitting is fluid. Here is how you can use natural language to define your splits:

By Intent

"Split this proposal into 'Executive Summary' and 'Technical Specifications'."

By Complexity

"Create one PDF for the multiple-choice section and another for the long-form analysis."

Unified Categories

The most powerful feature is the ability to merge and split simultaneously. If you upload a stack of reports, you can tell the tool to "extract all financial tables into one PDF and all board minutes into another."

The tool scans every page across every file and reconstructs your new documents based on those categories. You aren't just splitting; you're reorganizing your entire library in seconds.