-The PDF 1.7 standard describes a format which is \rephrase{essentially PostScript plus everything in the kitchen sink}.
-\begin{itemize}
- \item PDF is not just crippled postscript
- \item Objects - has a type system, like a programming language, not like the DOM where all objects are fundamentally the same - this is similar to PostScript
- \item File structure - Header, body, reference table (location of objects in file), trailer (location of reference table and special objects)
- \begin{itemize}
- \item Read the file from the end
- \item File can be updated incrementally as long as the trailer is at the end
- \end{itemize}
- \item Document structure - This is basically a graph, wheras the DOM is a tree
- \item Content streams - objects but conceptually different - operators or instructions
- \item Interactivity --- At this point, PDF suddenly changes from being PostScript to being XML
- \begin{itemize}
- \item
- \end{itemize}
-\end{itemize}
+Hayes describes PDF as ``... essentially 'flattened' PostScript; it’s what’s left when you remove all the procedures and loops in a program, replacing them with sequences of simple drawing commands.''\cite{hayes2012pixelsor}. Consultation of the PDF 1.7 standard shows that this statement does not a give a complete picture --- despite being based on the Adobe PostScript model of a document as a series of ``pages'' to be printed by executing sequential instructions, from version 1.5 the PDF standard began to borrow some ideas from the Document Object Model discussed in Section \ref{Document Object Model}. For example, interactive elements such as forms may be included as XHTML objects and styled using CSS. ``Actions'' are objects used to modify the data structure dynamically. In particular, it is possible to include Javascript Actions. Adobe defines the API for Javascript actions seperately to the PDF standard\cite{js_3d_pdf}. There is evidence in the literature of attempts to exploit these features, with mixed success\cite{barnes2013embedding, hayes2012pixelsor}.
+
+To quote Adobe's PDF 1.7 reference manual, ``A PDF file should be thought of as a flattened representation of a data structure consisting of a collection of objects that can refer to each other in any arbitrary way''\cite{pdfref17}.