Repository profile
chrisryugj/kordoc
모두 파싱해버리겠다 — HWP/HWPX/PDF → Markdown | npm · CLI · MCP Server
Why this page exists
Use this profile to move from awareness into adoption-oriented inspection.
Best next step
Check the summary, then compare it against similar projects before touching production.
Research posture
Momentum helps discovery. Fit, maintenance quality, and reversibility decide adoption.
Editorial summary
Kordoc is a powerful tool designed for parsing and converting various document formats commonly used in South Korea, including HWP, HWPX, and PDF, into Markdown. Developed by a former civil servant with extensive experience handling official documents, Kordoc aims to automate the processing of public documents, making them easier to read and analyze. The tool not only extracts text but also accurately recreates complex tables and generates comparative reports that highlight differences between documents, serving as an invaluable resource for legal, administrative, and data analysis tasks.
Adoption analysis
Best-fit use case
chrisryugj/kordoc is most useful to evaluate when your team is researching developer tooling. Compare its documented workflow with your runtime, deployment model, and maintenance capacity before adopting it.
Momentum signal
Recent tracked star growth is modest, so maintenance quality and fit may matter more than momentum. Daily and three-day changes are discovery signals, while total stars show accumulated awareness.
Adoption caution
Before adding it to production, review license terms, dependency footprint, security guidance, open issue quality, and whether there is a clear path to migrate away later.
What to inspect next
- 1Run the quick install in a disposable project before touching production code.
- 2Compare its topic focus (cli, document-parser, hancom, hwp) with the problem your team is actually solving.
- 3Identify at least two alternatives so the decision is not based on one ranking page.
- 4Read recent issues and releases to understand maintenance rhythm, breaking changes, and common failure modes.