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- From: Jonathan Monsarrat <postscript-request@cs.brown.edu>
- Subject: PostScript monthly FAQ v2.2 12-26-93 [07-10 of 11]
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- Message-ID: <JGM.94Apr11234603@chekov.cs.brown.edu>
- Followup-To: poster
- Summary: Useful facts about the PostScript graphics programming language
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- Reply-To: postscript-request@cs.brown.edu (PostScript FAQ comments address)
- Organization: Brown University Department of Computer Science
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Date: Tue, 12 Apr 1994 04:46:03 GMT
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-
- Archive-name: postscript/faq/part7-10
- Last-modified: 1993/12/26
- Version: 2.2
-
- -- PostScript --
-
- Answers to Questions
-
- (the comp.lang.postscript FAQ v2.2)
-
- Jon Monsarrat
-
- jgm@cs.brown.edu
-
-
-
-
-
-
- This FAQ is formatted as a digest.
-
- Most news readers can skip from one question
-
- to the next by pressing control-G.
-
-
- Changes since the last version are marked with a '|' in the table
- of contents and in the sections in the text-only format of the FAQ.
-
- Now that there is Linux and NetBSD and BSD 386 UNIX IBM PC (and
- clone) users can run any of the X-windows and UNIX programs in the
- utilities section. See comp.os.linux. Also, there is now
- GhostScript for the Macintosh.
-
- Many thanks to Dan Carrigan for reformatting the books and
- publishers section.
-
- The utilities index from the comp.sources.postscript FAQ will be
- posted in comp.lang.postscript now too.
-
- Please help fix the FAQ! All comments should be mailed to
- jgm@cs.brown.edu. My favorite way to receive a change suggestion is
- when it is accompanied by a section of the FAQ that is edited and
- mailed to me verbatim as an example. If you would like to
- contribute, please read the section ``about the FAQ'' first. Thank
- you!
-
- Books and programs are referred to by name only. See the book
- sections for book information, and the comp.sources.postscript FAQ
- for a full list of all PostScript related programs. I have archived
- a number of the small utilities in
- wilma.cs.brown.edu:pub/postscript. You can get the
- comp.sources.postscript FAQ from
- wilma.cs.brown.edu:pub/comp.sources.postscript.
-
- Related FAQs: comp.text, comp.text.tex, comp.fonts, comp.graphics,
- comp.sys.mac.apps, comp.sources.postscript.
-
- Subject: 7 Programming in PostScript
-
-
- Subject: 7.1 What is PostScript level 2?
-
- (See the Section 11, ``About PostScript 2''.)
-
-
- Subject: 7.2 Should I learn level 2 PostScript?
-
- Yes, because Level Two will soon become the standard. Application
- developers using PostScript need to become aware of the new
- capabilities and how to take advantage of them.
-
- There are many good books on PostScript 2. (See Section 5,
- ``Books''.)
-
-
- Subject: 7.3 Where can I find examples of PostScript code?
-
- Many other books on PostScript make example PostScript code
- available. ``Thinking in PostScript'', by Glenn Reid, is the only
- book I know of that allows its examples to be freely distributed.
- (See Section 5, ``Books''.)
-
- All the examples in ``the blue book'' are available from the Adobe
- file server (See Section 5, ``Books''.)
-
- See the question ``How can I browse through PostScript programs?''
- in the comp.sources.postscript FAQ.
-
-
- Subject: 7.4 What is the physical size of the page?
-
- | This depends on what print medium you are using. Paper comes in a
- | number of standard sizes:
- |
- |
- | Paper Size Dimension (in points)
- | ------------------------------ ---------------------
- | Comm #10 Envelope 297 x 684
- | C5 Envelope 461 x 648
- | DL Envelope 312 x 624
- | Folio 595 x 935
- | Executive 522 x 756
- | Letter 612 x 792
- | Legal 612 x 1008
- | Ledger 1224 x 792
- | Tabloid 792 x 1224
- | A0 2384 x 3370
- | A1 1684 x 2384
- | A2 1191 x 1684
- | A3 842 x 1191
- | A4 595 x 842
- | A5 420 x 595
- | A6 297 x 420
- | A7 210 x 297
- | A8 148 x 210
- | A9 105 x 148
- | B0 2920 x 4127
- | B1 2064 x 2920
- | B2 1460 x 2064
- | B3 1032 x 1460
- | B4 729 x 1032
- | B5 516 x 729
- | B6 363 x 516
- | B7 258 x 363
- | B8 181 x 258
- | B9 127 x 181
- | B10 91 x 127
- |
- | To determine what print mediums are available, check the PPD file
- | for your printer, under the PageSize keyword.
-
-
- Subject: 7.5 What is the Imagable Area of the page
-
- | The initial clipping path gives you the size of the imagable area.
- | Use ``clippath pathbbox'' to get these coordinates. If you must
- | know the size of the device's imageable area, use the sequence
- | ``gsave initclip clippath pathbbox grestore'', but this will
- | prevent an enclosing application from using the clippath to achieve
- | some special effects (such as multiple pages per page).
- |
- | PPD files (see section 2 of the FAQ, printers) contain information
- | on what paper sizes, as well as the Imagable Area for each,
- | specific to each printer. A Postscript code fragment (called
- | ``?ImageableArea'') is described in a PPD file, which determines
- | the current Imageable Area for that printer.
-
-
- Subject: 7.6 Why can't I do a pathforall after a charpath ?
-
- (See Section 4, ``Fonts'', question ``Why are Adobe fonts
- hidden?''.)
-
-
- Subject: 7.7 How do I center a string of text around a point?
-
- Level 1 PostScript has two operators that can extract information
- about the metrics of characters: ``stringwidth'' and ``charpath''.
-
- The ``stringwidth'' operator returns the advance width of its
- string operand. This is the distance the current point would be
- moved by a ``show'' operation on the same string. ``stringwidth''
- returns two numbers on the stack, representing the x and y
- components of the advance width. Usually the y component is zero
- because most fonts are displayed along a horizontal line, moving
- the current point only in the x direction.
-
- Also note that the ``stringwidth'' usually does not give an exact
- measure of the area of the page that will be touched by its
- operand. The letters can either project a little over the
- boundaries or fall a little within (leaving a touch of whitespace).
-
- If all that an application requires is horizontal centering of a
- long string of text, the result returned by ``stringwidth'' is
- sufficient. A common technique is
-
-
- x y moveto
- (string) dup stringwidth pop 2 div neg 0 rmoveto show
-
- (This code makes the assumption that the y component of advance
- width is irrelevant.)
-
- The ``charpath'' operator extracts the graphic shapes of its string
- state.
- These shapes can then be processed by other PostScript operators.
- To get the actual size of the area touched by a character a simple
- approach is
-
-
- gsave
- newpath
- 0 0 moveto
- (X) false charpath flattenpath pathbbox
- grestore
-
- This code places four numbers on the stack, representing the
- coordinates of the lower left and upper right corners of the
- bounding box enclosing the character ``X'' rendered with the
- current point at (0,0). Leaving the flattenpath out will cause it
- to be less accurate, but it will take up less memory and be faster.
-
- There are two things to be careful about when using the code shown
- above:
-
-
-
- 1. There are severe limits on the size of the string operand,
- related to the limit on the number of elements in a graphic path.
- The PostScript Language Reference Manual recommends taking
- ``charpath''s one character at a time.
-
-
- 2. If user space is rotated or skewed with respect to device space,
- the result from ``pathbbox'' may be larger than expected;
- ``pathbbox'' returns a rectangle oriented along the user space
- coordinate axes, which fully encloses a (possibly smaller)
- rectangle oriented along the coordinate axes of device space. If
- user space is rotated at an integer multiple of 90 degrees these
- two rectangles will be the same, otherwise the rectangle in user
- space will be larger.
-
- So, to center text vertically one must get the bounding boxes of
- all the characters in the string to be displayed, find the minimum
- and maximum y coordinate values, and use half the distance between
- them to displace the text vertically. This still may not do a very
- good job, since this provides centering based on extrema, not on
- the optical center of the string (which is more related to a sort
- of ``center of mass'' of the text).
-
- If an application does this repeatedly, it would be wise to store
- the bounding boxes in an array indexed by character code, since
- ``charpath'' is a slow operation.
-
- Font metric information is available outside of a PostScript
- printer in font metrics files, available from the font vendor. A
- program generating PostScript output can obtain metrics from these
- files rather than extracting the metrics in the printer.
-
-
- Subject: 7.8 How can I concatenate two strings together?
-
-
- %% string1 string2 append string
- % Function: Concatenates two strings together.
- /append {
- 2 copy length exch length add % find the length of the new.
- string dup % string1 string2 string string
- 4 2 roll % string string string1 string2
- 2 index 0 3 index
- % string string string1 string2 string 0 string1
- putinterval % stuff the first string in.
- % string string string1 string2
- exch length exch putinterval
- } bind def
-
-
- Subject: 7.9 What do I do when I get stack overflow/underflow?
-
- These errors are among the most common in PostScript.
-
- When I get a stack overflow, that is usually a sign that a routine
- is leaving an object on the stack. If this routine gets called 2000
- times, it leaves 2000 objects on the stack, which is too many.
-
- When I get a stack underflow, that is a sign that either: (A) one
- of the routines in the program doesn't work, and never has or (B)
- one of the routines in the program works, but expects to be called
- with some arguments left on the stack.
-
- There is no such thing as a PostScript debugger right now. For now,
- the best that you can do to debug your program is to put in lots of
- print statements. Learn to use the PostScript pstack command, and
- use an online interpreter so you don't have to run to the printer
- for each debugging cycle.
-
- Use an error handler to learn more about what exactly is happening
- when your program crashes. (see the comp.sources.postscript FAQ for
- a list of all PostScript related programs.)
-
- If your code has never worked yet (i.e. you are still writing it)
- then I find that it helps to put little comments in the margin
- about the state of the stack. Like this:
-
-
- Heart pathbbox % lowerx lowery upperx uppery
- exch 4 -1 roll % lowery uppery upperx lowerx
-
-
- I generally put these comments in originally, and then take them
- out when the program works. Maybe this is a bad practice, in case I
- ever want to go back and look at the code to modify it!!
-
-
- Subject: 7.10 How can I print in landscape mode?
-
- Landscape (the opposite of portrait) means that the page is turned
- on its side. You can redefine showpage in terms of the current
- definition of showpage.
-
- Do something like:
-
-
- /oldshowpage /showpage load def
-
- 90 rotate llx neg ury neg translate % for the first page
- /showpage
- {
- oldshowpage
- 90 rotate llx neg ury neg translate
- } def
-
- This won't work if the PostScript file you're editing uses
- initgraphics or grestoreall. Also note that the method described
- (redefining showpage) does not conform to the document structuring
- conventions. The Adobe recommended method involves performing the
- transformaton as part of the setup for each page.
-
-
- Subject: 8 Computer-specific PostScript
-
- This section describes PostScript information specific to a
- particular type of computer or operating system.
-
-
- Subject: 8.1 Sun Workstations
-
- What is NeWS?
-
- | NeWS (R.I.P.) was Sun Microsystems PostScript-based window system
- | for the Sun Workstation. NeWS was a project within Sun (started
- | around 1985) to create a window system to supplant SunView (a very
- | successful kernel-based window system). NeWS was a client-server
- | model window system (like X) but among many of NeWS novel features
- | was the use of PostScript as the language to describe the
- | appearance of objects on the screen. NeWS had many features in
- | common with Display PostScript, but NeWS predates Adobe Display
- | PostScript and was neither connected with Adobe Display PostScript
- | nor endorsed by Adobe. NeWS was not an Adobe product, nor was it a
- | Sun/Adobe joint venture.
- |
- | As of October 1992, Sun management signed a deal with Adobe to
- | adopt Display PostScript for the Sun. In 1993, Sun finally dropped
- | NeWS altogether. The Sun window system is supposed to start
- | shipping a Display PostScript environment in late 1993.
-
- And how does PostScript run on them?
-
- PostScript runs on NeWS, although NeWS was not a fully-compliant
- PostScript interpreter. There were incompatibilities between the
- NeWS PostScript interpreter and ``official'' PostScript
- interpreters as defined by Adobe and the Apple LaserWriter family
- of printers, such that many PostScript files which would print fine
- on a LaserWriter would not render under NeWS. The most critical
- incompatibility was lack of support for Adobe Type 1 fonts, Sun
- | having gone with their own font format known as F3. F3 fonts have
- | now gone the way of the zumbooruk and will be supplanted by Type 1
- | fonts.
-
-
- Subject: 8.2 IBM PC
-
- You can find nenscript for OS/2 1.x--2.0 and MSDOS on
- ftp-os2.nmsu.edu in pub/uploads/nensc113.zip.
-
- There are rumors that Word Perfect and Microsoft Word don't produce
- ``clean'' PostScript that follows the DSC conventions (See Section
- 9, ``Encapsulated PostScript''). This means that a lot of
- PostScript utilities like Ghostview and psnup, etc., that require
- the DSC conventions, will not work on them.
-
- Creating a PostScript file from MS Word
-
- Install the LaserWriter driver that comes with Windows.In the
- printer setup, select a PostScript printer. Then click on the setup
- button to get that pop-up. Then clik the Options button. Then
- select the print to Encapsulated PostScript File. If you don't
- specify a file name, Word will prompt you for one when you tell it
- to print.
-
- When printing Microsoft Windows files that have been captured on a
- PC's LPT port, you mostly need to define two ctrl-d's in a row as
- well to remove all of them in the document:
-
-
- (\004\004) cvn {} def
-
-
- Subject: 8.3 Apple Macintosh
-
- For more details about printing with the Macintosh, read the
- comp.sys.mac.apps FAQ.
-
- How can I convert a PostScript file created with a UNIX program to
- the Mac?
-
- A way that is clumsy, but works, is this:
-
-
-
- 1. Display the UNIX-based PostScript file on screen
-
-
- 2. Use window dumping facility to get a bitmap file
-
-
- 3. Convert the above bitmap file to TIFF format and then export it
- to Adobe Illustrator on the Mac.
-
- The PostScript section of the FAQ for the Macintosh newsgroup
- comp.sys.mac.apps (maintained by Elliotte Harold) answers the
- following questions:
-
-
-
- * How do I make a PostScript file?
-
-
- * How do I print a PostScript file?
-
-
- * Why won't my PostScript file print on my mainframe's printer?
-
- Full documentation of this process provided with a utility called
- macps.
-
-
- * Why are my PostScript files so big?
-
-
- Subject: 9 Encapsulated PostScript
-
-
- Subject: 9.1 What is Encapsulated PostScript?
-
- Encapsulated PostScript (EPS) is a standard format for importing
- and exporting PostScript language files in all environments. It is
- usually a single page PostScript language program that describes an
- illustration. The purpose of the EPS file is to be included as an
- illustration in other PostScript language page descriptions. The
- EPS file can contain any combination of text, graphics, and images.
- An EPS file is the same as any other PostScript language page
- description, with some restrictions.
-
- EPS files can optionally contain a bitmapped image preview, so that
- systems that can't render PostScript directly can at least display
- a crude representation of what the graphic will look like. There
- are three preview formats: Mac (PICT), IBM (tiff), and a platform
- independent preview called EPSI.
-
- An EPS file must be a conforming file, that is, it must conform to
- the Adobe Document Structuring Conventions (DSC). At a minimum, it
- must include a header comment,%!PS-Adobe-3.0 EPSF-3.0, and a
- bounding box comment,%%BoundingBox: llx lly urx ury, that
- describes the bounds of the illustration.
-
- (The specification does not require the EPSF version, but many
- programs will reject a file that does not have it.)
-
- The EPS program must not use operators that initialize or
- permanently change the state of the machine in a manner that cannot
- be undone by the enclosing application's use of save and restore
- (eg. the operators starting with ``init'' like initgraphics). As a
- special case, the EPS program may use the showpage operator. The
- importing application is responsible for disabling the normal
- effects of showpage.
-
- The EPS program should make no environment-sensitive decisions (the
- importing application may be trying to attain some special effect,
- and the EPS program shouldn't screw this up), although it can use
- some device-dependent tricks to improve appearance such as a
- snap-to-pixel algorithm.
-
- The complete EPS specification is available from Adobe (see the
- section on Adobe). Read Appendix G (Document Structuring
- Conventions, V3.0) and Appendix H (Encapsulated PostScript File
- Format, V3.0) in the new PostScript red book: PostScript Language
- Reference Manual, Second Edition.
-
- An optional component of an EPS file is a ``preview'' image of the
- file's content. The preview image is a bitmapped representation of
- the image which may be displayed by programs using the EPS file
- without having to actually interpret the PostScript code.
-
- The recommended form for a preview image is ``Interchange'' format
- and is described fully in the ``red book'', second edition.
- Interchange format represents the image as a series of hex strings
- placed in the EPS file as PostScript comments. The entire file
- remains an ASCII file.
-
- That book contains all of the information that you need to fix your
- program to correctly output EPS. It is what I use for our software.
-
- A variation of EPS embeds the preview image and PostScript text in
- a binary file which contains a header and the preview image in
- either a TIFF or MetaFile format. The header defines where in the
- file each section (EPS, TIFF, or MetaFile) starts and ends. On the
- Macintosh, the preview is stored as a PICT in the file's resource
- fork.
-
-
- Subject: 9.2 What are EPSI and EPSF?
-
- EPSI is EPS with a device independent bitmap preview. EPSI is an
- all ASCII (no binary data or headers) version of EPS. EPSI provides
- for a hexadecimal encoded preview representation of the image that
- will be displayed or printed.
-
- EPSF is a version of EPS with a TIFF preview instead of a bitmap
- preview.
-
-
- Subject: 9.3 How do I convert PostScript to EPS?
-
- Use pstoepsi, or do it by hand.
-
- To convert from PostScript to EPS, one must guarantee that the
- PostScript file meets the above requirements. If the actual program
- conforms to the programming requirements, then one can simply add
- the required comments at the top of the file saying that the file
- is EPS and giving its BoundingBox dimensions.
-
- Optional comments include font usage (%%DocumentFonts: or%%
- DocumentNeededResources: font), EPSI preview comments (%%
- Begin(End)Preview:) extensions (%%Extensions:) and language
- level (%%LanguageLevel:).
-
- There are some operators that should not be used within an EPS
- file:
-
-
- banddevice cleardictstack copypage erasepage
- exitserver framedevice grestoreall initclip
- initgraphics initmatrix quit renderbands
- setglobal setpagedevice setshared startjob
-
- These also include operators from statusdict and userdict operators
- like legal, letter, a4, b5, etc.
-
- There are some operators that should be carefully used:
-
- nulldevice setgstate sethalftone setmatrix
- setscreen settransfer undefinefont
-
- To convert a PostScript file to EPS format, you must edit the file
- using a text editor or word processor to add lines that will define
- the file as an EPS-format file.
-
-
-
- 1. Using your normal method of printing, print the PostScript file
- to a PostScript printer. You can choose to view it on the screen
- instead, but keep in mind that all the below distance
- measurements assume that you are printing on a normal-sized piece
- of paper.
-
- NOTE: If the PostScript image does not get displayed properly, it
- probably will not work either once you have converted it to EPS
- format. Correct the PostScript program so that it works before
- you convert it to EPS format.
-
-
- 2. Use a tool (see below) to find the bounding box, which shows how
- much space the PostScript image occupies when printed. You
- specify the dimensions of the bounding box when you convert the
- PostScript file to EPS format.
-
-
- 3. If you don't have a bounding box tool, you can just use a ruler
- and draw one on your printout. With two horizontal lines and two
- vertical lines, draw a box around the image that includes the
- entire image while minimizing white space.
-
- This box represents your bounding box. You may want to leave a
- small amount of white space around the image as a precautionary
- measure against minor printing problems, such as paper stretching
- and paper skewing.
-
-
- 4. Measure distance ``a'' from the lower-left corner of the image to
- the left edge of the paper.
-
-
- 5. Write the measurement in points. If your ruler does not show
- points, calculate the total number of points: 1 inch = 72 points,
- . Designate this
- measurement as ``measurement a.''
-
-
- 6. Measure distance ``b'' from the lower-left corner of the image to
- the bottom edge of the paper.
-
- Designate this measurement in points as ``measurement b.''
-
-
- 7. Measure distance ``c'' from the upper-right corner of the image
- to the left edge of the paper.
-
- Designate this measurement in points as ``measurement c.''
-
-
- 8. Measure distance ``d' from the upper-right corner of the image to
- the bottom edge of the paper.
-
- Designate this measurement in points as ``measurement d.''
-
-
- 9. Using any text editor, open the PostScript file for editing.
-
- You'll see several lines of text. These lines are the PostScript
- description of the image. The lines at the top of the file are
- the header.
-
-
- 10. Add these lines to, or modify existing lines in, the header (the
- first group of lines in any PostScript file):
-
-
- %!Adobe-2.0 EPSF
- %%Creator: name
- %%CreationDate: date
- %%Title: filename
- %%BoundingBox: a b c d
-
-
- Note: Make sure that the first line in the file is ``%
- !Adobe-2.0 EPSF.'' Also, do not separate the header lines with a
- blank line space. The first blank line that PostScript encounters
- tells it that the the next line begins the body of the program.
-
- For ``name,'' type your name or initials. For ``date,'' type
- today's date using any format (for example, MM-DD-YY, MM/DD/YY,
- July 5, 1987, and so on). For ``filename,'' type the name of the
- PostScript file. After ``BoundingBox: ,'' type the measurements
- you took in steps 3, 4, 5, and 6, separating each with a space:
- ``a'' is the measurement from Step 3, ``b'' is the measurement
- from Step 4, ``c'' is the measurement from Step 5, and ``d'' is
- the measurement from Step 6.
-
-
- 11. Save the file in text-only format.
-
- If you are interested in learning how to further edit your
- PostScript files, these books are available at most bookstores:
-
- Understanding PostScript Programming and the green book.
-
- The Document Structuring Conventions (DSC), version 1.0, are
- discussed in Appendix C of the old red book. The new red book has a
- lot of information about Encapsulated PostScript.
-
- There will be a technical note available from Adobe called
- ``Guidelines for Specific Operators'' that will talk about why some
- operators are prohibited and how to use the others.
-
-
- Subject: 9.4 How do I get the bounding box of a PostScript picture?
-
- Use bbfig or epsinfo.ps.
-
- Or if you would rather construct the bounding box by hand, use
- Ghostview, which has a continuous readout of the mouse cursor in
- the default user coordinate system. You simply place the mouse in
- the corners of the figure and read off the coordinates.
-
- Subject: 10 About The Comp.Lang.PostScript FAQ (and Usenet Guide to
- PostScript)
-
-
- Subject: 10.1 The PostScript FAQ: What is it?
-
- The PostScript FAQ is a set of answers to frequently asked
- questions (FAQs) that have appeared on the Usenet newsgroup
- comp.lang.postscript. It is broken into many useful sections.
-
- The Usenet Guide to PostScript is a larger set of help and answers
- to PostScript questions, plus a tutorial for new users. It is still
- in the process of being created. There is one file ``Exactly What
- Does a Transformation Matrix Do?'', that is definitely not part of
- the FAQ. Please send more!
-
- I need help writing and revising answers for common questions
- relating to PostScript. Almost all of the information in the
- documents has been written by kind volunteers. The answers will be
- published in either or both documents. A very long answer in the
- Usenet Guide may be summarized, referred to briefly, or not
- mentioned at all in the FAQ.
-
-
- Subject: 10.2 How to get the FAQ files
-
- The FAQ is available by anonymous ftp to
- wilma.cs.brown.edu:pub/comp.lang.postscript/ You can get it
- formatted in plain text ASCII, LaTeX, or PostScript.
-
- I would be happy to email a copy of the FAQ in any format to you if
- you do not have FTP.
-
-
- Subject: 10.3 How to write a FAQ answer
-
- I greatly appreciate your time and effort to help improve the
- quality of the FAQ. Thank you for being willing to contribute!
-
-
- * Please check to see if the topic is already in an FAQ. Perhaps
- you really mean to submit a revision to an existing section.
-
- * Start with a clear statement about what problem you are solving.
-
- * Write for novice users, in ``tutorial format'', even if the
- answer is meant for experienced programmers.
-
- * Be specific when you make references.
-
- * Be complete, and take the time to look over your draft and
- revise.
-
- * Answers should not be too wordy, unless you intend to write a
- long answer for the Usenet Guide and have a shorter summary or a
- pointer to the description placed in the FAQ. If you want to
- write the summary yourself, thanks!
-
- * Obviously, I cannot accept copyrighted material without
- permission. Don't write the FAQ by paraphrasing from a
- copyrighted book!
-
-
- Subject: 10.4 The FAQ can contain LaTeX and PostScript inserts
-
- The FAQ is actually written with LaTeX, so feel free to submit with
- that text formatting language. There is a PostScript version of the
- FAQ also, so feel free to send along PostScript pictures to
- include.
-
-
- Subject: 10.5 Revising the FAQ
-
- Suggestions and comments are welcomed. My favorite way of receiving
- a change suggestion is if you make a copy of the FAQ, edit the
- copy, and mail me the modification, or a context diff (include the
- version number).
-
-
- Subject: 10.6 How to submit new information
-
- If you know something that you think is worthwhile to be put in a
- FAQ, definitely send it to me!
-
- Don't hold back if your information is very specific. If there's
- too much information to post I will archive it at an ftp site and
- place a pointer to it in the FAQ.
-
-
- Subject: 10.7 How to add a program description to the FAQ index
-
- If the program is original, please send it to me, or tell me where
- I can get it. Please put your name and email address at the top of
- each file. Your program will be doubly useful if you clean up the
- program so that other people can use it as an example to learn.
-
- If the program was written by someone else, please send me just the
- title, description, and where to get it. I may already have it.
-
- For programs the FAQ needs to know:
-
-
- * What is the name of the program?
-
- * What does it claim to do, and does it do it well? Is it worth
- using?
-
- * Where is it available? What ftp sites can I get it from?
-
- * How much does it cost? Is it free?
-
- * What kinds of computers does it run on?
-
- * Who is the author and does the author give an email address?
-
- * Does it handle PostScript 2?
-
- * What packages does it rely on?
-
- If the program is a PostScript interpreter, then the FAQ also needs
- to know:
-
-
- * Does it let you go backwards one page?
-
- * Does it display the number of pages in the document?
-
- * Does it let you print PostScript to a non-PostScript printer?
-
- * What formats can it convert to?
-
-
- Subject: 10.8 How to add a book description to the FAQ
-
- For books the FAQ needs to know:
-
-
- * What is the name of the book or document?
-
- * What does it claim to do, and does it do it well? Is it worth
- using?
-
- * Can I get it on-line?
-
- * Who wrote it? Does the author give an email address?
-
- * Who is the publisher, and what is the copyright date?
-
- * Does the publisher list an address and phone number or fax
- number?
-
- * What is the ISBN number of the book?
-
- * What is the library call number of the book?
-
- * How much does the book cost?
-
- * Does it cover PostScript 2?
-
- onymous
- ftp?
-
- * Do the authors sell the coding examples on a diskette?
-
-
- Subject: 10.9 Questions that need answers
-
-
-
- 1. Where are ftp sites that have PostScript freeware?
-
-
- 2. What vendors sell fonts for PostScript printers? Where are the
- free ftp sites for them?
-
-
- 3. Are there any free encapsulated PostScript converters?
-
-
- 4. What is the charter for comp.lang.postscript?
-
-
- 5. What questions should the FAQ have?
-
-
- 6. What book information is wrong or missing in the FAQ?
-
-
- 7. What program information is wrong or missing in the FAQ?
-
-
- 8. What ftp site have good examples of PostScript code?
-