home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- Copyright (C) 1989, 1992, 1993, 1994 Aladdin Enterprises. All rights reserved.
-
- This file is part of Aladdin Ghostscript.
-
- Aladdin Ghostscript is distributed with NO WARRANTY OF ANY KIND. No author
- or distributor accepts any responsibility for the consequences of using it,
- or for whether it serves any particular purpose or works at all, unless he
- or she says so in writing. Refer to the Aladdin Ghostscript Free Public
- License (the "License") for full details.
-
- Every copy of Aladdin Ghostscript must include a copy of the License,
- normally in a plain ASCII text file named PUBLIC. The License grants you
- the right to copy, modify and redistribute Aladdin Ghostscript, but only
- under certain conditions described in the License. Among other things, the
- License requires that the copyright notice and this notice be preserved on
- all copies.
-
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
-
- This file, use.doc, describes how to use the Ghostscript language
- interpreter.
-
- For an overview of Ghostscript and a list of the documentation files, see
- README.
-
- ********
- ******** How to install Ghostscript ********
- ********
-
- To run Ghostscript, you need the executable program, and also some
- external initialization files:
- gs_*.ps (see psfiles.doc for the full list), unless Ghostscript was
- compiled using the "compiled initialization files" option
- Fontmap
-
- The file name of the executable program depends on the environment;
- see the instructions for the specific platforms below.
-
- The Ghostscript fileset includes a set of fonts (.gsf files); you should
- have them on line as well, unless you have a complete set of other fonts
- (such as ATM or Display PostScript fonts) and are using a Fontmap and/or
- GS_FONTPATH that references them.
-
- VMS
- ---
-
- Installing Ghostscript on a VMS system requires compiling it first. The
- name of the executable is GS.EXE.
-
- You should install all the files, including the fonts, in the same
- directory as the executable and initialization files. By default, this is
- the directory in which you did the compilation. Consult the command file
- (VMS*.MAK) for more details.
-
- If you have DECWindows/Motif installed, you may wish to replace the FONTMAP
- file with the file FONTMAP.VMS. Read the comment at the beginning of the
- latter file for more information.
-
- MS-DOS
- ------
-
- There are two MS-DOS executables in the standard Ghostscript
- distribution:
- - GS.EXE runs on any MS-DOS machine, but is limited to 640K.
- - GS386.EXE runs on any 386 or 486 machine, and will use all
- available extended (not expanded) memory.
-
- You should install all the files except the fonts in C:\GS, and the
- fonts in C:\GS\FONTS.
-
- If you have Adobe Type Manager fonts installed on your system, and you wish
- to use them with Ghostscript, you may wish to replace the FONTMAP file with
- FONTMAP.ATM, and to add to the environment variable GS_LIB the name of the
- directory where the fonts are located (see below for more information about
- GS_LIB). Before you do this, please read carefully the license that
- accompanies the ATM fonts; Aladdin Enterprises takes no responsibility for
- any possible violations of such licenses. Similarly, if you have Adobe
- Type Basics, you may wish to replace FONTMAP with FONTMAP.ATB.
-
- MS Windows
- ----------
-
- The name of the executable is GSWIN.EXE. Ghostscript probably requires
- Windows 3.1, and you must run Windows in 386 Enhanced or Standard (not
- Real) mode. Since Ghostscript is a large program, you will need to run
- Windows in Enhanced mode (so that it can provide virtual memory) unless
- you have at least 6 Mb of RAM.
-
- You should install all the files except the fonts in C:\GS, and the fonts
- in C:\GS\FONTS.
-
- See under "MS-DOS" above for information about using Adobe Type Manager
- fonts with Ghostscript.
-
- The files COMMDLG.DLL and SHELL.DLL supplied with Ghostscript are only for
- use with Windows 3.0. If you have Windows 3.1, delete these files, since
- Windows itself provides versions of them.
-
- If your system uses TrueType fonts, you can get them converted to a
- Ghostscript-compatible format at the time you select your "printer" by
- doing the following:
-
- 1) Open control panel and double click on the printers icon.
- 2) Select your Postscript Printer.
- 3) Choose Setup.
- 4) Choose Options.
- 5) Choose Advanced.
- 6) At the top of the Dialog Box you will see TrueType Fonts
- Send to Printer As: <drop down menu>
- Choose Adobe Type 1.
- 7) Uncheck Use Printer Fonts for All TrueType Fonts
- and Use Substitution Table.
- 8) OK.
- 9) OK etc.
-
- That's it! Your TrueType fonts will automatically be downloaded in your
- PostScript file for Ghostscript to use.
-
- OS/2 2.x
- --------
-
- The Ghostscript OS/2 implementation is designed for OS/2 2.1. A few people
- have used it successfully under OS/2 2.0, but it has had very little
- testing.
-
- The name of the executable is GSOS2.EXE. This is a text application that
- will run windowed or full screen. The default device is "os2pm" which
- displays output in a Presentation Manager window using the external driver
- GSPMDRV.EXE. GSPMDRV.EXE must be located in the same directory as
- GSOS2.EXE or on the PATH.
-
- GSOS2.EXE and GSPMDRV.EXE are compiled using EMX/GCC 0.8h. You must have
- the EMX DLL's on your LIBPATH. These are available from
- ftp.cdrom.com:pub/os2/2_x/unix/gnu/emx08h/emxrt.zip.
-
- The system menu of the Ghostscript Image window includes a "Copy" command
- to copy the currently displayed bitmap to the Clipboard.
-
- OS/2 comes with some Adobe Type Manager fonts. If you wish to use these
- with Ghostscript, you should replace the FONTMAP file with FONTMAP.OS2,
- and add to the environment variable GS_LIB the name of the directory where
- the fonts are located, usually c:\psfonts. (see below for more
- information about GS_LIB). Before you do this, please read carefully the
- license that accompanies the ATM fonts; Aladdin Enterprises takes no
- responsibility for any possible violations of such licenses.
-
- Since GSOS2.EXE is not a PM application, it cannot determine the depth of
- the PM display. You must provide this information using the
- -dBitsPerPixel option. The default is 8 bits/pixel. Valid values are 1,
- 4, 8, 16 & 24.
- For monochrome VGA use -dBitsPerPixel=1
- For standard VGA screen use -dBitsPerPixel=4
- For 256 colour SVGA use -dBitsPerPixel=8
- A command file gspm.cmd containing the following line may be useful:
- @c:\gs\gsos2.exe -Ic:/gs;c:/gs/fonts;c:/psfonts -sDEVICE=os2pm
- -dBitsPerPixel=8 -sPAPERSIZE=a4 %1 %2 %3 %4 %5 %6 %7 %8
-
- While drawing, the os2pm driver updates the display every 5 seconds. On
- slow computers this is undesirable and a different interval can be
- specified in milliseconds with the -dUpdateInterval option. The default
- is -dUpdateInterval=5000; to disable update use -dUpdateInterval=0.
-
- Standard VGA is very slow due to double buffering to avoid bugs and due to
- 1 plane to 4 plane conversion. Use a 256 color display driver by
- preference. Many display drivers have bugs which cause 1 bit/pixel
- bitmaps to be displayed incorrectly.
-
- GSOS2.EXE and GSPMDRV.EXE will stay in memory for the number of minutes
- specified in the environment variable GS_LOAD.
-
- Ghostscript can also be run in a DOS box. Please read the MS-DOS notes,
- since they apply to this environment as well.
-
- If you run GS386 in the OS/2 2.0 or 2.1 DOS Box, you must select the
- "ENABLED" setting for the DPMI_DOS_API option of the DOS Box. GS386
- will not run with the "AUTO" setting.
-
- Unix
- ----
-
- Installing Ghostscript on a Unix system requires compiling it first.
- The name of the executable is gs. The makefile installs all the
- files, except the fonts, in /usr/local or various subdirectories
- thereof. The fonts should be installed in
- /usr/local/lib/ghostscript/fonts. Consult the makefile for more
- details.
-
- ********
- ******** Shell scripts for Ghostscript
- ********
-
- The Ghostscript distribution includes several Unix shell scripts for
- driving Ghostscript in different environments. These are all
- user-contributed code: please contact the user identified in the file, not
- Aladdin Enterprises, if you have questions.
-
- > pv.sh - preview a specified page of a dvi file in an X window.
-
- > sysvlp.sh - System V 3.2 lp interface for parallel printer.
-
- > pj-gs.sh - printing on an H-P PaintJet under HP-UX.
-
- > unix-lpr.sh - queue filter for lpr under Unix.
- > lprsetup.sh - setup for unix-lpr.sh.
-
- If one of these serves your needs, you may be able to skip most of
- the rest of this document.
-
- ********
- ******** How to use Ghostscript ********
- ********
-
- To invoke the interpreter, give the command
- gs <filename1> ... <filenameN>
- The interpreter will read in the files in sequence and execute them.
- After doing this, it reads further input from the primary input stream
- (normally the keyboard). Each line (i.e. characters up to a <return>) is
- interpreted separately. To exit from the interpreter, type quit<return>.
- The interpreter also exits gracefully if it encounters end-of-file.
- Typing the interrupt character, e.g., control-C, is also safe.
-
- The interpreter recognizes several switches described below, which may appear
- anywhere in the command line and apply to all files thereafter.
-
- You can get a brief help message by invoking Ghostscript with
- gs -h
- or
- gs -?
- This message also lists the available devices. For a little more
- information about available devices, a one-line description of each device
- appears near the beginning of the file devs.mak.
-
- Choosing the output device
- --------------------------
-
- Ghostscript may be built with multiple output devices. Ghostscript
- normally opens the first one and directs output to it. To use device xyz
- as the initial output device, include the switch
- -sDEVICE=xyz
- in the command line. Note that this switch must precede the first .ps
- file, and only its first invocation has any effect. For example, for
- printer output in a normal configuration that includes an Epson printer
- driver, you might use the shell command
- gs -sDEVICE=epson myfile.ps
- instead of just
- gs myfile.ps
- Alternatively, once you are inside Ghostscript, you can type
- (epson) selectdevice
- (myfile.ps) run
- All output then goes to the printer instead of the display until further
- notice. You can switch devices at any time by using the selectdevice
- procedure, e.g.,
- (vga) selectdevice
- or
- (epson) selectdevice
- As yet a third alternative, you can define an environment variable
- GS_DEVICE as the desired default device name. The order of precedence for
- these alternatives, highest to lowest, is:
- selectdevice
- (command line)
- GS_DEVICE
- (first device in build list)
-
- To select the density on a printer, use the shell command
- gs -sDEVICE=<device> -r<xres>x<yres>
- For example, on a 9-pin Epson-compatible printer, you can get the
- lowest-density (fastest) mode with
- gs -sDEVICE=epson -r60x72
- and the highest-density mode with
- gs -sDEVICE=epson -r240x72.
- On a 24-pin printer, the lowest density is
- gs -sDEVICE=epson -r60x60
- and the highest-density 24-pin mode is
- gs -sDEVICE=epson -r360x180
-
- If you select a printer as the output device, Ghostscript also allows you
- to control where the device sends its output. Normally, output goes
- directly to the printer (PRN) on MS-DOS systems, and to a scratch file on
- Unix or VMS systems. To send the output to a series of files foo1.xyz,
- foo2.xyz, ..., use the switch
- -sOutputFile=foo%d.xyz
- (For compatibility with older versions of Ghostscript, -sOUTPUTFILE=
- also works.) The %d is a printf format specification; you can use
- other formats like %02d. Each file will receive one page of output.
- Alternatively, to send the output to a single file foo.xyz, with all
- the pages concatenated, use the switch
- -sOutputFile=foo.xyz
-
- On Unix systems, you can send the output directly to a pipe. For
- example, to pipe the output to the command `lpr' (which, on many Unix
- systems, is the command that spools output for a printer), use the
- switch
- -sOutputFile=\|lpr
- You can also send output to stdout for piping with the switch
- -sOutputFile=-
- In this case you must also use the -q switch, to prevent Ghostscript from
- writing messages to stdout.
-
- To find out what devices are available, type
- devicenames ==
- after starting up Ghostscript. Alternatively you can use the -h or
- -? switch in the command line, as described above.
-
- Choosing paper size
- -------------------
-
- Ghostscript is normally configured to expect U.S. letter paper. To select
- a different paper size as the default, find the line in gs_init.ps that
- says
-
- % Optionally choose a default paper size other than U.S. letter.
-
- The next line begins
-
- % (a4)
-
- To select A4 as the default paper size, remove the % but do not change
- anything else. To select a different default paper size, remove the % and
- replace the word a4 with the name of the desired paper size. You can use
- any paper size listed in the table at the beginning of gs_statd.ps.
- (Individual documents can also specify a paper size, which will take
- precedence over the one specified on the command line.)
-
- Alternatively, to select a different paper size for a single invocation of
- Ghostscript, you can use the command line switch
- -sPAPERSIZE=a_known_paper_size
- e.g.,
- -sPAPERSIZE=a4
- or
- -sPAPERSIZE=legal
-
- Finally, most (but not all) of Ghostscript's printer drivers can be
- configured at compile time to use A4 paper as the default by including
- -DA4 in the CFLAGS switches in the makefile. See make.doc for more
- details.
-
- File searching
- --------------
-
- When looking for the initialization files (gs_*.ps), the files related to
- fonts, or the file for the 'run' operator, Ghostscript first checks whether
- the file name specifies an explicit directory or drive (i.e., doesn't begin
- with '/' on Unix systems; doesn't contain a ':' or begin with a '/' or '\'
- on MS-DOS systems; doesn't contain a ':' or a square bracket on VMS
- systems). If it does, Ghostscript simply tries to open the file using the
- given name. Otherwise, Ghostscript will try directories in the following
- order:
-
- - The directory/ies specified by the -I switch(es) in the command
- line (see below), if any;
-
- - The directory/ies specified by the GS_LIB environment variable,
- if any;
-
- - The directory/ies specified by the GS_LIB_DEFAULT macro in the
- Ghostscript makefile, if any.
-
- Each of these (GS_LIB_DEFAULT, GS_LIB, and -I parameter) may be either a
- single directory, or a list of directories separated by a character
- appropriate for the operating system (':' on Unix systems, ';' on VMS
- systems, ';' on MS-DOS systems). Note that Ghostscript does *not* attempt
- to open the file in the current directory. This is consistent with common
- practice on Unix, but it is different from the usual practice on MS-DOS.
-
- When Ghostscript starts up, it also looks at the GS_FONTPATH environment
- variable, which is also a list of directories. It goes to those
- directories and looks for all files that appear to contain PostScript
- fonts; it then effectively adds all those files and fonts to its internal
- copy of the Fontmap (the catalog of fonts and the files that contain
- them). If you are using one of the following types of computer, you may
- wish to set GS_FONTPATH to the indicated value so that Ghostscript will
- automatically acquire all the installed Type 1 fonts:
-
- System type GS_FONTPATH
- ----------- -----------
- AIX /usr/lpp/DPS/fonts/outlines
- NeXT /NextLibrary/Fonts/outline
- OSF/1 /usr/lib/X11/fonts/Type1Adobe
- Silicon Graphics /usr/lib/DPS/outline/base
- Sun (Solaris 2.3) /usr/openwin/lib/X11/fonts/Type1/outline
- Ultrix /usr/lib/DPS/outline/decwin
-
- These paths may not be exactly right for your installation; if the
- indicated directory doesn't contain files whose names are familiar font
- names like Courier and Helvetica, you may wish to ask your system
- administrator where to find these fonts.
-
- Temporary files
- ---------------
-
- By default, Ghostscript creates temporary files named _temp_XX.XXX in the
- current directory on MS-DOS and VMS systems, gsXXXXXX in the current
- directory on OS/2 systems, and gs_XXXXX in the /tmp directory on Unix
- systems. You can change the directory in which Ghostscript will create
- these files by setting the TEMP environment variable to the name of the
- directory.
-
- Ghostscript currently doesn't do a very good job of deleting temporary
- files when it exits; you may have to delete them manually from time to
- time.
-
- Environment variable summary
- ----------------------------
-
- GS_DEVICE
- Defines the default output device. Described above.
-
- GS_FONTPATH
- Specifies a list of directories that should be scanned for fonts
- at startup. Described above.
-
- GS_LIB
- Provides a search path for initialization files and fonts.
- Described above.
-
- GS_OPTIONS
- Defines a list of command line arguments to be processed before
- the ones actually specified on the command line. For example, setting
- GS_DEVICE to xxx is equivalent to setting GS_OPTIONS to -sDEVICE=xxx. The
- contents of GS_OPTIONS are not limited to switches; they may include
- actual file names or even @file arguments.
-
- TEMP
- Defines a directory name for temporary files. Described above.
-
- ********
- ******** Notes on specific platforms ********
- ********
-
- VMS
- ---
-
- On VMS systems, the last character of each "directory" name indicates what
- sort of entity the "directory" references. If the "directory" name ends
- with a colon, it is taken as referring to a logical device, e.g.:
- $ DEFINE GHOSTSCRIPT_DEVICE DUA1:[GHOSTSCRIPT_14]
- $ DEFINE GS_LIB GHOSTSCRIPT_DEVICE:
- If the "directory" name ends with a closing square bracket, it is taken as
- referring to a real directory, e.g.:
- $ DEFINE GS_LIB DUA1:[GHOSTSCRIPT]
-
- To run Ghostscript with switches, you must type a command like
-
- $ gs "-dNODISPLAY"
-
- because the C run time library will convert the command
- parameters/arguments to lowercase unless you enclose them in double quotes
- which preserves the case.
-
- If you are on an X Windows display (for which gs is built), you can do
-
- $ set display/create/node="domain-name"/transport=tcpip
-
- For example,
-
- $ set display/create/node="doof.city.com"/transport=tcpip
-
- and then run Ghostscript
-
- $ gs
-
- If you write printer output to a file and then want to print the file
- later, use the "/PASSALL" qualifier to the PRINT command.
-
- MS-DOS
- ------
-
- Ghostscript supports many SuperVGA displays directly, most of them with
- more than 16 colors. The complete list is in the file devs.mak, which is
- part of the Ghostscript source code. (If you got Ghostscript under the
- Aladdin Ghostscript Free Public License, the person or place from which you
- got it is also required to make the source code available to you; if you
- got it under the GNU License, see the GNU License for more information.)
-
- If you are running Ghostscript on a MS-DOS machine with a display
- that is not EGA/VGA compatible, you must use the Borland compiler.
- You must build Ghostscript with the BGI driver as the default, and
- you will need the appropriate .BGI file from the Borland Turbo C
- library. (Ghostscript includes the EGA/VGA driver in the
- executable.)
-
- If you are using the BGI driver, two additional environment variables
- become relevant:
-
- BGIPATH - defines the directory where Ghostscript will look for
- the appropriate BGI driver. If BGIPATH is not defined, Ghostscript will
- look in the directory defined as BGIDIR in the makefile. In either case,
- if no driver is found in the designated directory, Ghostscript will look
- in the current directory.
-
- BGIUSER - a string of the form nn.dname, where nn is a hexadecimal
- number giving a display mode and dname is the name of a file containing a
- user-supplied BGI driver. If BGIUSER is defined and the BGI device is
- selected, Ghostscript will supply nn as the display mode and will obtain
- the driver from the file named dname.
-
- Some applications, such as Microsoft Word, require a prologue in front of
- the PostScript files they output. In the case of Word, this is one of the
- *.ini files included with the Word distribution. Other applications may
- require other prologues. These may be specified on the Ghostscript
- command line, e.g.,
- gs prologue.ini myfile.ps
-
- X Windows
- ---------
-
- Ghostscript looks for the following resources under the program name
- "ghostscript" and class name "Ghostscript":
-
- Name Class Default
- ---- ----- -------
- background Background white
- foreground Foreground black
- borderColor BorderColor black
- borderWidth BorderWidth 1
- geometry Geometry NULL
- xResolution Resolution **
- yResolution Resolution **
- useExternalFonts UseExternalFonts true
- useScalableFonts UseScalableFonts true
- logExternalFonts LogExternalFonts false
- externalFontTolerance ExternalFontTolerance 10.0
- palette Palette Color
- maxGrayRamp MaxGrayRamp 128
- maxRGBRamp MaxRGBRamp 5
- useBackingPixmap UseBackingPixmap true
- useXPutImage UseXPutImage true
- useXSetTile UseXSetTile true
- regularFonts RegularFonts see below
- symbolFonts SymbolFonts see below
- dingbatFonts DingbatFonts see below
-
- ** Calculated from display metrics.
-
- Notes on Resources:
-
- Ghostscript doesn't look at the default system background and
- foreground colors; if you want to change the background or
- foreground color, you must set them explicitly for Ghostscript.
- (This is a deliberate choice, so that PostScript documents will
- display correctly -- with white = white and black = black --
- by default, even if text windows use other colors.)
-
- The geometry resource only affects window placement.
-
- Resolution is given in pixels per inch.
-
- The font tolerance gives largest acceptable difference in
- height of the screen font. The tolerance is expressed as
- a percentage of the height of the desired font.
-
- The palette resource can be used to restrict ghostscript to
- using a grayscale or monochrome palette.
-
- The maxRGBRamp and maxGrayRamp control the maximum number of
- colors that ghostscript allocates ahead of time for the dither
- cube/ramp. Ghostscript will never preallocate more than half
- of the cells in a colormap.
-
- The use... resources exist primarily to work around bugs in X servers.
-
- Some servers do not implement backing pixmaps properly, or do not
- have enough memory for them. If you get strange behavior or "out
- of memory" messages, try setting useBackingPixmap to false.
-
- Some servers do not implement tiling properly. This will show up
- as broad bands of color where dither patterns should appear. If
- this happens, try setting useXSetTile to false.
-
- Some servers do not implement bitmap/pixmap displaying properly.
- This may show up as white or black rectangles where characters
- should appear, or characters may appear in "inverse video" (e.g.,
- white on a black rectangle). If this happens, try setting
- useXPutImage to false.
-
- To use native X11 fonts, Ghostscript must map PostScript font names to
- the XLFD font names. The regularFonts, symbolFonts, and dingbatFonts
- resources give the name mapping for different encodings. The XLFD font
- name in the mapping must contain seven dashes. The X driver adds the
- additional size and encoding fields to bring the total number of dashes
- in the font name to 14. Here are the default font mappings:
-
- Regular Fonts: (Fonts available in standard or ISO-Latin-1 encoding)
-
- AvantGarde-Book:-Adobe-ITC Avant Garde Gothic-Book-R-Normal--\n\
- AvantGarde-BookOblique:-Adobe-ITC Avant Garde Gothic-Book-O-Normal--\n\
- AvantGarde-Demi:-Adobe-ITC Avant Garde Gothic-Demi-R-Normal--\n\
- AvantGarde-DemiOblique:-Adobe-ITC Avant Garde Gothic-Demi-O-Normal--\n\
- Bookman-Demi:-Adobe-ITC Bookman-Demi-R-Normal--\n\
- Bookman-DemiItalic:-Adobe-ITC Bookman-Demi-I-Normal--\n\
- Bookman-Light:-Adobe-ITC Bookman-Light-R-Normal--\n\
- Bookman-LightItalic:-Adobe-ITC Bookman-Light-I-Normal--\n\
- Courier:-Adobe-Courier-Medium-R-Normal--\n\
- Courier-Bold:-Adobe-Courier-Bold-R-Normal--\n\
- Courier-BoldOblique:-Adobe-Courier-Bold-O-Normal--\n\
- Courier-Oblique:-Adobe-Courier-Medium-O-Normal--\n\
- Helvetica:-Adobe-Helvetica-Medium-R-Normal--\n\
- Helvetica-Bold:-Adobe-Helvetica-Bold-R-Normal--\n\
- Helvetica-BoldOblique:-Adobe-Helvetica-Bold-O-Normal--\n\
- Helvetica-Narrow:-Adobe-Helvetica-Medium-R-Narrow--\n\
- Helvetica-Narrow-Bold:-Adobe-Helvetica-Bold-R-Narrow--\n\
- Helvetica-Narrow-BoldOblique:-Adobe-Helvetica-Bold-O-Narrow--\n\
- Helvetica-Narrow-Oblique:-Adobe-Helvetica-Medium-O-Narrow--\n\
- Helvetica-Oblique:-Adobe-Helvetica-Medium-O-Normal--\n\
- NewCenturySchlbk-Bold:-Adobe-New Century Schoolbook-Bold-R-Normal--\n\
- NewCenturySchlbk-BoldItalic:-Adobe-New Century Schoolbook-Bold-I-Normal--\n\
- NewCenturySchlbk-Italic:-Adobe-New Century Schoolbook-Medium-I-Normal--\n\
- NewCenturySchlbk-Roman:-Adobe-New Century Schoolbook-Medium-R-Normal--\n\
- Palatino-Bold:-Adobe-Palatino-Bold-R-Normal--\n\
- Palatino-BoldItalic:-Adobe-Palatino-Bold-I-Normal--\n\
- Palatino-Italic:-Adobe-Palatino-Medium-I-Normal--\n\
- Palatino-Roman:-Adobe-Palatino-Medium-R-Normal--\n\
- Times-Bold:-Adobe-Times-Bold-R-Normal--\n\
- Times-BoldItalic:-Adobe-Times-Bold-I-Normal--\n\
- Times-Italic:-Adobe-Times-Medium-I-Normal--\n\
- Times-Roman:-Adobe-Times-Medium-R-Normal--\n\
- ZapfChancery-MediumItalic:-Adobe-ITC Zapf Chancery-Medium-I-Normal--
-
- Symbol Fonts: (using Symbol encoding)
-
- Symbol: -Adobe-Symbol-Medium-R-Normal--
-
- Dingbat Fonts: (using Dingbat encoding)
-
- ZapfDingbats: -Adobe-ITC Zapf Dingbats-Medium-R-Normal--
-
- For X11/NeWS, one can use the OpenWindows scalable fonts instead, which
- will give good quality output for any point size. In this environment,
- the relevant section of the resource file should look like this:
-
- Ghostscript.regularFonts: \
- AvantGarde-Book: -itc-avantgarde-book-r-normal-- \n\
- AvantGarde-BookOblique: -itc-avantgarde-book-o-normal-- \n\
- AvantGarde-Demi: -itc-avantgarde-demi-r-normal-- \n\
- AvantGarde-DemiOblique: -itc-avantgarde-demi-o-normal-- \n\
- Bembo: -monotype-bembo-medium-r-normal-- \n\
- Bembo-Bold: -monotype-bembo-bold-r-normal-- \n\
- Bembo-BoldItalic: -monotype-bembo-bold-i-normal-- \n\
- Bembo-Italic: -monotype-bembo-medium-i-normal-- \n\
- Bookman-Demi: -itc-bookman-demi-r-normal-- \n\
- Bookman-DemiItalic: -itc-bookman-demi-i-normal-- \n\
- Bookman-Light: -itc-bookman-light-r-normal-- \n\
- Bookman-LightItalic: -itc-bookman-light-i-normal-- \n\
- Courier: -itc-courier-medium-r-normal-- \n\
- Courier-Bold: -itc-courier-bold-r-normal-- \n\
- Courier-BoldOblique: -itc-courier-bold-o-normal-- \n\
- Courier-Oblique: -itc-courier-medium-o-normal-- \n\
- GillSans: -monotype-gill-medium-r-normal-sans- \n\
- GillSans-Bold: -monotype-gill-bold-r-normal-sans- \n\
- GillSans-BoldItalic: -monotype-gill-bold-i-normal-sans- \n\
- GillSans-Italic: -monotype-gill-normal-i-normal-sans- \n\
- Helvetica: -linotype-helvetica-medium-r-normal-- \n\
- Helvetica-Bold: -linotype-helvetica-bold-r-normal-- \n\
- Helvetica-BoldOblique: -linotype-helvetica-bold-o-normal-- \n\
- Helvetica-Narrow: -linotype-helvetica-medium-r-narrow-- \n\
- Helvetica-Narrow-Bold: -linotype-helvetica-bold-r-narrow-- \n\
- Helvetica-Narrow-BoldOblique: -linotype-helvetica-bold-o-narrow-- \n\
- Helvetica-Narrow-Oblique: -linotype-helvetica-medium-o-narrow-- \n\
- Helvetica-Oblique: -linotype-helvetica-medium-o-normal-- \n\
- LucidaBright: -b&h-lucidabright-medium-r-normal-- \n\
- LucidaBright-Demi: -b&h-lucidabright-demibold-r-normal-- \n\
- LucidaBright-DemiItalic: -b&h-lucidabright-demibold-i-normal-- \n\
- LucidaBright-Italic: -b&h-lucidabright-medium-i-normal-- \n\
- LucidaSans: -b&h-lucida-medium-r-normal-sans- \n\
- LucidaSans-Bold: -b&h-lucida-bold-r-normal-sans- \n\
- LucidaSans-BoldItalic: -b&h-lucida-bold-i-normal-sans- \n\
- LucidaSans-Italic: -b&h-lucida-medium-i-normal-sans- \n\
- LucidaSans-Typewriter: -b&h-lucidatypewriter-medium-r-normal-sans- \n\
- LucidaSans-TypewriterBold: -b&h-lucidatypewriter-bold-r-normal-sans- \n\
- NewCenturySchlbk-BoldItalic: -linotype-new century schoolbook-bold-i-normal-- \n\
- NewCenturySchlbk-Bold: -linotype-new century schoolbook-bold-r-normal-- \n\
- NewCenturySchlbk-Italic: -linotype-new century schoolbook-medium-i-normal-- \n\
- NewCenturySchlbk-Roman: -linotype-new century schoolbook-medium-r-normal-- \n\
- Palatino-Bold: -linotype-palatino-bold-r-normal-- \n\
- Palatino-BoldItalic: -linotype-palatino-bold-i-normal-- \n\
- Palatino-Italic: -linotype-palatino-medium-i-normal-- \n\
- Palatino-Roman: -linotype-palatino-medium-r-normal-- \n\
- Rockwell: -monotype-rockwell-medium-r-normal-- \n\
- Rockwell-Bold: -monotype-rockwell-bold-r-normal-- \n\
- Rockwell-BoldItalic: -monotype-rockwell-bold-i-normal-- \n\
- Rockwell-Italic: -monotype-rockwell-medium-i-normal-- \n\
- Times-Bold: -linotype-times-bold-r-normal-- \n\
- Times-BoldItalic: -linotype-times-bold-i-normal-- \n\
- Times-Italic: -linotype-times-medium-i-normal-- \n\
- Times-Roman: -linotype-times-medium-r-normal-- \n\
- Utopia-Bold: -adobe-utopia-bold-r-normal-- \n\
- Utopia-BoldItalic: -adobe-utopia-bold-i-normal-- \n\
- Utopia-Italic: -adobe-utopia-regular-i-normal-- \n\
- Utopia-Regular: -adobe-utopia-regular-r-normal-- \n\
- ZapfChancery-MediumItalic: -itc-zapfchancery-medium-i-normal-- \n
- Ghostscript.dingbatFonts: \
- ZapfDingbats: -itc-zapfdingbats-medium-r-normal--
- Ghostscript.symbolFonts: \
- Symbol: --symbol-medium-r-normal--
-
- Users who switch regularly between different X servers may wish to use the
- '*' wild card in place of the foundry name (itc, monotype, linotype, b&h,
- or adobe); users who do not switch X servers should leave the explicit
- foundry in the name, since it speeds up font accessing.
-
- To set these resources, put them in a file (such as ~/.Xdefaults) in the
- following form:
-
- Ghostscript*geometry: -0+0
- Ghostscript*xResolution: 72
- Ghostscript*yResolution: 72
-
- Then load the defaults into the X server:
-
- % xrdb -merge ~/.Xdefaults
-
- Ghostscript will take advantage of the "HP XLFD Enhancements," if
- available, to use native X11 fonts for fonts that are anamorphically
- scaled, rotated, or mirrored. If the user has installed these changes to
- their X or font server, they will automatically be used when appropriate.
-
- ********
- ******** Switches
- ********
-
- Unless otherwise noted, these apply to all platforms.
-
- Normal switches
- ---------------
-
- @filename
- Causes Ghostscript to read filename and treat its
- contents the same as the command line. (This is
- intended primarily for getting around MS-DOS's
- 128-character limit on the length of a command line.)
- Switches or file names in the file may be separated by
- any amount of white space (space, tab, line break);
- there is no limit on the size of the file.
-
- -- filename arg1 ...
- -+ filename arg1 ...
- Takes the next argument as a file name as usual, but takes
- all remaining arguments (even if they have the syntactic
- form of switches) and defines the name ARGUMENTS in
- userdict (not systemdict) as an array of those strings,
- *before* running the file. When Ghostscript finishes
- executing the file, it exits back to the shell.
-
- -@ filename arg1 ...
- Does the same thing as -- and -+, but expands @filename
- arguments.
-
- -c tokens ...
- Interprets arguments, up to the next argument that begins
- with - followed by a non-digit or with @, as PostScript
- code. For example, if the file quit.ps contains just
- the word `quit', the following are equivalent:
- quit.ps
- and
- -c quit
- Each argument must be exactly one token, as defined by
- the `token' operator.
-
- -Dname=token
- -dname=token
- Define a name in systemdict with the given definition.
- The token must be exactly one token (as defined by the
- 'token' operator) and must not contain any whitespace.
-
- -Dname
- -dname
- Define a name in systemdict with value=true.
-
- -Sname=string
- -sname=string
- Define a name in systemdict with a given string as value.
- This is different from -d. For example,
- -dname=35
- is equivalent to the program fragment
- /name 35 def
- whereas
- -sname=35
- is equivalent to
- /name (35) def
-
- -q
- Quiet startup -- suppress normal startup messages,
- and also do the equivalent of -dQUIET.
-
- -ffilename
- Execute the given file, even if its name begins with a -
- or an @. -f alone does nothing, but it provides a
- convenient way to terminate the list of tokens for the -c
- switch.
-
- -gnumber1xnumber2
- Equivalent to -dDEVICEWIDTH=number1 and
- -dDEVICEHEIGHT=number2. This is for the benefit of
- devices (such as X11 windows and VESA displays) that require
- (or allow) width and height to be specified.
-
- -rnumber
- -rnumber1xnumber2
- Equivalent to -dDEVICEXRESOLUTION=number1 and
- -dDEVICEYRESOLUTION=number2. This is for the benefit of
- devices (such as printers) that support multiple
- X and Y resolutions.
-
- -Idirectories
- Adds the designated list of directories at the head of the
- search path for library files.
-
- -
- This is not really a switch. It indicates to Ghostscript
- that the standard input is coming from a file or a pipe.
- Ghostscript reads from stdin until reaching end-of-file,
- executing it like any other file, and then continues
- processing the command line. At the end of the command
- line, Ghostscript exits rather than going into its
- interactive mode.
-
- Note that gs_init.ps makes systemdict read-only, so the values of names
- defined with -D/d/S/s cannot be changed (although, of course, they can be
- superseded by definitions in userdict or other dictionaries.)
-
- Special names
- -------------
-
- -dDISKFONTS
- causes individual character outlines to be loaded from the disk
- the first time they are encountered. (Normally Ghostscript loads all the
- character outlines when it loads a font.) This may allow loading more
- fonts into RAM, at the expense of slower rendering.
-
- -dNOBIND
- disables the 'bind' operator. Only useful for debugging.
-
- -dNOCACHE
- disables character caching. Only useful for debugging.
-
- -dNODISPLAY
- suppresses the normal initialization of the output device. This
- may be useful when debugging.
-
- -dNOPAUSE
- disables the prompt and pause at the end of each page. This may
- be desirable for applications where another program is 'driving'
- Ghostscript.
-
- -dNOPLATFONTS
- disables the use of fonts supplied by the underlying platform
- (X Windows or Microsoft Windows). This may be needed if the platform
- fonts look undesirably different from the scalable fonts.
-
- -dSAFER
- disables the deletefile and renamefile operators, and the
- ability to open files in any mode other than read-only. This may be
- desirable for spoolers or other sensitive environments.
-
- -dWRITESYSTEMDICT
- leaves systemdict writable. This is necessary when running
- special utility programs such as font2c and pcharstr, which must bypass
- normal PostScript access protection.
-
- -sDEVICE=device
- selects an alternate initial output device, as described above.
-
- -sOutputFile=filename
- selects an alternate output file (or pipe) for the initial output
- device, as described above.
-
- Debugging switches
- ------------------
-
- The -Z switch only applies if the interpreter was built for a
- debugging configuration (DEBUG=1 or -DDEBUG selected at compile
- time).
-
- -A Fill empty storage with a distinctive bit pattern
- for debugging. Equivalent to -Z@.
-
- -E Turn on tracing of error returns from operators.
- Equivalent to -Z#.
-
- -Mn Force the interpreter's allocator to acquire additional
- memory in units of nK, rather than the default (currently
- 20K on MS-DOS systems, 50K on Unix). n is a positive
- decimal integer (not exceeding 63 on MS-DOS systems).
-
- -Zxxx Turn on debugging printout.
- Each of the xxx characters selects an option.
- Case is significant.
- 0 = OS-related calls
- 1 = type 1 font interpreter (type1addpath)
- 2 = curve subdivider/rasterizer
- 3 = curve subdivider/rasterizer, detail
- 4 = garbage collector (strings)
- 5 = garbage collector (strings, detail)
- 6 = garbage collector (chunks, roots)
- 7 = garbage collector (objects)
- 8 = garbage collector (refs)
- 9 = garbage collector (pointers)
- a = allocator (large blocks only)
- A = allocator (all calls)
- b = bitmap image processor
- B = bitmap images, detail
- c = color/halftone mapper
- d = dictionary put/undef
- D = dictionary lookups
- f = fill algorithm (summary)
- F = fill algorithm (detail)
- g = gsave/grestore[all]
- h = halftone renderer
- H = halftones, every pixel
- i = interpreter, just names
- I = interpreter, everything
- j = (Japanese) composite fonts
- k = character cache & xfonts
- K = character cache, every access
- l = command lists, bands
- L = command lists, everything
- m = makefont and font cache
- n = name lookup (new names only)
- o = outliner (stroke)
- O = stroke detail
- p = path tracer
- q = clipping
- r = arc renderer
- s = streams
- S = scanner
- t = tiling algorithm
- u = undo saver (for save/restore)
- U = undo saver, more detail
- v = rectangle fill
- V = device-level output
- w = compression encoder/decoder
- x = transformations
- y = Type 1 hints
- Y = Type 1 hints, every access
- z = trapezoid fill
- # = operator error returns
- The following switches select debugging options other than
- printout.
- + = use minimum-size stack blocks
- @ = clear storage when allocating or freeing
-
- ********
- ******** Frequently Asked Questions
- ********
-
- Q: The spacing of characters / words / margins on the display is
- wrong, what can I do?
-
- A: This is almost always caused by differences between the character
- widths that were used to format the document and the character widths
- of the fonts installed in your system. (This only affects the
- display, and only with window systems, not with MS-DOS.) If this
- happens, invoke Ghostscript with the -dNOPLATFONTS switch, or (on X
- Windows) set
- Ghostscript*useExternalFonts: false
- in your X resource file.
-
- For more information about fonts on the display, please read the
- first sections of fonts.doc.
-
- Q: On my H-P LaserJet, why do I only get a partial page of output, or a
- single page gets split across two sheets?
-
- A: Printing on a Hewlett-Packard LaserJet at full resolution (300 DPI)
- requires a printer with at least 1.5 Mb of memory. 150 DPI printing
- requires only .5 Mb. You can select 150 DPI printing with the command
- line switch
- -r150
- (This is not necessary on DeskJet printers.)
-
- Q: On my MS-DOS system using GS.EXE (Borland compiler), why do I get a
- `limitcheck in setdevice' or `VMerror in setdevice' error message?
-
- A: On MS-DOS systems using the Borland compiler, if Ghostscript gives you
- a 'limitcheck in setdevice' error, it may mean Ghostscript's standard
- buffer size wasn't large enough. Likewise, if Ghostscript gives you a
- 'VMerror in setdevice' error, it means the buffer size was too large. You
- can use the -dBufferSpace= switch to set the buffer size to a different
- value, e.g.,
- -dBufferSpace=50000
- The default value is 25000; the smallest value Ghostscript accepts is
- 10000; the largest valid value is 65000.
-