IPB
>  Man Pages > Unix > Solaris 10 11/06 > Section 1 > postdaisy man page

postdaisy man page

Section 1 - Solaris 10 11/06 Man Pages

Other operating system man pages available here


Advanced Search

Hopefully, this page is exactly what you are looking for, but if not, you can always find further assistance on Unix/Linux Forum!





User Commands                                        postdaisy(1)



NAME
     postdaisy - PostScript translator for Diablo 630 daisy-wheel
     files

SYNOPSIS
     postdaisy [-c num] [-f num] [-h num]  [-m num]  [-n num]  [-
     o list]  [-p mode]  [-r num]  [-s num] [-v num ] [-x num] [-
     y num] [file...]

     /usr/lib/lp/postscript/postdaisy

DESCRIPTION
     The postdaisy filter translates Diablo 630 daisy-wheel files
     into  PostScript and writes the results on the standard out-
     put. If no files are specified, or if - is one of the  input
     files, the standard input is read.

OPTIONS
     -c num   Print num copies of each page. By default only  one
              copy is printed.



     -f name  Print files using font name.  Any  PostScript  font
              can  be  used,  although  the  best results will be
              obtained  only  with  constant-width   fonts.   The
              default font is Courier.



     -h num   Set the initial horizontal  motion  index  to  num.
              Determines  the  character  advance and the default
              point size, unless  the  -s  option  is  used.  The
              default is  12.



     -m num   Magnify each logical page by the factor num.  Pages
              are  scaled  uniformly  about  the origin, which is
              located near the upper left corner  of  each  page.
              The default magnification is  1.0.



     -n num   Print num logical pages on  each  piece  of  paper,
              where  num can be any positive integer. By default,
              num is set to  1.



     -o list  Print pages whose numbers are given in  the  comma-
              separated  list. The list contains single numbers N



SunOS 5.10           Last change: 9 Sep 1996                    1






User Commands                                        postdaisy(1)



              and ranges N1 - N2. A missing N1 means  the  lowest
              numbered  page, a missing N2 means the highest. The
              page range is an expression of logical pages rather
              than  physical sheets of paper. For example, if you
              are printing two logical pages to a sheet, and  you
              specified  a  range  of 4, then two sheets of paper
              would print, containing four page layouts.  If  you
              specified  a page range of 3-4, when requesting two
              logical pages to a sheet; then only page 3 and page
              4 layouts would print, and they would appear on one
              physical sheet of paper.



     -p mode  Print files in either portrait or  landscape  mode.
              Only  the  first  character of mode is significant.
              The default mode is portrait.



     -r num   Selects carriage return and line feed behavior.  If
              num  is 1, a line feed generates a carriage return.
              If num is 2, a carriage  return  generates  a  line
              feed. Setting num to 3 enables both modes.



     -s num   Use point size num instead of the default value set
              by the initial horizontal motion index.



     -v num   Set the initial vertical motion index to  num.  The
              default is  8.



     -x num   Translate the origin num inches along the  positive
              x  axis. The default coordinate system has the ori-
              gin fixed near the upper left corner of  the  page,
              with  positive  x  to the right and positive y down
              the page. Positive num moves everything right.  The
              default offset is  0.25 inches.



     -y num   Translate the origin num inches along the  positive
              y  axis.  Positive  num moves text up the page. The
              default offset is  -0.25 inches.






SunOS 5.10           Last change: 9 Sep 1996                    2






User Commands                                        postdaisy(1)



EXIT STATUS
     The following exit values are returned:

     0               Successful completion.



     non-zero        An error occurred.



FILES
     /usr/lib/lp/postscript/forms.ps


     /usr/lib/lp/postscript/ps.requests


ATTRIBUTES
     See attributes(5) for descriptions of the  following  attri-
     butes:

     ____________________________________________________________
    |       ATTRIBUTE TYPE        |       ATTRIBUTE VALUE       |
    |_____________________________|_____________________________|
    | Availability                | SUNWpsf                     |
    |_____________________________|_____________________________|


SEE ALSO
     download(1),  dpost(1),  postdmd(1),  postio(1),  postmd(1),
     postprint(1), postreverse(1), posttek(1), attributes(5)























SunOS 5.10           Last change: 9 Sep 1996                    3





Man(1) output converted with man2html and wrapped by fishsponge

This page was generated on Wed Sep 12 11:25:15 GMT 2007

Your favourite pages:

No pages logged yet.
Trying to save cookie...

Top 10 most popular pages:

sqlite3 man page (5334 hits)
(openSUSE 10.2)

svn man page (5208 hits)
(FreeBSD 6.2)

adv_cap_autoneg man page (4870 hits)
(Solaris 10 11_06)

CPAN man page (4607 hits)
(Suse Linux 10.1)

ssh man page (4342 hits)
(Suse Linux 10.1)

ssh-socks5-proxy-connect man page (2874 hits)
(Solaris 10 11_06)

netcat man page (2717 hits)
(Suse Linux 10.1)

pprosetup man page (2487 hits)
(Solaris 10 11_06)

startproc man page (2471 hits)
(Suse Linux 10.1)

signal man page (2406 hits)
(Suse Linux 10.1)

Useful Links

Go Back

Visitor Statistics


Valid XHTML 1.0 Transitional     Valid CSS!

Partners: Cambridge Plus :: Pyrenees Ski Resorts :: Touch Sensor Chip :: <Link Available>
Unix Man Pages / Linux Man Pages :: HiFi Forum :: SIP VoIP Phone & Provider Reviews :: UNIX/Linux Forum Archives

More info on advertising on Unix/Linux Forum