OGONKIFY(1) | General Commands Manual | OGONKIFY(1) |
ogonkify - international support for PostScript
ogonkify [-p procset] [-e encoding] [-r Old=New] [-a] [-c] [-h] [-t] [-A] [-C] [-H] [-T] [-AT] [-CT] [-ATH] [-CTH] [-E] [-N] [-M] [-mp] [-SO] [-AX] [-F] [-RS] [--] file ...
ogonkify does various munging of PostScript files related to printing in different languages. Its main use is to filter the output of Netscape, Mosaic and other programs in order to print in languages that don't use the standard Western-European encoding (ISO 8859-1).
Installation instructions are provided in the file INSTALL. Assuming the installation has been correctly completed, save the PostScript output of Netscape or Mosaic to a file, say output.ps. Then print it using
You may want to change the -AT option to -CT in order to use a high quality Courier font from IBM (at the price of slower printing).
An alternative way to print from Netscape is to set the printing command in the printing dialog box to:
Let us assume that you want to print a WWW page encoded in ISO Latin-2. Netscape stubbornly insists on printing it as ISO Latin-1. By using the File->Print command, have Netscape send the output to a file, say alamakota.ps.
As ogonkify is configured for ISO Latin-2 by default, passing it the PostScript generated by Netscape will correct the encoding of the fonts. It is enough to do:
However, most printers do not have fonts with the needed characters installed; synthesized fonts will be downloaded and used instead of Courier and Times-Roman with -AT, and a very good Courier font from IBM will be used with: -CT. The command will therefore typically be:
or eventually
Typical usage with other programs is:
% ogonkify -M -AT <alamakota.ps | lpr % ogonkify -mp -AT <alamakota.ps | lpr % ogonkify -SO -AT <alamakota.ps | lpr % ogonkify -AX -ATH <alamakota.ps | lpr % ogonkify -XF -ATH <alamakota.ps | lpr
Characters with an `ogonek' should be constructed differently (for instance, the `ogonek' used with an `a' should be differently shaped than the one used with an `e'.)
It would be better to patch the programs we have the sources to than to post-process the produced PostScript.
The program is written in Perl.
In order to view the output PostScript with Ghostscript, you might need to run gs with the flag -dNOPLATFONTS, and ghostview with the flag -arguments -dNOPLATFONTS.
Netscape, IBM, Adobe, PostScript, StarOffice, ApplixWare and possibly others are registered trademarks.
Much of the composite character data have been provided by Primoz Peterlin, H. Turgut Uyar, Ricardas Cepas, Kristof Petrovay and Jan Prikryl.
Jacek Pliszka provided the support for StarOffice. Andrzej Baginski provided the support for ApplixWare.
Markku Rossi wrote genscript and provided many useful encoding vectors with the distribution.
Throughout writing the Postscript code, I used the ghostscript interpreter, by Peter Deutsch.
Larry Wall wrote perl, the syntax and semantics of which are a never ending source of puzzlement.
Juliusz Chroboczek <jec@dcs.ed.ac.uk>, with help from loads of people.
14 May 1999 | McKornik Jr. |