UNIPRINT(1) | LINUX COMMANDS | UNIPRINT(1) |
uniprint - produce postscript output from unicode text for printing
uniprint [ -out output-file ] [ -in input-file ] [ -decode encoding ] [ -printer printer ] [ -L ] [ -media media ] [ -us ] [ -nus ] [ -break ] [ -wrap ] [ -left ] [ -right ] [ -size font-size ] [ -hsize header-font-size ] [ -font truetype-font-file ]
uniprint is a program from the yudit distribution. It makes a formatted poscript output that can be saved or directly sent to the printer. The program needs a TrueType font that has unicode table in order to operate.
If you are running Linux you most probably have unicode truetype fonts, because there are very few vendors, if any. who give discount if you do not buy Windows. If you are running other Unices it is still possible to get a freely available font. I have made ciberbit.ttf a default font for uniprint, mainly because it is freely downloadable from http://www.bitstream.com/.
The postcript output contains all drawing information. No extra fonts are needed, and it can be printed on any postscript printer. You may encounter probkems with old ghostview or old printers. I used this program with ghostscript 5.10 because 2.6.2 gave me stack overflow error.
truetype-font is the full pathname of the font, like /somepath/myfonts/cyberbit.ttf or just the name of the file cyberbit.ttf. The fonts are searched using yudit.fontpath property in ~/.yudit/yudit.properties or /usr/share/yudit/config/yudit.properties. directory where the font files are kept. By default /usr/share/yudit/fonts and ~/.yudit/fonts are searched. This option can be specified multiple times, to create a virtual font.
~/.yudit/yudit.properties or /usr/share/yudit/config/yudit.properties can have yudit.fontpath and yudit.datapath properties. The former is where the font files, the latter is where the map files are kept. By default /usr/share/yudit/fonts is searched.
uniconv
This program was written by gsinai@iname.com (Gaspar Sinai), using the code of ttf2pfa program that was written by Adrew Weeks. Last Updated Tokyo, 2 November, 2001.
Nov 25 1997 | LINUX COMMANDS |