Annotation of 43BSDReno/share/doc/ucs/X/ximpv.1, revision 1.1.1.1

1.1       root        1: .TH XIMPV 1 "30 August 1985" "X Version 10"
                      2: .SH NAME
                      3: ximpv \- Imprint (Impress) Previewer for the X Window System
                      4: .SH SYNOPSIS
                      5: .B ximpv
                      6: [=\fIgeometry\fP] [-p#] [-rv] [-fg \fIcolor\fP] [-bg \fIcolor\fP] [-bd \fIcolor\fP] [-ms \fIcolor\fP] [\fIhost\fP:\fIdisplay\fP] file
                      7: .SH DESCRIPTION
                      8: .I Ximpv
                      9: is a program which runs under the X window system. It
                     10: is used to preview images which is destined for an Imagen laser
                     11: printer.
                     12: .PP
                     13: The 
                     14: .I -p# 
                     15: option, if used, will set the number of pages you can back up to #. Default
                     16: is five pages. Zero (or no number) runs faster as the pages do not have to be 
                     17: transferred to disk.
                     18: .PP
                     19: If the 
                     20: .I file 
                     21: given to ximpv is correct a square will appear on the
                     22: screen indicating text is about to appear.
                     23: If no 
                     24: .I file 
                     25: is given stdin must be from a pipe or an error message is printed
                     26: and the program aborted.
                     27: .PP
                     28: The pages of the file are displayed in the order.
                     29: Only about 2/3 of a page can be displayed at once (this is because
                     30: of aspect ratio differences).
                     31: .SH ARGUMENTS
                     32: .PP
                     33: .TP 8
                     34: .B -bd \fIcolor\fP
                     35: Specify the border color.
                     36: .PP
                     37: .TP 8
                     38: .B -ms \fIcolor\fP
                     39: Specify the mouse color.
                     40: .PP
                     41: .TP 8
                     42: .B -fg \fIcolor\fP
                     43: Specify the foreground color.
                     44: .PP
                     45: .TP 8
                     46: .B -bg \fIcolor\fP
                     47: Specify the background color.
                     48: .PP
                     49: .TP 8
                     50: .B -bw \fIwidth\fP
                     51: Specify the width of the border.
                     52: .PP
                     53: .TP 8
                     54: .B -rv
                     55: Cause \fIximpv\fP
                     56: to produce all output in black-on-white instead of white-on-black.
                     57: .PP
                     58: .TP 8
                     59: .B =\fIgeometry\fP
                     60: The previewer window is created with the specified
                     61: size specified by the geometry specification.
                     62: See \fIX(1)\fP for details of this specification.
                     63: .SH MOUSE
                     64: .PP
                     65: Clicking the right button will display the next window full, moving to the
                     66: next page as needed.  Clicking the middle button will move to the opposite
                     67: end of the current page.  Clicking the left button will
                     68: display the previous window full, moving to the previous page as needed.
                     69: .PP
                     70: Clicking the right button with the Shift key held down will display the next
                     71: window full to the right.
                     72: Clicking the middle button with the Shift key held down will move to the
                     73: opposite side of the current page.  Clicking the left button with the Shift
                     74: key held down will display the previous window full to the left.
                     75: .SH KEYBOARD
                     76: .PP
                     77: The user may move up and down the page
                     78: with the numeric pad keys:
                     79: .nf
                     80: .br
                     81: .ta 1.2i 1.8i 2.5i
                     82:        fine    medium  coarse
                     83: .br
                     84: up page           7       8       9
                     85: .sp
                     86: down page         1       2       3
                     87: .br
                     88: .fi
                     89: The numeric pad keys can also be used for horizontal motion:
                     90: .nf
                     91: .ne 3
                     92: .br
                     93:        left    center  right
                     94: .br
                     95: horizontal        4       5       6
                     96: .fi
                     97: .br
                     98: .DT
                     99: .PP
                    100: You may also move forward or back in the document by using:
                    101: .br
                    102: .B -
                    103: for back a page,
                    104: .br
                    105: .B up-arrow
                    106: for back a window full,
                    107: .br
                    108: .B .
                    109: for forward a page,
                    110: .br
                    111: .B down-arrow
                    112: for forward a window full,
                    113: .br
                    114: .B ,
                    115: or
                    116: .B +
                    117: for forward to next new page.
                    118: .br
                    119: You may also move left and right in the document by small amounts using the
                    120: left and right arrow keys.
                    121: .br
                    122: The only other functional keys are the CNTRL
                    123: .B -D 
                    124: key and the CNTRL
                    125: .B -C
                    126: key, which exit the program.
                    127: .SH X DEFAULTS
                    128: .PP
                    129: Accepts the following defaults:
                    130: .PP
                    131: .TP 8
                    132: .B BorderWidth
                    133: Set the border width of the window.
                    134: .PP
                    135: .TP 8
                    136: .B ReverseVideo
                    137: If ``on'', reverse the definition of foreground and background color.
                    138: .PP
                    139: .TP 8
                    140: .B Foreground
                    141: Set the text/graphics color.
                    142: .PP
                    143: .TP 8
                    144: .B Background
                    145: Set the background color.
                    146: .PP
                    147: .TP 8
                    148: .B Border
                    149: Set the border color.
                    150: .PP
                    151: .TP 8
                    152: .B Mouse
                    153: Set the mouse cursor color.
                    154: .SH "SEE ALSO"
                    155: X(1), xproof(1), xdvi(1)
                    156: .SH ENVIRONMENT
                    157: Uses the environment variable ``DISPLAY'' to specify which bit map display
                    158: terminal to use.
                    159: .SH FILES
                    160: /usr/tmp/impvXXXXXX    circular buffer of screen images
                    161: .SH "SEE ALSO"
                    162: X(1).
                    163: .SH "AUTHOR"
                    164: Steven Sutphen and Ted Bentley, University of Alberta
                    165: Changes and enhancements for X by
                    166: Bob Scheifler, MIT Laboratory for Computer Science, and Jim Gettys,
                    167: DEC, Project Athena.

unix.superglobalmegacorp.com

This archive runs on limited infrastructure. Preserving old code on modern bandwidth. Automated agents are requested to crawl responsibly.