Annotation of 43BSDTahoe/old/man/vpr.0, revision 1.1.1.1

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                      4: VPR(1)             UNIX Programmer's Manual               VPR(1)
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                      7: 
                      8: NAME
                      9:      vpr, vprm, vpq, vprint - raster printer/plotter spooler
                     10: 
                     11: SYNOPSIS
                     12:      vpr [ -W ] [ -l ] [ -v ] [ -t [ -1234 font ] ] [ -w ] [
                     13:      -w_w_i_d_t_h ] [ -m ] [ name ... ]
                     14:      vprm [ id ...  ] [ filename ...  ] [ owner ...  ]
                     15:      vpq
                     16:      vprint [ -W ] file ...
                     17: 
                     18: DESCRIPTION
                     19:      _V_p_r causes the named files to be queued for printing or
                     20:      typeset simulation on one of the available raster
                     21:      printer/plotters. If no files are named, the standard input
                     22:      is read.  By default the input is assumed to be line
                     23:      printer-like text.  For very wide plotters, the input is run
                     24:      through the filter /_u_s_r/_l_i_b/_s_i_d_e_b_y_s_i_d_e giving it an argument
                     25:      of -w106 which arranges it four pages adjacent with 90
                     26:      column lines (the rest is for the left margin).  Since there
                     27:      are 8 lines per inch in the default printer font, _v_p_r thus
                     28:      produces 86 lines per page (the top and bottom lines are
                     29:      left blank).
                     30: 
                     31:      The following options are available:
                     32: 
                     33:      -l             Print the input in a more literal manner.
                     34:                    Page breaks are not inserted, and most con-
                     35:                    trol characters (except format effectors: \n,
                     36:                    \f, etc.) are printed (many control charac-
                     37:                    ters print special graphics not in the ASCII
                     38:                    character set.) Tab and underline processing
                     39:                    is still done.  If this option is not given,
                     40:                    control characters which are not format
                     41:                    effectors are ignored, and page breaks are
                     42:                    inserted after an appropriate number of lines
                     43:                    have been printed on a page.
                     44: 
                     45:      -W             Queues files for printing on a wide output
                     46:                    device, if available.  Normally, files are
                     47:                    queued for printing on a narrow output dev-
                     48:                    ice.
                     49: 
                     50:      -1234         Specifies a font to be mounted on font posi-
                     51:                    tion _i.  The daemon will construct a ._r_a_i_l_m_a_g
                     52:                    file referencing /_u_s_r/_l_i_b/_v_f_o_n_t/_n_a_m_e._s_i_z_e.
                     53: 
                     54:      -m             Report by _m_a_i_l(1) when printing is complete.
                     55: 
                     56:      -w             (Applicable only to wide output devices.) Do
                     57:                    not run the input through sidebyside.  Such
                     58:                    processing has been done already, or full
                     59:                    (440 character) printer width is desired.
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                     63: Printed 7/26/87              4/29/85                           1
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                     69: 
                     70: VPR(1)             UNIX Programmer's Manual               VPR(1)
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                     73: 
                     74:      -w_w_i_d_t_h     Use width _w_i_d_t_h rather than 90 for _s_i_d_e_b_y_-
                     75:                    _s_i_d_e.
                     76: 
                     77:      -v             Use the filter /_u_s_r/_l_i_b/_v_r_a_s_t to convert the
                     78:                    vectors to raster. The named files must be a
                     79:                    parameter and vector file (in that order)
                     80:                    created by _p_l_o_t(3X) routines.
                     81: 
                     82:      -t             Use the filter /_u_s_r/_l_i_b/_v_c_a_t to typeset the
                     83:                    input on the printer/plotter.  The input must
                     84:                    have been generated by _t_r_o_f_f(1) run with the
                     85:                    -t option.  This is not normally run directly
                     86:                    to wide output devices, since it is wasteful
                     87:                    to run only one page across.  The program
                     88:                    _v_t_r_o_f_f(1) is normally used and arranges,
                     89:                    using _v_s_o_r_t for printing to occur four pages
                     90:                    across, conserving paper.
                     91: 
                     92:      _V_p_r_m removes entries from the raster device queues.  The id,
                     93:      filename or owner should be that reported by _v_p_q. All
                     94:      appropriate files will be removed.  Both queues are always
                     95:      searched. The id of each file removed from the queue will
                     96:      be printed.
                     97: 
                     98:      _V_p_q prints the queues.  Each entry in the queue is printed
                     99:      showing the owner of the queue entry, an identification
                    100:      number, the size of the entry in characters, and the file
                    101:      which is to be printed.  The _i_d is useful for removing a
                    102:      specific entry from the printer queue using _v_p_r_m
                    103: 
                    104:      _V_p_r_i_n_t is a shell script which _p_r'_s a copy of each named
                    105:      file on one of the electrostatic printer/plotters.  The
                    106:      files are normally printed on a narrow device; -W option
                    107:      causes them to be printed on a wide device.
                    108: 
                    109: FILES
                    110:      /usr/spool/v?d/*   device spool areas
                    111:      /usr/lib/v?d       daemons
                    112:      /usr/lib/vpd       Versatec daemon
                    113:      /usr/lib/vpf       filter for printer simulation
                    114:      /usr/lib/*vcat     filter for typeset simulation
                    115:      /usr/lib/vrast     filter for plot
                    116:      /usr/lib/sidebyside filter for wide output
                    117: 
                    118: SEE ALSO
                    119:      troff(1), vfont(5), vp(4), pti(1), vtroff(1), plot(3X)
                    120: 
                    121: BUGS
                    122:      The 1's (one's) and l's (lower-case el's) in a Benson-
                    123:      Varian's standard character set look very similar; caution
                    124:      is advised.
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                    129: Printed 7/26/87              4/29/85                           2
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                    135: 
                    136: VPR(1)             UNIX Programmer's Manual               VPR(1)
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                    140:      A versatec's hardware character set is rather ugly.  _V_p_r_i_n_t
                    141:      should use one of the constant width fonts to produce pret-
                    142:      tier listings.
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                    195: Printed 7/26/87              4/29/85                           3
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