Man page - psnup(1)

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Manual

PSUTILS

NAME
SYNOPSIS
DESCRIPTION
OPTIONS
COMMENTS
EXAMPLES
AUTHOR

NAME

psutils

SYNOPSIS

psutils [OPTION...] -NUMBER [INFILE [OUTFILE]]

DESCRIPTION

psnup uses pstops to impose multiple logical pages on to each physical sheet of paper.

Paper sizes can be given either as a name (see paper(1) ) or as width x height (see psutils (1) for the available units). Put multiple pages of a PostScript document on to one page.
-NUMBER

number of pages to impose on each output page

INFILE

‘-’ or no INFILE argument means standard input

OUTFILE

‘-’ or no OUTFILE argument means standard output

OPTIONS

-p PAPER , --paper PAPER

output paper name or dimensions (WIDTHxHEIGHT)

-P INPAPER , --inpaper INPAPER

input paper name or dimensions (WIDTHxHEIGHT)

-m DIMENSION , --margin DIMENSION

width of margin around each output page [default 0pt]; useful for thumbnail sheets, as the original page margins will be shrunk

-b DIMENSION , --border DIMENSION

width of border around each input page

-d [DIMENSION] , --draw [DIMENSION]

draw a line of given width (relative to original page) around each page [argument defaults to 1pt; default is no line; width is fixed for PDF]

-l , --rotatedleft

input pages are rotated left 90 degrees

-r , --rotatedright

input pages are rotated right 90 degrees

-f , --flip

swap output pages’ width and height

-c , --transpose

swap columns and rows (column-major order)

-t NUMBER , --tolerance NUMBER

maximum wasted area in square pt [default: 100000]

-v , --version

show program’s version number and exit

-q , --quiet

don’t show progress

COMMENTS

psnup aborts with an error if it cannot arrange the input pages so as to waste less than the given tolerance.

The output page size defaults to the input page size; if none is specified in the document or on the command line, the default given by the ‘paper’ command is used.

The input page size defaults to the output page size.

In row-major order (the default), adjacent pages are placed in rows across the paper; in column-major order, they are placed in columns down the page.

EXAMPLES

The potential use of this utility is varied but one particular use is in conjunction with psbook (1). For example, using groff to create a PostScript document and lpr as the UNIX print spooler a typical command line might look like this:

groff -Tps -ms file | psbook | psnup -2 | lpr

where file is a 4 page document this command will result in a two page document printing two pages of file per page and rearranges the page order to match the input pages 4 and 1 on the first output page and pages 2 then 3 of the input document on the second output page.

AUTHOR

Reuben Thomas <rrt@sc3d.org>