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- 1Overview
- ?Overview
- W
- `GSview for Windows` is a graphical interface for MS-Windows `Ghostscript`.
- P
- `PM GSview` is a graphical interface for OS/2 `Ghostscript`.
- E
- Ghostscript is an interpreter for the PostScript page description language
- used by laser printers.
- For documents following the Adobe PostScript Document Structuring
- Conventions,
- GSview allows selected pages to be viewed or printed.
- W
- GSview should be used with Ghostscript 3.53 or later.
- P
- GSview should be used with Ghostscript 3.53 or later.
- E
- GSview was inspired by Tim Theisen's X11 Ghostview program.
- 2Installation
- ?Installation
- It is recommended that you use the installation program for
- installing GSview. For OS/2, use os2setup.exe. For MS-Windows,
- use winsetup.exe. See the file README.GV for more details.
-
- If you wish to install GSview manually, see the `Manual Installation`
- topic.
- 3Uninstalling GSview and Ghostscript
- To uninstall GSview, remove all the files in the `gsview` directory.
- To uninstall Ghostscript, remove all the files in the `gs3.53` directory.
-
- Also remove
- P
- c:\os2\gvpm.ini
- W
- c:\windows\gsview.ini
- c:\windows\gsview32.ini
- c:\windows\gswin.ini
- c:\windows\gswin32.ini
- E
- from the appropriate system directory.
-
- P
- Remove the `GSview` program object from the desktop.
- W
- Remove the `GS Tools` group from the Program Manager.
-
- If you know how to edit the registry, remove the following keys:
- psfile
- .eps
- .ps
- E
- 3Manual Installation
- ?Manual Installation
- It is recommended that you use the installation program for
- installing GSview. The following instructions describe how
- to install GSview without using the installation program.
-
- W
- First you need to install Ghostscript.
- It is recommended that Ghostscript 3.53 or later be used.
- (If you wish to use 16-bit Ghostscript 2.6.1, see the
- `Ghostscript Version` topic.
- If using the 32-bit versions of GSview or Ghostscript, you must use
- Ghostscript 3.12 or later.)
- P
- First you need to install Ghostscript 3.12 or later.
- This version of GSview will not work with earlier versions of Ghostscript.
- Ghostscript 3.53 or later is preferred.
- E
-
- Make a directory d:\gsview.
-
- Next install
- P
- PM GSview by copying gvpm.exe and gvpm.hlp
- W
- GSview for Windows by copying gsview.exe, gsview32.exe, gsview.hlp
- and gsv16spl.exe
- E
- to the `d:\gsview` directory.
-
- Start GSview then select `Options` | `Configure Ghostscript`.
-
- Enter the correct executable path for Ghostscript.
- For example
- P
- c:\gs3.53\gsos2.exe
- W
- c:\gs3.53\gswin.exe
- E
-
- Enter the correct Ghostscript include path into the
- `Ghostscript Include Path` field.
- This include path must include the directories where the Ghostscript
- library files (gs_*.ps and Fontmap) and the Ghostscript fonts (*.gsf)
- are located. For example:
- P
- c:\gs3.53;c:\gs3.53\fonts;c:\psfonts
- W
- c:\gs3.53;c:\gs3.53\fonts
- E
- Do NOT put a `-I` before the include path.
-
- Leave the `Other Options` field empty.
-
- If you do not get the `Ghostscript EXE` field correct, GSview will
- not be able to load Ghostscript.
- If you do not get the `Ghostscript Include Path` correct, Ghostscript
- will immediately exit with an error code.
-
- W
- Under Windows 95 or NT, the 32 bit version of GSview (gsview32.exe)
- requires the 32 bit version of Ghostscript (gswin32.exe), and
- the 16 bit version of GSview (gsview.exe) requires the 16 bit
- version of Ghostscript (gswin.exe). Under Windows 95 or NT you
- need a version of Ghostscript later than 3.12.
- Under Windows 3.1 with Win32s, the 16 and 32 bit versions can
- be intermixed.
-
- E
- Set the environment variable TEMP to point to a directory for
- temporary files. For example:
- SET TEMP=c:\temp
- The directory must exist and must be writeable.
-
- If you have some Type 1 fonts on your system, it may be possible to
- tell Ghostscript to use them. See `Fontmap.os2` and `Fontmap.atm`
- supplied with Ghostscript for examples. See the `Fonts` topic.
-
- If you have problems, try reading the help topic `Common Problems`.
- 3Ghostscript Installation
- ?Ghostscript Installation
- The following describes how to install Ghostscript, not GSview.
- The primary documentation on installing Ghostscript is found in
- the Ghostscript file use.doc.
-
- Aladdin Ghostscript for the PC is available on the Internet from
- ftp://ftp.cs.wisc.edu/ghost/aladdin/gsNNNxxx.zip
- Where NNN is the version number.
- For Ghostscript 3.53, the files required to run Ghostscript are:
- gs353ini.zip
- plus one or more of
- gs353dos.zip (MS-DOS 386 EXE)
- gs353os2.zip (OS/2 2.0 or later EXE)
- gs353win.zip (MS-Windows 3.1 16bit EXE)
- gs353w32.zip (MS-Windows 3.1/Win32s or MS-Windows 95 or NT EXE)
- If you do not already have a set of Type 1 fonts, you will
- also need
- gs353fn1.zip
-
- The following assumes that Ghostscript is to be installed on
- drive d:.
- Unzip the INI zip file and the required EXE zip files from the
- root directory. This should put the files into the directory d:\gs3.53.
-
- If you also need the fonts, change to the d:\gs3.53 directory and
- then unzip gs353fn1.zip. This will put font files into .\fonts.
- To run Ghostscript, set the GS_LIB environment variable as follows
- SET GS_LIB=d:\gs3.53;d:\gs3.53\fonts
- then start the appropriate EXE. To run Ghostscript without using
- the environment variable, use the following command
- d:\gs3.53\gs -Id:\gs3.53;d:\gs3.53\fonts
- where the EXE name needs to be replaced with the appropriate name
- (gs, gs386, gswin, gswin32 or gsos2).
-
- If you already have some Type 1 fonts, there are two ways to tell
- Ghostscript about these fonts: editing/replacing the `Fontmap` file,
- or the `GS_FONTPATH` environment variable. See the Ghostscript
- use.doc and the sample Fontmap files for details.
-
- See the `Include Path` and `Fonts` topics for more details.
- P
- 3Portable Document Format
- ?Portable Document Format
- ?PDF
- GSview can display PDF files, although there are a number of problems
- with the current method. To enable display of PDF files with
- Aladdin Ghostscript 3.33, copy the file pdf2dsc.ps from the GSview src
- directory (unzip src.zip) to the Ghostscript directory.
- With Aladdin Ghostscript 3.53 you do not need to do this because this
- file is distributed with Aladdin Ghostscript 3.53.
- When you open a PDF file, GSview will start up
- Ghostscript and using pdf2dsc.ps will create a temporary DSC file which
- will contain commands to display pages of the PDF file. GSview will
- then start Ghostscript a second time to actually display the PDF file.
-
- Known problems with the current implemtentation are:
-
- - For long PDF files, GSview will take a long time to scan the PDF file.
- Be patient.
-
- - Ghostscript is used twice, firstly to scan the PDF file, then a second
- time to display the PDF file. These two passes makes it take even longer.
- The GSview PDF code should eventually be rewritten to avoid using the
- temporary DSC file so that only one pass is needed.
-
- - Zoom doesn't work for PDF files. Attempting to use it will probably
- cause GSview to crash with an out of memory error.
-
- - Doesn't sense if PDF file has been changed during display.
- E
- 3Include Path
- ?Include Path
- Ghostscript needs to read some initialisation files during startup,
- and needs to read font files before drawing text.
- When used on a PC, it is normal to tell Ghostscript where to
- find these files using the Ghostscript `-I` command line switch.
- Alternatively, the `GS_LIB` environment variable can be used.
- See below for details for Unix or VMS.
-
- The `-I` switch or `GS_LIB` environment variable contains a list of
- directories to search for the required initialisation files.
- On a PC, it is normal to put the initialisation files in the
- same directory as the Ghostscript program. If Ghostscript is in
- c:\gs, then `-Ic:\gs` would be used as a command line option to
- Ghostscript.
-
- Ghostscript also needs to find font files. The list of fonts known to
- Ghostscript is contained in the `Fontmap` file. The directories which
- contain these fonts should be added to the `-I` switch.
- If the Ghostscript *.gsf fonts are in c:\gs\fonts, and some other
- *.pfb fonts are in c:\psfonts, then `-Ic:\gs;c:\gs\fonts;c:\psfonts`
- would be used as a command line option to Ghostscript on a PC.
-
- Under Unix or VMS with Ghostview, the include path should have been
- configured when Ghostscript was compiled.
- If not, and Ghostview is being used, use the `GS_LIB` environment
- variable instead of `-I`.
- The Ghostscript include files are generally not put in the same
- directory as the executable under Unix. Instead the executable
- might be in
- /usr/local/bin
- while the include files are in
- /usr/local/lib/ghostscript/gs3.53
- and the fonts in
- /usr/local/lib/ghostscript/fonts
- Consequently, the `GS_LIB` environment variable would need to
- be set to
- /usr/local/lib/ghostscript/gs3.53:/usr/local/lib/ghostscript/fonts
- It is to be hoped that these were set as the default when Ghostscript
- was compiled, and that it is unnecessary to use `GS_LIB`.
-
- For more information, see the following topic.
- 4File searching
- ?File searching
- (from Ghostscript use.doc)
-
- When looking for the initialisation files (gs_*.ps), the files related to
- fonts (Fontmap, *.pfa, *.pfb, *.gsf), or the file for the 'run' operator,
- Ghostscript first checks whether
- the file name specifies an explicit directory or drive (i.e., doesn't begin
- with '/' on Unix systems; doesn't contain a ':' or begin with a '/' or '\'
- on MS-DOS systems; doesn't contain a ':' or a square bracket on VMS
- systems). If it does, Ghostscript simply tries to open the file using the
- given name. Otherwise, Ghostscript will try directories in the following
- order:
-
- 1. The directory/ies specified by the -I switch(es) in the command
- line (see below), if any;
-
- 2. The directory/ies specified by the GS_LIB environment variable,
- if any;
-
- 3. The directory/ies specified by the GS_LIB_DEFAULT macro in the
- Ghostscript makefile, if any.
-
- Each of these (GS_LIB_DEFAULT, GS_LIB, and -I parameter) may be either a
- single directory, or a list of directories separated by a character
- appropriate for the operating system (':' on Unix systems, ';' on VMS
- systems, ';' on MS-DOS systems).
- Ghostscript 3.12 use.doc states that:
- Note that Ghostscript does *not* attempt to open the file
- in the current directory. This is consistent with common
- practice on Unix, but it is different from the usual
- practice on MS-DOS.
- This is incorrect. Ghostscript does search in the current directory.
- 3Fonts
- ?Fonts
- Ghostscript locates fonts in two ways:
-
- 1. Those listed explicitly in `Fontmap`
-
- 2. Font files found in directories listed in the `GS_FONTPATH` environment
- variable.
-
- Those listed in the `Fontmap` file should be locatable on the Ghostscript
- include path, or should have fully qualified paths. Note that
- you must use / or \\ and must not use \ within a directory name.
-
- Ghostscript comes with a number of free fonts, most with a .gsf
- extension. These are ordinary Type 1 fonts (although they cannot
- be used with Adobe Type Manager). The Ghostscript fonts can be
- broken into three main classes:
-
- 1. Type 1 outline fonts with hinting (most *.pfa). These produce
- good quality output. The standard Fontmap file uses these in
- preference to the other font types. There are relatively few of
- these fonts.
-
- 2. Type 1 outline fonts that have been created from bitmap fonts
- (p*.gsf, z*.gsf, etc.). These produce poor quality output.
- Avoid them if at all possible.
- A full set of the common 35 PostScript fonts is available.
-
- 3. Type 1 stroked fonts created from the public domain Hershey fonts
- (h*.gsf, h*.pfa). These produce moderate quality output, but do
- not correspond to standard PostScript fonts.
-
- If you have some other Type 1 outline fonts (*.pfa, *.pfb), it is
- possible to use these with Ghostscript. Whether or not you are
- allowed to do this depends on the font licence. If you do use
- these fonts with Ghostscript, it is `your` responsibility to make
- sure that the font licence permits this use.
- To use the other Type 1 fonts, you will need to replace or edit
- the `Fontmap` file. The reason for using these other Type 1 fonts
- is that they are almost certainly of better quality than the Type 1
- bitmap derived fonts supplied with Ghostscript. However, good
- quality fonts are not usually free.
- 4Fontmap
- ?Fontmap
- The `Fontmap` file tells Ghostscript what fonts are available
- and where to find them.
- Each line in `Fontmap` may be one of the following:
-
- 1. A comment. These are lines that start with a %
- % fontmap aka Fontmap - standard font catalog for Ghostscript.
-
-
- 2. A font name and file name. For example
- /Courier (ncrr.pfa) ;
- /Courier-Italic (ncrri.pfa) ;
- The first of these lines says that the font name `Courier` is to
- be found in the file `ncrr.pfa`.
- The file `ncrr.pfa` must contain a font named Courier.
- If the name is not Courier then a font alias must be used.
- This is described later.
- Note that the file name is a PostScript string and so \ has a
- special meaning.
- If `ncrr.pfa` was in the c:\gs\fonts directory, you would need to
- have `c:\gs\fonts` as one of the directories listed in the include path,
- or you would need to use the file name (c:/gs/fonts/ncrr.pfa) or
- (c:\\gs\\fonts\\ncrr.pfa). Using / is preferred to \\.
-
- 3. A font alias. For example
- /Courier-Oblique /Courier-Italic ;
- This tells Ghostscript that if Courier-Oblique is requested,
- Courier-Italic is to be used instead.
- The standard Fontmap file uses aliases to replace poor quality
- bitmap-derived fonts with good quality hinted outline fonts.
- Ghostscript has a bitmap derived version of the Helvetica font
- in the file phvr.gsf. The Fontmap file could instruct Ghostscript
- to use this with the following line:
- /Helvetica (phvr.gsf) ;
- However, the NimbusSansL-Regular font looks like Helvetica and is
- a better quality font, so the default Fontmap file actually uses
- /Helvetica /NimbusSansL-Regular ;
- /NimbusSansL-Regular (n019003l.gsf) ;
-
- A description of the required formatting for each line is near
- the top of each `Fontmap` file.
-
- Ghostscript comes with a number of alternate `Fontmap` files.
- These include
- Fontmap The standard fontmap file
- Fontmap.ATB For Adobe Type Basics (65 Type 1 fonts)
- Fontmap.ATM For Adobe Type Manager (13 fonts)
- Fontmap.OS2 For Type 1 fonts shipped with OS/2 (13 fonts)
- Fontmap.OSF For DEC OSF/1 systems
- Fontmap.Ult For DEC Ultrix systems
- Fontmap.VMS For VAX/VMS systems with DECwindows/Motif
- If you want to use one of the alternate Fontmap files, the procedure
- is as follows:
-
- 1. Copy Fontmap to Fontmap.old
-
- 2. Copy Fontmap.??? (your selected Fontmap file) to Fontmap
-
- 3. Add the directory that contains the Type 1 fonts to the
- include path (`-I` or `GS_LIB`)
- 4GS_FONTPATH
- ?GS_FONTPATH
- (From Ghostscript use.doc)
-
- When Ghostscript starts up, it also looks at the `GS_FONTPATH` environment
- variable, which is also a list of directories. It goes to those
- directories and looks for all files that appear to contain PostScript
- fonts; it then effectively adds all those files and fonts to its internal
- copy of the Fontmap (the catalog of fonts and the files that contain
- them). If you are using one of the following types of computer, you may
- wish to set `GS_FONTPATH` to the indicated value so that Ghostscript will
- automatically acquire all the installed Type 1 fonts:
-
- System type GS_FONTPATH
- ----------- -----------
- AIX /usr/lpp/DPS/fonts/outlines
- NeXT /NextLibrary/Fonts/outline
- OSF/1 /usr/lib/X11/fonts/Type1Adobe
- Silicon Graphics /usr/lib/DPS/outline/base
- Sun (Solaris 2.3) /usr/openwin/lib/X11/fonts/Type1/outline
- Ultrix /usr/lib/DPS/outline/decwin
-
- See also `Fontmap`.
- 4Platform Fonts
- ?Platform Fonts
- Platform fonts are described in Ghostscript fonts.doc.
-
- The bitmap derived fonts used by Ghostscript are of poor quality.
- The computer hosting Ghostscript may have the same fonts in better
- quality versions, either as scalable fonts (e.g. Type 1 or TrueType)
- or as bitmaps.
- To improve the display of documents, Ghostscript can use these
- `platform fonts` instead of using the low quality fonts.
-
- This can be illustrated with an example. The default /Helvetica-Bold
- font is phvb.gsf, an outline font derived from a bitmap. When the
- /Helvetica-Bold font is requested, phvb.gsf is read. When a character
- is to be rendered to the display, Ghostscript instead asks MS-Windows
- for the Helvetica-Bold font at the appropriate size. MS-Windows then
- draws the requested character from the TrueType Arial Bold font, and
- Ghostscript puts it on the display. The resulting output is of better
- quality than the /Helvetica-Bold bitmap derived font.
-
- In another example, the same request for /Helvetica-Bold under
- Unix/X11 might instead display characters using a prebuilt bitmap
- font if one is available in the requested size.
-
- There are some limitations to using `Platform fonts`.
-
- 1. Platform fonts are only used for upright (Portrait) characters.
- Rotated characters will be displayed using the original PostScript font.
-
- 2. A PostScript version of the required font must be available.
- This is needed to obtain character bounding box information,
- encoding vector for character sets, and drawing rotated characters.
-
- 3. Platform fonts may only used for a limited range of sizes.
- For example, MS-Windows only uses platform fonts for 6 to 36 point
- fonts.
-
- 4. MS-Windows lies about the available font sizes. Ghostscript asks for
- a particular font size and MS-Windows returns a font that it claims
- is the same size. However MS-Windows may instead return a font
- of a different size that it thinks will look better. Often it
- looks worse because the intercharacter spacing is out of proportion
- to the character size. If this happens, platform fonts can be
- disabled by adding -dNOPLATFONTS to the Ghostscript Command Line.
-
- 5. Platform fonts will only be used for the display. Output to
- printer devices will continue to use the PostScript font.
-
- MS-Windows Ghostscript has a fixed alias table for fonts.
- In the table below, the name on the left is the name of the
- PostScript font, and the name on the right is the name that
- Ghostscript will try if MS-Windows doesn't know the PostScript
- name.
- Courier Courier New
- Helvetica Arial
- Helvetica Helv
- Times Times New Roman
- Times Tms Rmn
-
- Platform fonts are not supported under OS/2.
-
- Not yet written:
- Unix/X11 Ghostscript may have an ability to use Xresources to
- specify font aliases. If this is the case, then the method should
- be described here.
- 2Document Structuring Conventions
- ?Document Structuring Conventions
- ?DSC
- ?Encapsulated PostScript
- ?EPSF
- ?EPS
- Adobe has defined a set of extended comment conventions that provide
- additional information about the page structure and resource
- requirements of a PostScript file.
- If a file contains these Document Structuring Convention (DSC) comments,
- GSview can display pages in random order using `Goto Page` and display pages
- in reverse order using `Previous Page`. Selected pages can be extracted to
- another file or printed.
-
- If a file does not contain DSC comments, GSview can only
- display the pages in the original order.
-
- DSC conforming files start with the comment line:
- %!PS-Adobe-3.0
- where the number 3.0 may change and is the DSC version number.
- Some programs write PostScript files with a control-D as the first
- character of the file, followed by the comment line mentioned above.
- GSview will correctly report that these files are not DSC conforming,
- but will still display them with page selection features available.
- Complain to the author of the program that produced the PostScript file.
- To make the file DSC conforming, edit it to remove the control-D character.
-
- DSC conforming files contain lines such as:
- %%Pages: 24
- %%Page: 1 1
- These lines tell GSview how many pages a document contains and
- where they start. GSview uses this information to select
- individual pages.
-
- Encapsulated PostScript Files (EPSF) are single page documents
- that contain a subset of the `DSC` comments and PostScript commands.
- EPS files start with the comment line:
- %!PS-Adobe-3.0 EPSF-3.0
- EPS files are commonly used for inclusion in other documents and
- for this reason require the bounding box comment:
- %%BoundingBox: llx lly urx ury
- where llx, lly, urx and ury are integers giving the x and y coordinates
- of the lower left and upper right corners of a bounding box which encloses
- all marks made on the page.
-
- Some EPS files contain a preview of the PostScript document.
- This preview can be a Windows Metafile, a TIFF file, or an Interchange
- preview (EPSI format).
- For the Windows Metafile or TIFF file preview, the EPS file under DOS
- contains a binary header which specifies the location and lengths of
- the preview and PostScript language sections of the EPS file.
- For the Interchange format, the preview is contained in DSC comments
- starting with
- %%BeginPreview: width height depth lines
- An EPS file with a preview can be created from an EPS file without a
- preview using `Add EPS Preview`.
- 2Opening a Document
- ?File
- ?Open
- ?Select File
- ?Save As
- ?Extract
- ?Close
- The `Open` command on the `File` menu opens a file and displays
- the first page.
-
- If the file contains `DSC` comments, pages can be selected using
- `Next Page`, `Previous Page` and `Goto Page`.
-
- If the file does not contain `DSC` comments, `Previous Page` and `Goto Page`
- will not work. Another file should not be selected until a last page of
- the file has been displayed.
-
- When a file is open, GSview will display the document filename,
- the current page (if available) and while the cursor is over
- the image, the location of the cursor in coordinates specified
- by `Options` | `Units`. The coordinate can be PostScript points
- (1/72"), millimetres or inches.
- The cursor location is useful for calculating bounding boxes.
-
- The `Select File` command is similar to `Open` but it does not display
- the document.
- This command is useful for opening a document prior to printing it.
-
- The `Save As` command saves a copy of the current document.
- This is useful if GSview is being used as a PostScript viewer by
- another application and you wish to save the currently displayed file.
-
- `Extract` allows a range of pages to be copied from the current
- document to a new document. For example, ten pages can be extracted
- from the middle of the current document and written to another file,
- which will later be sent to a printer.
-
- The `Close` command closes the currently open document.
- This should be used before the current file is changed by another
- program.
- If you do not do this and GSview detects that the file length or date
- have changed, it will close Ghostscript and rescan the document.
-
- See also `Print`.
- 3PS to EPS
- ?PS to EPS
- In general, it is not possible to convert a PostScript file to `EPS`.
- However, many single page PostScript files can be converted to `EPS`
- by changing the first line of the file to
- %!PS-Adobe-3.0 EPSF-3.0
- and then adding or fixing up the `%%BoundingBox` comment.
-
- `When used incorrectly, the PS to EPS command can produce PostScript
- files with incorrect DSC comments. Such a document will cause problems
- when you try to include it inside another document.`
-
- To convert a PostScript file to `EPS`, the original file `must` be
- a `single page` document. If the document contains `DSC` comments
- and is multi page, extract the desired page with `File` | `Extract`.
- If the document does not contain `DSC` comments, you will need to
- edit the file by hand to extract the desired page.
-
- `EPS` documents `must not` use any of the following operators:
- banddevice clear cleardictstack copypage
- erasepage exitserver framedevice grestoreall
- initclip initgraphics initmatrix quit
- renderbands setglobal setpagedevice setpageparams
- setshared startjob letter note
- legal a3 a4 a5
-
- The following operators should be used with care:
- nulldevice setgstate sethalftone setmatrix
- setscreen settransfer setcolortransfer
-
- It is `your` responsibility to make sure that the above requirements
- are met.
-
- To test if a document contains any of the above operators, select
- `Options` | `EPS Warn` and then `Open` the desired document.
- After the page has been displayed, look in the Ghostscript text window.
- If any of the above operators have been used you should see lines like:
- Warning: EPS files must not use ...
- If you find these warnings then do `not` use `PS to EPS`.
- Remember to turn off `EPS Warn` afterwards.
-
- A document must be displayed before `PS to EPS` is used.
- The document must contain a `showpage`.
- This is required so that the bounding box can be measured.
-
- For documents without `DSC` comments, `PS to EPS` allows a bounding
- box to be specified, then writes out an `EPS` file consisting of
- an `EPS` wrapper around the original document.
-
- For documents with `DSC` comments, `PS to EPS` will change the
- first line of the file to
- %!PS-Adobe-3.0 EPSF-3.0
- then allows the `%%BoundingBox` comment to be changed or added.
-
- For `EPS` documents, `PS to EPS` allows the `%%BoundingBox` comment to
- be changed.
-
- `PS to EPS` does not clip the document to the `%%BoundingBox`.
- To do so would require changing the PostScript code itself.
- `PS to EPS` only changes the `DSC` comments.
-
- `PS to EPS` does not add a preview to a document.
- If you want a preview you add it with `Edit` | `Add EPS Preview` after
- first creating an `EPS` file with a correct `%%BoundingBox`.
-
- See also `Add EPS Preview`, `Extract`, `EPS Warn`.
- 2Page Selection
- ?Page Selection
- ?Next Page
- ?Previous Page
- ?Redisplay
- ?Goto Page
- ?View
- `View` | `Next Page` or the `+` button moves to the next page of a
- document.
- This works even if the document does not contain `DSC` comments.
-
- `View` | `Previous Page` or the `-` button moves to the previous page.
-
- `View` | `Redisplay` redisplays the current page.
-
- `View` | `Goto Page` or the `pointing hand` button shows a dialog box
- which allows selection of the next page number to display.
- The `Select Page` dialog box shows page labels since these are likely
- to be more useful than a sequential page number.
-
- The `Previous Page`, `Redisplay` and `Goto Page` commands work only if the
- document contains `DSC` comments.
- 2Zoom
- ?Zoom
- To enlarge a displayed feature, position the cross-hair mouse pointer
- over the feature then press the right mouse button.
- The window will swap from normal display resolution to zoom
- resolution and the status line will have the word `Zoomed` appended to it.
- The zoomed feature will be in the centre of the window.
- To cancel `Zoom`, press the right mouse button again or select
- any command that redraws the page (e.g. `Redisplay`, `Next Page`).
- By default the zoom resolution is 300 dots per inch but this can
- be changed with the `Media` | `Zoom Resolution` command.
-
- `Zoom` will only work for `DSC` conforming documents.
- 2Document Information
- ?Info
- A brief information area at the top of the window is used by
- GSview to display the document filename, the current page number
- and label (if available) and while the cursor is over the image, the
- location of the cursor in coordinates specified by `Options` | `Units`.
- The cursor location is useful for calculating bounding boxes.
-
- The `Info` command on the `File `menu shows a dialog box with the
- following information about the `DSC` comments in the current document.
-
- `File `is the full pathname to the document.
-
- `Type` is` DSC`,` EPS`, `No DSC comments` or 'Ignoring DSC Comments'.
- `EPS` is an Encapsulated PostScript File - a single page document
- that contains a subset of the `DSC` comments and PostScript commands.
- `EPS `files are commonly used for inclusion in other documents.
- `Ignoring DSC Comments` is displayed if `Options` | `Ignore DSC`
- is selected.
-
- `Title` is a text title that can be used when printing banner
- pages and for routing or recognising documents.
-
- `Date` is the time the document was created.
-
- `BoundingBox` specifies a box that encloses all the marks painted
- on the page. The four integer values are the coordinates of the
- lower left and upper right corners of the bounding box in default
- user coordinates (1/72 inch).
-
- `Orientation `is either `Portrait `or` Landscape`.
-
- `Default Media` gives the media name followed by the width and
- height of that media in default user coordinates (1/72 inch).
-
- `Page Order` is either `Ascending`, `Descending` or `Special`
-
- `Pages` is the total number of pages in the document.
-
- `Page` gives the page label and page number.
-
- `Bitmap `is the size of the display bitmap in pixels which may be
- useful if you are copying the displayed image to the clipboard.
- 2Printing
- ?Print
- ?Print To File
- ?Print File
- The `Print` command on the `File `menu allows printing of the document
- using Ghostscript.
- A `Printer Setup` dialog box allows selection of
- the Ghostscript printer driver and resolution, the page range
- and the `Spooler` output.
-
- All pages, individual pages or any combination may be printed.
- The `All`, `Odd` and `Even` buttons provide quick selection of pages.
-
- W
- The `mswinpr2` printer driver uses the windows printer drivers
- and should work with any printer with raster capabilities.
- Printer resolution cannot be selected from within GSview; use
- the Control Panel instead.
-
- The `mswinprn` printer driver is an older version of `mswinpr2`
- and may not still work. This driver is very slow and should
- be considered a last resort if no other Ghostscript printer
- driver is available.
-
- With all other printer drivers, Ghostscript sends the output direct
- to the printer, without passing through a Windows printer driver.
- If you have trouble printing you may have to `Print To File`
- and then `Print File` or use the DOS command `COPY /B FILENAME PRN`.
-
- The Win32 versions of GSview and Ghostscript can't send output
- directly to a printer port so an attempt is made to pass the output
- unchanged through a Windows printer driver. This does not work
- with some Windows printer drivers. Use 'Print To File' if you
- have problems.
- E
-
- This list of available devices and resolutions is stored in the
- [Devices] section of
- W
- gsview.ini (or gsview32.ini for gsview32.exe).
- P
- gvpm.ini.
- E
- The default list of devices and resolutions is taken from the
- standard distribution version of Ghostscript 3.33 and may not
- be complete.
-
- To print a document without displaying it, open the document
- using `Select File`.
-
- `Print To File` is similar to the `Print` command except that Ghostscript
- will write the output to a file instead of sending it to a printer.
-
- If you want to produce a bitmap, some useful drivers are
- `bmpmono`, `bmp16`, `bmp16m` and `bmp256`.
-
- `Print File` sends a file to a local port, bypassing the
- W
- Windows
- P
- Presentation Manager
- E
- printer drivers.
- This is useful for sending a document to a PostScript printer,
- or for sending an output file produced by Ghostscript to a printer.
- 3Spooler
- ?Spooler
- The
- P
- `Printer Setup` dialog box prompts you for the name of a printer queue
- to which output should be sent.
- This queue will be saved and will be the default selection next time.
- W
- `Select Printer Port` or `Select Printer` dialog box prompts you for the
- name of a printer queue or port to which output should be sent.
- This queue or port will be saved and will be the default selection
- next time.
-
- Under Windows 3.1, a port name is used. Output will be spooled for
- this port.
-
- Under Windows 3.1 / Win32s, a port name is used. Output will be
- written directly to this port. The spooler is not used.
-
- Under Windows 95 or NT, a printer queue name is used.
- At present this must be a local queue.
- E
-
- See also `Print`
- 3Properties
- ?Properties
- The `Printer Setup` dialog box has a `Properties` button which
- allows some printer drivers to configure extra properties and
- a page offset to be specified.
-
- A page offset can be specified for each printer. This will
- only work if `Ghostscript Version` is set to 3.51 or later.
- The page offset is useful for correcting a mismatch between the page
- origin of a Ghostscript printer device and a particular printer.
- Increasing the X value will translate the image towards the right.
- Increasing the Y value will translate the image downwards.
-
- `Properties` are typically used to set BitsPerPixel for a colour
- printer or other types of colour or density correction.
-
- `Properties` are specific to a particular printer. Changing
- the value of the `BitsPerPixel` property on one printer does not
- change it for any other printer.
-
- When you press the `OK` button in the `Properties` dialog
- box, the current settings are written to the
- W
- gsview.ini (or gsview32.ini for gsview32.exe)
- P
- gvpm.ini
- E
- file.
-
- No `Properties` are predefined in GSview. The `Edit` and `New`
- buttons allow you to modify available `Properties` for that printer.
- See the `Edit Properties` topic for more details.
- 4Edit Properties
- ?Edit Properties
- Not every printer supports the use of optional `Properties`. To find
- out which printers support `Properties` and which `Properties` are
- recognised by each printer, read the Ghostscript
- file devices.doc or look at the Ghostscript source code.
-
- There are two ways to add or edit `Properties`.
-
- The first method uses the `Edit` or `New` button on the `Properties`
- dialog box.
-
- Each property must be either a number or a string. Number properties
- are equivalent to the Ghostscript `-d` command line option. String
- properties are equivalent to the Ghostscript `-s` command line option.
- Each property consists of a `Name` and `Value`. These are used as
- `-dNAME=VALUE` or `-sNAME=VALUE`.
- The `Value` is chosen from the comma separated list of `Values`
- entered into the `Edit Properties` dialog box. Spaces must not
- be embedded in the `Name` or `Values`.
-
- To delete a property, select it on the `Properties` dialog box,
- then press `Edit`, then press the `Delete` button on the `Edit Properties`
- dialog box.
-
- The second method is to manually edit the GSview INI file.
-
- For each printer, you must add two sections to the
- W
- gsview.ini (or gsview32.ini for gsview32.exe)
- P
- gvpm.ini
- E
- file.
- The following example shows how to add property information
- for the cdjcolor driver.
- First add a section which gives the current values.
- This section, after the first character is removed, gives the options
- that will appear in the `Property` list box.
- The first character is `s` for string or `d` for number.
- [cdjcolor]
- dBitsPerPixel=24
- dDepletion=1
- dShingling=2
- dBlackCorrect=4
-
- Next add a section which gives the values to display in the
- `Value` list box.
- [cdjcolor values]
- dBitsPerPixel=1,3,8,16,24
- dDepletion=1,2,3
- dShingling=0,1,2
- dBlackCorrect=0,1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9
- GSview will also add the value `[Not defined]` to the listbox.
-
- When GSview prints a file, it will give Ghostscript the contents
- of the [cdjcolor] section of
- W
- gsview.ini (or gsview32.ini for gsview32.exe)
- P
- gvpm.ini
- E
- as follows:
- -dBitsPerPixel=24 -dDepletion=1 -dShingling=2 -dBlackCorrect=3
- If the value of a property is `[Not defined]`, that property will
- not be sent to Ghostscript.
-
- Some entries for the cdj family of drivers are supplied in the
- property.ini file that comes with GSview.
- 2Text Extract and Find
- ?Text Extract and Find
- ?Text
- ?Text Extract
- ?Search
- ?Find
- ?Find Next
- In general, extracting text from a PostScript document is not a
- trivial operation. Words may be broken. Text may be encoded.
- Ligatures may be used (e.g replacing 'fi' with a single character).
- There may be no relationship between the location of a word in
- the PostScript file and its location on the page.
-
- However, it is common for PostScript documents to contain text in the
- same order as it appears on the page, and for it to be given in
- PostScript strings, surrounded by parentheses. Complete lines
- may be given in one string, or one word per string. For this sort
- of document, extracting text can be done with reasonable success.
-
- `Edit` | `Text Extract` will extract text contained in strings from
- specified pages and write it to a text file.
- Line breaks in this text file correspond to lines in the document.
- Spaces in the text file correspond to spaces within strings, or to
- separate strings. A more effective method of extracting text is to
- use ps2ascii.ps supplied with Ghostscript.
-
- `Edit` | `Find` will search for text and display the first
- page that contains the text. `Find` asks for a search text
- and a range of pages in which to search.
- The preceeding comments about extracting text from a PostScript
- document should be noted. `Find` first extracts text from
- the document, then searches it ignoring all spaces in both the
- document and the search text. Case is ignored when searching.
- Consequently the search text `these` would match both `These`
- and `The serial`. No information is given about where the word
- is located on a given page because this information is not
- available without a complete PostScript interpreter.
-
- `Edit` | `Find Next` will continue the search from the next page.
- 2Clipboard
- ?Clipboard
- ?Edit
- ?Copy
- ?Paste To
- ?Convert Bitmap
- ?Bitmap
- ?Add EPS Preview
- ?Extract EPS
- The GSview window can be copied to the Clipboard as a bitmap
- by selecting `Copy` from the `Edit` menu.
- W
- The bitmap may be a Device Independent Bitmap or it may be a Device
- Dependent Bitmap, depending on how Ghostscript was compiled.
- The default for Ghostscript 3.53 is a Device Independent Bitmap
- (BMP format).
- E
-
- An alternative way to get a bitmap output from Ghostscript is
- to use one of the BMP drivers. See `Print`.
-
- W
- `Paste To` copies a Device Independent Bitmap from the Clipboard
- (if available) to a BMP file.
-
- `Convert Bitmap` converts between a Device Independent Bitmap and
- a Device Dependent Bitmap.
- If the clipboard contains a Device Independent Bitmap (BMP format),
- this is converted to a Device Dependent Bitmap and added to the clipboard.
- If the clipboard does not contain a colour palette, one is created
- from the Device Independent Bitmap and added to the clipboard.
- This option is present because some applications (notably Windows
- Paintbrush) won't recognise a Device Independent Bitmap in the clipboard.
- P
- `Paste To` copies the currently displayed image (if available)
- to a BMP file.
- E
-
- `Add EPS Preview` takes a bitmap from the
- W
- clipboard
- P
- display
- E
- and uses it to add a preview to an EPS file.
- `Add EPS Preview` can create a DOS EPS file with a
- W
- Windows Metafile or
- E
- TIFF preview, or an EPSI file with an Interchange preview.
- To use the `Add EPS Preview` command the following steps must be followed.
-
- 1. Make sure the document has a correct bounding box.
- A bounding box can be added or changed using `File` | `PS to EPS`.
-
- 2. Select `Orientation` | `Portrait`.
-
- 3. Select `Options` | `EPS Clip`.
- This will cause Ghostscript to use a display window the size of the
- bounding box instead of the page size.
-
- 4. Select `Media` | `Resolution` and set a suitable resolution
- for the preview. If the resolution is too high
- W
- the bitmap may not fit in the clipboard, or will
- P
- it
- E
- make the EPS file excessively large.
-
- 5. `Open` an EPS file that does not contain a preview.
-
- W
- 6. Select `Edit` | `Copy`. This tells Ghostscript to copy the
- display bitmap to the Clipboard. This allows GSview to access
- the bitmap in the next step.
-
- 7.
- P
- 6.
- E
- Select `Edit` | `Add EPS Preview`, then the preview format,
- then the new EPS filename. GSview will write a new file containing
- the original PostScript EPS file and a preview created from the
- W
- bitmap in the clipboard.
- P
- display bitmap.
- E
- The available preview formats are `Interchange`,
- W
- `TIFF 4`, `TIFF 5` and `Windows Metafile`.
- P
- `TIFF 4` and `TIFF 5`.
- E
- If adding an Interchange preview, the document must have an `%%EndComments`
- line, otherwise GSview may put the preview in the wrong place.
- A TIFF 5 preview is a Class B image with no compression as described
- in Appendix G of the TIFF 5.0 memorandum. A TIFF 4 preview is almost
- identical to the TIFF 5 preview, but avoids using tags which are not
- described in the TIFF 4 specifiation.
- WordPerfect 5.1 requires a TIFF 4 preview.
-
- W
- 8.
- P
- 7.
- E
- Reset `Orientation` | `Portrait`, `Options` | `EPS Clip`
- and `Media` | `Resolution` to their previous values.
-
- To extract the PostScript or Preview section from a DOS EPS
- file, use `File` | `Select File` followed by `Edit` | `Extract EPS`
- then `PostScript` or `Preview`.
-
- See also `PS to EPS`.
- 2Options
- ?Options
- The `Options` menu has the following selections:
- 3Ghostscript Command
- ?Ghostscript Command
- The `Ghostscript Command` option allows selection of the command
- to use when executing Ghostscript.
- A default will be constructed using the GSview path and
- will look like:
- W
- gswin -Ic:\gs;c:\gs\fonts
- P
- gsos2.exe -Ic:\gs;c:\gs\fonts;c:\psfonts
- E
- GSview will first attempt to find Ghostscript in the GSview
- directory and then will try the PATH.
- If GSview still cannot find Ghostscript, use this option to
- set the full pathname to Ghostscript.
- If you wish to specify that Ghostscript should look for its
- initialisation files in a different place, modify the -I option.
- W
- Try to keep the command length short, otherwise GSview will
- have trouble printing files with Ghostscript.
- E
- Only the Ghostscript EXE and include path may be specified -
- other items will confuse GSview.
- 3Ghostscript Version
- ?Ghostscript Version
- GSview is best used with Ghostscript version 3.53 or later.
-
- W
- The 16-bit version of GSview can be used with the 16-bit
- Ghostscript 2.6.1 by setting this option to `Ghostscript 2.6.1`.
-
- E
- The default is `Ghostscript 3.51 or later`.
-
- See `Common Problems` for a description of what happens if you
- set the `Ghostscript Version` to the wrong setting.
- P
- 3Draw Method
- ?Draw Method
- A number of buggy display drivers have been written for OS/2.
- Many of these have a non-functional GpiDrawBits() API.
- The default `Draw Method` is to use GpiDrawBits() for most
- displays, and a slower double buffering method using
- WinDrawBitmap for VGA (4bit/pixel) displays.
-
- If your display has problems drawing the bitmap (usually
- seen during scrolling) or a SYS3175 (memory access violation)
- occurs in the display driver, then try explicitly using the
- GpiDrawBits or WinDrawBitmap method.
-
- If you have bugs in your display driver, please complain to
- the company that wrote it.
- E
- 3Sounds
- ?Sounds
- The `Sounds` option assigns sounds to various events.
- For each event the sound can be set to `None`, a `Speaker Beep` or
- a `Wave` file.
-
- You must have a sound driver loaded before using Wave files.
- Wave file sounds are not available under MS-Windows 3.0.
-
- The events are:
-
- `Output Page`: the PostScript showpage operator was executed.
-
- `No Page`: an invalid page was selected.
- For example, pressing `Prev` while on the first page of a document
- with `DSC` comments.
-
- `No Number`: a command required page numbering and the document did
- not have page numbering.
- For example, pressing `Goto Page` when viewing a document without
- `DSC` comments.
-
- `Not Open`: a command required a document to be open and this was
- not the case.
- For example, pressing `Goto Page` when no document is open.
-
- `Error`: many types of errors.
-
- `Timeout`: no response from Ghostscript within a timeout period.
- For example, display snowflak.ps on a PC with a 286-12 CPU.
-
- `Start`: GSview opened.
-
- `Exit`: GSview closed.
-
- The defaults are for `No Page` and `Error` to be a `Speaker Beep`
- and all other events to be `None`.
- 3Units
- ?Units
- The `Units` option sets the units used to display the cursor location
- on the status bar. Available units are PostScript points (`pt` = 1/72"),
- millimetres (`mm`) and inches (`in`).
- The default is `pt`.
- 3Save Settings
- ?Save Settings
- ?Save Settings Now
- ?Save Settings on Exit
- ?Settings
- ?INI file
- The `Save Settings Now` option saves the GSview window position,
- window size, last used printer, last directory,
- `Sounds`, `Units`, `Save Last Directory`,
- `User Defined`, `Ghostscript Command`, `Button Bar`,
- P
- `Fit Window To Page`,
- E
- `Quick Open`, `Auto Redisplay`, `EPS Clip`, `EPS Warn`, `Ignore DSC`,
- P
- `Show Bounding Box`,
- E
- `Depth`, `Orientation`, `Media`, `Resolution`
- and `Zoom Resolution` options to the initialisation file
- W
- gsview.ini (or gsview32.ini for gsview32.exe) in the Windows system
- directory.
- P
- gvpm.ini in the OS/2 system directory.
- E
- GSview reads this file during startup.
-
- When the `Save Settings on Exit` option is checked, GSview will
- automatically save the above settings when you quit GSview.
- 3Safer
- ?Safer
- When the `Safer` option is `checked`, GSview will give Ghostscript
- the `-dSAFER` flag, which disables the deletefile and renamefile operators,
- and the ability to open files in any mode other than read-only.
- This is the default.
-
- When the `Safer` option is `unchecked` Ghostscript can change
- files.
- 3Save Last Directory
- ?Save Last Directory
- When the `Save Last Directory` option is `checked`, GSview will
- save the current directory when you quit GSview. When GSview
- is started next, this will be made the current directory.
- This is the default.
-
- When `Save Last Directory` option is `unchecked`, the current
- directory when GSview is started will be the directory where
- GSview is located, or the working directory specified by
- the Program Manager.
- 3Button Bar
- ?Button Bar
- ?Magnify
- When the `Button Bar` option is `checked`, GSview will display
- a Button Bar down the left side of the window. This is the default.
- The Button Bar contains the following items in order from top to
- bottom:
-
- `File` | `Open`
-
- `File` | `Print`
-
- `File` | `Info`
-
- `Help` | `Contents`
-
- `View` | `Goto Page`
-
- `View` | `Next Page`
-
- `View` | `Previous Page`
-
- `Go forward 5 pages`
-
- `Go back 5 pages`
-
- `Increase resolution by 1.2`
-
- `Decrease resolution by 1/1.2`
-
- `Edit` | `Find`
-
- `Edit` | `Find Next`
-
- If using the increase/decrease resolution buttons, `Auto Redisplay`
- should be set. Instead of using these buttons, it is also possible
- to use the `Media` | `Resolution` command.
- When the `Button Bar` option is `unchecked`, GSview will not
- display the Button Bar.
- P
- 3Fit Window To Page
- ?Fit Window To Page
- When the `Fit Window To Page` option is `checked`, GSview will
- shrink the window size so that it is no larger than the page
- being displayed. This is the default.
-
- If `Fit Window To Page` is `unchecked`, GSview will not resize the
- window and areas outside the page will be drawn in light grey.
- This is useful if you do not wish the window to shrink when looking
- at pages at low resolution.
- E
- 3Quick Open
- ?Quick Open
- When the `Quick Open` option is `checked`, GSview will not reload
- Ghostscript before every document, making opening of documents quicker.
-
- GSview tries to preserve the Ghostscript state between documents,
- but a document may still leave the Ghostscript interpreter in an unusual
- state or cause an error. If an error occurs, Ghostscript will close.
- Error messages are displayed in the Ghostscript window.
- Select `Redisplay` to reopen the document.
-
- If `Quick Open` is `unchecked`, GSview will close Ghostscript and
- restart it before each new document or whenever the page orientation,
- resolution or size is changed.
- 3Auto Redisplay
- ?Auto Redisplay
- When the `Auto Redisplay` option is `checked`, GSview will
- redisplay `DSC` documents when the `Orientation`, `Resolution`,
- `Depth` or `Media` are changed.
- This is the default.
-
- If `Auto Redisplay` is `unchecked`, the `View` | `Redisplay` command
- must be used to redisplay a document after changing the
- `Orientation`, `Resolution`, `Depth` or `Media`.
- 3EPS Clip
- ?EPS Clip
- When the `EPS Clip` option is `checked`, GSview will clip the
- display bitmap to the bounding box of an EPS file instead of using the
- page size specified on the `Media` menu. This is useful when
- adding a bitmap preview to an EPS file.
-
- If `EPS Clip` is `unchecked`, GSview will use the page size
- specified on the `Media` menu for EPS files. This is the default.
-
- `EPS Clip` does not alter the original document, it only affects
- how much of the document is displayed by GSview.
- `EPS Clip` will only work in Portrait orientation.
-
- See also `Clipboard` | `Add EPS Preview`
- 3EPS Warn
- ?EPS Warn
- When the `EPS Warn` option is `checked`, GSview will write a
- prolog to Ghostscript when each file is opened. This prolog will
- produce warning messages in the Ghostscript text window if any
- PostScript operators that should not be used in `EPS` files
- are used. An example warning message is:
- Warning: EPS files must not use /initgraphics
- `EPS Warn` is not infallible. It is possible to access restricted
- operators without `EPS Warn` producing a warning.
-
- The default for `EPS Warn` is `unchecked`.
-
- See also `PS to EPS`.
- 3Ignore DSC
- ?Ignore DSC
- Some documents incorrectly claim to conform to the Adobe Document
- Structuring Conventions. Attempting to display one of these bogus
- documents will probably leave GSview horribly confused and unable
- to display the document. If `Ignore DSC` is `checked`, GSview
- will treat the document as if it does not contain DSC comments
- and will only display the pages in the original order.
-
- The default for `Ignore DSC` is `unchecked`.
- P
- 3Show Bounding Box
- ?Show Bounding Box
- Selecting this option causes a dashed rectangle to drawn over
- the image, showing the location of the bounding box.
- This bounding box is only drawn on the display, and does not
- affect printer output.
- The bounding box will only be shown for `DSC` documents (non
- conforming documents don't have a bounding box).
-
- The default for `Show Bounding Box` is `unchecked`.
- E
- 2Page Orientation
- ?Orientation
- ?Portrait
- ?Landscape
- ?Upside-down
- ?Seascape
- ?Swap Landscape
- The `Portrait`, `Landscape`, `Upside-down` and `Seascape`
- (reverse Landscape) commands on the `Orientation `Menu select
- the page orientation used by the display.
- `Landscape` implies a clockwise rotation of the paper by 90 degrees.
- `Seascape` implies an anti-clockwise rotation of the paper by 90 degrees.
- These orientation options only affect the display and do not affect
- the print commands.
- If a `DSC` page orientation comment is found, the orientation will be
- selected automatically.
-
- When the `Swap Landscape` option is `checked`, GSview swaps the
- meaning of Landscape and Seascape.
- Most of the Landscape documents that I have encountered require a 90
- clockwise rotation of the paper to view.
- However, there is no standard and some documents need to be rotated
- the other way.
- The `Swap Landscape` button allows GSview to automatically rotate the
- document the right way in response to the `%%Orientation` comment in the
- PostScript file.
-
- See also `Page Size and Display Resolution`.
- 2Page Size and Display Resolution
- ?Page Size and Display Resolution
- ?Resolution
- ?Zoom Resolution
- ?Depth
- ?Page Size
- ?Media
- ?User Defined
- The `Resolution` command on the `Media` menu selects the display
- resolution in dots per inch.
- The default for a VGA display is 96 dots per inch.
-
- For DSC conforming files, pressing the right mouse button will
- zoom into the page at what is usually printer resolution.
- Pressing the right mouse button a second time will zoom back out to
- normal display resolution.
- The `Zoom Resolution` command on the `Media` menu sets the zoom
- resolution in dots per inch.
-
- The `Depth` sub menu on the `Media` menu selects the display
- depth in bits per pixels.
-
- The `Media` menu also allows selection of page size.
- Available page sizes are:
- Letter 8.5 x 11 inch
- Tabloid 11 x 17 inch
- Ledger 17 x 11 inch
- Legal 8.5 x 14 inch
- Statement 5.5 x 8.5 inch
- Executive 7.5 x 10 inch
- A3 297 x 420 mm
- A4 210 x 297 mm
- A5 148 x 210 mm
- B4 257 x 364 mm
- B5 182 x 257 mm
- Folio 8.5 x 13 inch
- Quarto 8.5 x 10.8 inch
- 10x14 10 x 14 inch
-
- A user defined size can be specified in PostScript points (1/72 inch)
- with the `User Defined` command. A size of 480x360 points at 96 dpi
- will give an image size of 640x480 pixels.
-
- If a `DSC` media comment is found, the page type will be selected
- automatically. If the media specification is not one of the above
- page types, the `User Defined` size will be set.
- 2Keys
- ?Keys
- Following are the key assignments for GSview.
-
- `O`, `o` Open and display a file. (`File` | `Open`)
-
- `C`, `c` Close file. (`File` | `Close`)
-
- `N`, `n`, `+` Next Page. (`View` | `Next Page`)
-
- `V`, `v`, `-` Previous Page. (`View` | `Previous Page`)
-
- `G`, `g` Goto Page. (`View` | `Goto Page`)
-
- `I`, `i` File information. (`File` | `Info`)
-
- `R`, `r` Redisplay page. (`View` | `Redisplay`)
-
- `S`, `s` Select file: open but don't display. (`File` | `Select File`)
-
- `A`, `a` Save As. (`File` | `Save As`)
-
- `P`, `p` Print all or some pages to a printer. (`File` | `Print`)
-
- `F`, `f` Print all or some pages to a File. (`File` | `Print To File`)
-
- `E`, `e` Extract some pages to another File. (`File` | `Extract`)
-
- `F1` Help. (`Help` | `Contents`)
-
- `Ctrl+C`, `Insert` Copy displayed bitmap to clipboard. (`Edit` | `Copy`)
-
- W
- `Up` Scroll up 16 pixels.
-
- `Down` Scroll down 16 pixels.
-
- `Left` Scroll left one screen.
-
- `Right` Scroll right one screen.
- P
- `Arrow Keys` Scroll by 16 pixels.
-
- `Ctrl+Left` Scroll left one screen.
-
- `Ctrl+Right` Scroll right one screen.
-
- `Ctrl+Page Up` Scroll left one screen.
-
- `Ctrl+Page Down` Scroll right one screen.
- E
-
- `Page Up` Scroll up one screen (window height).
-
- `Page Down` Scroll down one screen.
-
- `Home` Scroll to top of page.
-
- `End` Scroll to bottom of page.
- W
- 2Running GSview from the File Manager
- ?Registration Info Editor
- ?File Manager
- If you used the GSview installation program, then the File Manager
- will already know about PostScript files. If you didn't use the
- GSview installation program, read on.
-
- To run GSview when a PostScript file is double clicked in the
- Windows 3.1 File Manager, the following sequence must be followed
- to teach File Manager about PostScript files.
-
- From the `Program Manager`, run the Registration Info Editor using
- `File `| `Run...` then type `regedit`.
- From the `Registration Info Editor` select `Edit `| `Add File Type...`
- then enter the following fields:
- Identifier = psfile
- Filetype = PostScript
- Action = Open
- Command = gsview %1
- Uses DDE = unchecked
- Action = Print
- Command = gsview /p %1
- Uses DDE = unchecked
- Then press `OK`.
-
- From the `File Manager`, select `File `| `Associate` then
- enter the following fields:
- Files with Extension = ps
- Associate With = PostScript (gsview)
- Then press `OK`.
-
- Put gsview.exe and gsview.hlp in a directory on your PATH.
- That's it! Now when you double click on a PostScript file,
- the `File Manager` will run GSview. When you drop a PostScript
- file on the `Print Manager`, GSview will print the file.
-
- For Windows 95, the configuration is instead made using Windows
- Explorer.
-
- Start `Windows Explorer`. Select `View `| `Options `. Select the
- `File Types` tab. Select the `New Type` button.
- Enter the following fields:
- Description of type = PostScript
- Associated Extension = PS EPS
- Press the `New` button, then enter
- Action = open
- Application used to perform action = c:\gsview\gsview32.exe
- Press the `OK` button
-
- Press the `New` button, then enter
- Action = print
- Application used to perform action = c:\gsview\gsview32.exe /p
- Press the `OK` button
-
- Press the `Close `button.
-
- Press the `Close `button.
- E
- 2Command line options
- ?Command line options
- Usage:
- W
- gsview [/D] filename
- gsview [/D] /F filename
- gsview [/D] /P filename
- gsview [/D] /S[port] filename
- P
- gvpm [/D] filename
- gvpm [/D] /F filename
- gvpm [/D] /P filename
- E
-
- To start GSview and display filename.ps use:
- W
- gsview filename.ps
- P
- gvpm filename.ps
- E
- To start GSview and print filename.ps using Ghostscript
- (`File` | `Print`) use:
- W
- gsview /P filename.ps
- P
- gvpm /P filename.ps
- E
- To start GSview and print filename.ps to a file using Ghostscript
- (`File` | `Print To File`) use:
- W
- gsview /F filename.ps
- P
- gvpm /F filename.ps
- E
- W
- To start GSview and spool filename.ps for printing directly to
- a printer (`File` | `Print File`) use:
- gsview /S filename.ps
- To start GSview and spool filename.ps for printing directly to
- printer port LPT3: use:
- gsview /SLPT3: filename.ps
- E
-
- To start GSview in debug mode use:
- W
- gsview /D
- P
- gvpm /D
- E
- In debug mode GSview will `not` remove its temporary files.
- This is to allow inspection of these files after GSview has finished.
-
- GSview ignores the case of option:
- /p is the same as /P.
- 2World Wide Web
- ?World Wide Web
- ?WWW
- ?HTML
- The World Wide Web home page for Ghostscript, Ghostview and GSview
- is at
- http://www.cs.wisc.edu/~ghost/index.html
-
- GSview can be used as a PostScript file viewer for several OS/2
- and MS-Windows Web browsers. See the GSview home page for details.
- 2Copyright
- ?Copyright
- The `About` menu item shows the GSview copyright message
- and GSview version number.
-
- W
- GSVIEW.EXE - A Ghostscript graphical interface
- P
- GVPM.EXE - A Ghostscript graphical interface
- E
- Copyright (C) 1993-1996, Russell Lang. All rights reserved.
- Portions Copyright (C) 1994, Timothy O. Theisen. All rights reserved.
-
- This file is part of GSview.
-
- This program is distributed with NO WARRANTY OF ANY KIND. No author
- or distributor accepts any responsibility for the consequences of using it,
- or for whether it serves any particular purpose or works at all, unless he
- or she says so in writing. Refer to the GSview Free Public Licence
- (the "Licence") for full details.
-
- Every copy of GSview must include a copy of the Licence, normally in a
- plain ASCII text file named LICENCE. The Licence grants you the right
- to copy, modify and redistribute GSview, but only under certain conditions
- described in the Licence. Among other things, the Licence requires that
- the copyright notice and this notice be preserved on all copies.
-
- Author: Russell Lang
- Internet: rjl@aladdin.com
- 2Common Problems
- ?Common Problems
- ?Problems
- W
- `Problem:` Can't run gswin...
-
- GSview requires Ghostscript for Windows (gswin.exe).
- This error message usually occurs if you don't have Ghostscript
- for Windows, or if GSview can't find Ghostscript for Windows.
-
- From the GSview menu select `Options` | `Ghostscript Command`
- and enter the correct executable path and include path for Ghostscript.
- For example:
- c:\gs\gswin.exe -Ic:\gs
-
- You must set the include path for Ghostscript using either the
- `-I` command or the `GS_LIB` environment variable.
-
- Make sure you don't already have Windows Ghostscript running.
- Only one copy of Windows Ghostscript can be running at a time.
- Only one copy of GSview can be running at a time.
-
- If you can't get GSview to run Ghostscript correctly, make sure
- you can run Ghostscript on its own.
- P
- `Problem:` Can't run gsos2...
-
- GSview requires OS/2 Ghostscript (gsos2.exe).
- This error message occurs if you don't have OS/2 Ghostscript,
- or if GSview can't find OS/2 Ghostscript.
-
- From the GSview menu select `Options` | `Ghostscript Command`
- and enter the correct executable path and include path for Ghostscript.
- For example:
- c:\gs\gsos2.exe -Ic:\gs;c:\gs\fonts;c:\psfonts
-
- You must set the include path for Ghostscript using either the
- `-I` command or the `GS_LIB` environment variable.
-
- If you can't get GSview to run Ghostscript correctly, make sure
- you can run Ghostscript on its own.
- E
-
- `Problem:` Ghostscript starts and then immediately exits with error code 1.
-
- W
- Read the error message in the Ghostscript window before pressing
- OK in the message box.
-
- E
- Ghostscript probably couldn't find its initialisation files.
- Set the Ghostscript include path by adding `-Idirectory` to the
- command in `Options` | `Ghostscript Command`, where `directory`
- includes the name of the directory that contains the Ghostscript
- initialisation files,
- Alternatively, set the environment variable GS_LIB.
-
- Read the file use.doc that comes with Ghostscript.
-
- If you can't get GSview to run Ghostscript correctly, make sure
- you can run Ghostscript on its own.
-
- W
- Alternatively, you may be using an incompatible version of Ghostscript,
- or you may have the `Options` | `Ghostscript Version` set incorrectly.
- This version of GSview should be used with Ghostscript version `3.12`
- or later.
- If you are using an incompatible version of Ghostscript or you
- have `Options` | `Ghostscript Version` set incorrectly, the
- Ghostscript text window will show one of the following error messages
- undefined in ear
- undefined in XXclear
- where `XX` are a pair of garbage characters.
-
- `Problem:` Message Box says `Incompatible Windows Ghostscript`
-
- You probably have an earlier version of Ghostscript.
- Get Ghostscript version 3.12 or later.
-
- `Problem:` GSview says 'Drawing...' or 'Printing...' and shows an
- hourglass cursor. When the cursor is moved off the GSview window
- it changes to a normal arrow.
-
- The above state is normal while GSview is waiting for Ghostscript
- to do something. It may be that the document is very complex and
- Ghostscript is just taking a long time. In this state it is safe to
- resize or scroll the window, but do not select any menu commands.
-
- If this is not the case then GSview probably got no response
- from Ghostscript.
- Open the Ghostscript text window and look at any error messages.
- Close Ghostscript using the Ghostscript system menu.
- If GSview is still waiting, press the GSview Open button
- (even though the cursor is still an hourglass).
- Press the 'Yes' button on the 'gsview is busy' message box.
- GSview should then revert to the non-waiting mode.
-
- `Problem:` Message Box says `Imitation pipe handle is zero`
-
- If you are running Windows 95 or NT, this is probably caused by a mismatch
- between GSview and Ghostscript. Make sure you are running both GSview32
- and gswin32.
-
- `Problem:` GSview displays a "Pipe error" message box.
-
- GSview could not open a temporary file. GSview requires a temporary
- file for `piping` commands to Ghostscript. This temporary file is
- created in the directory given by the environment variable TEMP,
- or if that is not set, in the current directory.
- `Pipe error` will result when
-
- 1. TEMP is not set and the current directory is read-only.
- For example, the current directory is on a CD-ROM or a network.
-
- Solution: Set TEMP environment variable in AUTOEXEC.BAT.
-
- 2. TEMP is set but does not point to a valid read-write directory.
-
- Solution: Change TEMP to point to a directory that exists
- and is read-write.
-
- 3. Disk is full.
-
- `Problem:` Ghostscript under Win32s won't print anything.
-
- Under Win32s, the 16 bit spooler functions are not available
- and the 32 bit spooler functions are not implemented.
- That is, Win32s is the worst of both worlds.
- The printer output code in Aladdin Ghostscript 3.51 for Win32s
- attempts to write directly to a port.
- This works on some computers, but fails on others.
- If it doesn't work on your computer, you have two options:
-
- 1. `Print To File`, then `Print File`. GSview under Win32s can
- write to the 16 bit spooler, using a 16 bit program.
-
- 2. Try the mswinpr2 device.
-
- Aladdin Ghostscript 3.53 starts the 16 bit program gs16spl.exe
- to spool printer output. It does not suffer from the problem
- described above.
- E
-
- `Problem:` GSview says that a multipage PostScript file produced
- by MS-Windows contains 0 pages and will only show the first page.
-
- This is because the document does not have correct DSC comments.
- From the Control Panel, select `Printers`, `Options...`, then in the
- `Print to` group box click on the `Printer` radio button. You cannot
- use the `Print To` `Encapsulated PostScript File` for printing
- multipage files. The correct method is to connect the printer
- to `FILE:`.
- In addition,
- from the Control Panel select `Printers`, `Options...`, `Advanced` and
- then check `Conform to Adobe Document Structuring Convention`.
-
- The DSC comment `%%Pages: 0` means that the document does not produce
- any pages. That is, the PostScript `showpage` operator is not used.
- If you find a PostScript document that has multiple pages and contains
- the `%%Pages: 0` comment, change the first line from `%!PS-Adobe-` to `%!`.
- GSview will then ignore the DSC comments and allow you to view all
- pages, but only in the original order. Complain to the author of the
- program that produced that PostScript file.
-
- Some PostScript printer drivers include code that is specific to
- a particular printer. The PostScript output from these drivers may
- be unportable and may not display in GSview. If you are having this
- problem, try using a reasonably generic PostScript driver such as
- `Apple LaserWriter II NT` for PostScript level 2 printers, or
- `Apple LaserWriter Plus` for PostScript level 1 printers.
-
- `Problem:` PostScript files produced by MS-Windows start with a Control-D.
-
- Since this occurs even when the PostScript printer
- `Conform to Document Structuring Convention`
- checkbox is checked, this must be considered a
- bug in the MS-Windows PostScript printer driver.
- The bug fix is documented in the MS-Windows PRINTERS.WRI file.
- Edit the win.ini file and search for the PostScript printer section.
- There may be more than one. In each of these sections add
- `CTRLD=0` as shown below.
-
- [Apple LaserWriter II NT,FILE]
- CTRLD=0
-
- `Problem:` PostScript files produced by Word for Windows 6.0
- cause a "Missing %%Pages comment" message box.
-
- Congratulations. You have just found a mistake in the DSC comments
- when Word included an EPS file. Word should have surrounded the
- included EPS file with the lines
- %%BeginDocument: filename.eps
- %%EndDocument
- Because Word didn't do this, GSview can't tell how many pages
- are in the document and where they are located.
-
- Please complain to Microsoft. There is a problem in the EPSIMP.FLT
- filter version 2.01 which Microsoft needs to fix.
-
- In the interim, you have two solutions:
-
- 1. Select `Options` | `Ignore DSC`
-
- 2. Edit the PostScript file to correct the DSC comments.
- Search the PostScript file for all lines containing
- %MSEPS Preamble
- From each of these lines, search forward for the start of the
- included EPS file which should start with a line like
- %%PS-Adobe-3.0 EPSF-3.0
- Above these lines add the line
- %%BeginDocument: AddedByHand
-
- Then search for all lines containing
- %MSEPS Trailer
- Above these lines add the line
- %%EndDocument
-
- GSview should then be able to display the file correctly.
-
- `Problem:` Ghostscript always outputs to a printer instead of the
- GSview window.
-
- You must not use the GS_DEVICE environment variable.
- W
-
- `Problem:` Ghostscript displays a message box "pipe overflow".
-
- The document may contain incorrect DSC comments.
-
- You must wait until Ghostscript is not busy before attempting to
- display another page. Exit and then restart GSview.
- E
- 2Whats new
- ?What's new
- ----------------------
- Version 1.4 1996-01-02
- ----------------------
- All:
- File was being opened twice if file was changed.
- Should be used with Aladdin Ghostscript 3.53.
- Win16:
- Prevented GPF when running out of memory.
- Reduced stack size and pipe buffer size to allow larger documents
- to be displayed. If only numeric page labels are used, 500 page
- documents should be OK.
- PM:
- Requires emx 0.9b or later.
- PDF viewing was broken when "Configure Ghostscript" was added.
-
-
- ----------------------------
- Version 1.33 beta 1995-11-30
- ----------------------------
- All:
- Added PageOffset for printers. See the Properties dialog box.
- Add 'Edit Properties' dialog box to allow user to add, edit or delete
- properties for a printer without having to hand edit the INI file.
- Win:
- Installation program now creates "GS Tools" program group and
- adds File Manager associations for .ps and .eps to the registry.
-
-
- ----------------------------
- Version 1.32 beta 1995-11-23
- ----------------------------
- All:
- Installation programs added.
- Win32s:
- Uses new gsv16spl.exe to write to the 16-bit spooler from Win32s.
- PM:
- Fixed printing of non DSC documents (was broken when printer
- dialog boxes were combined).
-
- ----------------------------
- Version 1.31 beta 1995-11-03
- ----------------------------
- This is an interim release, intended to fix some known problems
- and add a few new features, but does not include the full DLL
- implementation needed to work reliably under Windows 95/NT,
- or paper size handling using level 2 setpagedevice.
- It is intended for use with Aladdin Ghostscript 3.51.
- All:
- Still doesn't work with landscape PostScript that sets the
- clipping path.
- Combined printer dialog boxes.
- Allow user supplied preview file in creation of DOS EPS file for both
- GSview "Edit | Add EPS Preview | User Supplied Preview" and EPSTOOL.
- Added warning if EPS BoundingBox was entirely off the page.
- Replace label of "%%Pages: () 1" with page number.
- Changed "Ghostscript Command" into "Configure Ghostscript" which
- has separate "Ghostscript EXE" and "Ghostscript Include Path".
- Changed TIFF code to work on big-endian architectures, to allow
- EPSTOOL to run under Solaris.
- Directories src, gsgrab and epstool are now in ZIP files, since
- most people won't want them unzipped.
- PM:
- Uses print queues instead of writing to ports.
- It is now possible to use a Ghostscript path with embedded spaces.
- Allow user to specify drawing method GpiDrawBits or WinDrawBitmap
- to dodge display driver bugs.
- Recover when last directory is invalid (usually no floppy in drive).
- Win:
- Added Ghostscript 3.51 to "Options | Ghostscript Version". Selecting
- GS 3.51 puts quotes around filenames in response files to allow embedded
- spaces. This won't work with GS 3.33.
- Win32:
- Uses print queues under Win95 and WinNT.
- 2Internals
- ?Internals
- W
- The preferred method for driving Ghostscript would be to start it
- as a child process and then to send it PostScript code through a pipe.
- Windows 3.1 supports neither child processes nor pipes.
-
- GSview interacts with Ghostscript by sending messages between
- the GSview and Ghostscript windows.
- GSview creates an imitation pipe to Ghostscript by writing
- into a shareable global memory block (or memory mapped file
- under Windows 95 or NT) and then passing the handle to Ghostscript.
-
- GSview starts Ghostscript for displaying using
- gswin -dBitsPerPixel=x -dSAFER -rXDPIxYDPI -gWIDTHxHEIGHT -sGSVIEW=xxxx -
- where xxxx is the handle to the GSview window.
- Ghostscript then tells GSview the handle to the text window by sending
- a message WM_USER with wParam HWND_TEXT=0 to the GSview window.
- Instead of creating another window for the image, Ghostscript
- creates a child window of the GSview window for displaying
- the bitmap. Ghostscript tells GSview the handle to this child
- image window by sending a message WM_USER with wParam
- HWND_IMGCHILD=1.
-
- Ghostscript also sends WM_USER messages to GSview with wParam
- GSWIN_CLOSE=2 when it is exiting,
- SYNC_OUTPUT=3 when the image needs to be redrawn (win_sync_output),
- OUTPUT_PAGE=4 when a page is to be output (win_output_page),
- SCROLL_POSITION=5 when the window is scrolled,
- PIPE_DATA=6 for passing the handle to a global memory block (in
- lParam) for the imitation pipe,
- BEGIN=7 when "-1 false .outputpage" is executed and
- END=8 when "-2 false .outputpage" is executed.
-
- When Ghostscript sends the OUTPUT_PAGE command it waits until it
- receives a NEXT_PAGE command from GSview.
-
- GSview sends WM_USER messages to the Ghostscript Image window with
- wParam NEXT_PAGE=10 when it is time to move to the next page and
- COPY_CLIPBOARD=11 when the bitmap should be copied to the clipboard.
- GSview sends WM_USER messages to the Ghostscript Text window with
- wParam PIPE_REQUEST=12 when it wants more pipe data.
-
- GSview uses temporary files of the name gsviewXX.XXX in the
- directory given by the TEMP environment variable.
- Keep TEMP short to avoid the gswin command line exceeding 128 characters.
-
- GSview starts Ghostscript for printing using
- gswin -sGSVIEW=xxxx @optfile
- optfile contains
- -dNOPAUSE
- -dSAFER
- -sDEVICE=devname
- -rXDPIxYDPI
- -gWIDTHxHEIGHT
- -sOutputFile=outfilename
- filename.ps
- quit.ps
-
- P
- GSview starts Ghostscript for displaying using
- gsos2 -dBitsPerPixel=x -dSAFER -rXDPIxYDPI -gWIDTHxHEIGHT -sGSVIEW=xxxx -
- where xxxx is a string used to access a named shareable memory block,
- two semaphores and a queue. These are listed in gdevpm.h.
- The shareable memory block contains a bitmap in BMP format.
- The SYNC semaphore is not used (it is used by gspmdrv.exe instead).
- The NEXT semaphore is used when waiting at each showpage.
- The MUTEX is used to sychronise access to the bitmap.
- The QUEUE is used by Ghostscript to notify GSview about the
- following significant events: 1. Starting to draw into bitmap,
- 2. Synchronise (redraw) page, 3. showpage (redraw page),
- 4. Ghostscript is closing, 5. Ghostscript fatal error,
- 6. Palette in bitmap has changed,
- 7. "-1 false .outputpage" is executed,
- 8. "-2 false .outputpage" is executed.
- PostScript code is piped to the Ghostscript stdin.
- Ghostscript stdout goes to a window.
-
- GSview uses temporary files of the name gvXXXXXX in the
- directory given by the TEMP environment variable.
-
- GSview starts Ghostscript for printing using
- gsos2 @optfile
- optfile contains
- -dNOPAUSE
- -dSAFER
- -sDEVICE=devname
- -rXDPIxYDPI
- -gWIDTHxHEIGHT
- -sOutputFile=outfilename
- filename.ps
- quit.ps
-
- E
-