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732 lines
30 KiB
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732 lines
30 KiB
Plaintext
*print.txt* Nvim
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VIM REFERENCE MANUAL by Bram Moolenaar
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Printing *printing*
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Type |gO| to see the table of contents.
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==============================================================================
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1. Introduction *print-intro*
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On MS-Windows Vim can print your text on any installed printer. On other
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systems a PostScript file is produced. This can be directly sent to a
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PostScript printer. For other printers a program like ghostscript needs to be
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used.
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Note: If you have problems printing with |:hardcopy|, an alternative is to use
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|:TOhtml| and print the resulting html file from a browser.
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*:ha* *:hardcopy* *E237* *E238* *E324*
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:[range]ha[rdcopy][!] [arguments]
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Send [range] lines (default whole file) to the
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printer.
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On MS-Windows a dialog is displayed to allow selection
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of printer, paper size etc. To skip the dialog, use
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the [!]. In this case the printer defined by
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'printdevice' is used, or, if 'printdevice' is empty,
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the system default printer.
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For systems other than MS-Windows, PostScript is
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written in a temp file and 'printexpr' is used to
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actually print it. Then [arguments] can be used by
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'printexpr' through |v:cmdarg|. Otherwise [arguments]
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is ignored. 'printoptions' can be used to specify
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paper size, duplex, etc.
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Note: If you want PDF, there are tools such as
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"ps2pdf" that can convert the PostScript to PDF.
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:[range]ha[rdcopy][!] >{filename}
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As above, but write the resulting PostScript in file
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{filename}.
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Things like "%" are expanded |cmdline-special|
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Careful: An existing file is silently overwritten.
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On MS-Windows use the "print to file" feature of the
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printer driver.
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Progress is displayed during printing as a page number and a percentage. To
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abort printing use the interrupt key (CTRL-C or, on MS-systems, CTRL-Break).
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Printer output is controlled by the 'printfont' and 'printoptions' options.
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'printheader' specifies the format of a page header.
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The printed file is always limited to the selected margins, irrespective of
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the current window's 'wrap' or 'linebreak' settings. The "wrap" item in
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'printoptions' can be used to switch wrapping off.
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The current highlighting colors are used in the printout, with the following
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considerations:
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1) The normal background is always rendered as white (i.e. blank paper).
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2) White text or the default foreground is rendered as black, so that it shows
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up!
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3) If 'background' is "dark", then the colours are darkened to compensate for
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the fact that otherwise they would be too bright to show up clearly on
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white paper.
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==============================================================================
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2. Print options *print-options*
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Here are the details for the options that change the way printing is done.
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For generic info about setting options see |options.txt|.
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*pdev-option*
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'printdevice' 'pdev' string (default empty)
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global
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This defines the name of the printer to be used when the |:hardcopy| command
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is issued with a bang (!) to skip the printer selection dialog. On Win32, it
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should be the printer name exactly as it appears in the standard printer
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dialog.
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If the option is empty, then vim will use the system default printer for
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":hardcopy!"
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*penc-option* *E620*
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'printencoding' 'penc' String (default empty, except for:
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Windows: cp1252,
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Macintosh: mac-roman,
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HPUX: hp-roman8)
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global
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Sets the character encoding used when printing. This option tells Vim which
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print character encoding file from the "print" directory in 'runtimepath' to
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use.
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This option will accept any value from |encoding-names|. Any recognized names
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are converted to Vim standard names - see 'encoding' for more details. Names
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not recognized by Vim will just be converted to lower case and underscores
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replaced with '-' signs.
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If 'printencoding' is empty or Vim cannot find the file then it will use
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'encoding' (if it is set an 8-bit encoding) to find the print character
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encoding file. If Vim is unable to find a character encoding file then it
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will use the "latin1" print character encoding file.
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When 'encoding' is set to a multi-byte encoding, Vim will try to convert
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characters to the printing encoding for printing (if 'printencoding' is empty
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then the conversion will be to latin1). Conversion to a printing encoding
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other than latin1 will require Vim to be compiled with the |+iconv| feature.
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If no conversion is possible then printing will fail. Any characters that
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cannot be converted will be replaced with upside down question marks.
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Two print character encoding files are provided to support default Mac and
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HPUX character encodings and are used by default on these platforms. Code page
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1252 print character encoding is used by default on the Windows platform.
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*pexpr-option*
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'printexpr' 'pexpr' String (default: see below)
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global
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Expression that is evaluated to print the PostScript produced with
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|:hardcopy|.
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The file name to be printed is in |v:fname_in|.
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The arguments to the ":hardcopy" command are in |v:cmdarg|.
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The expression must take care of deleting the file after printing it.
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When there is an error, the expression must return a non-zero number.
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If there is no error, return zero or an empty string.
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The default for non MS-Windows systems is to simply use "lpr" to print the
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file: >
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system(['lpr']
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+ (empty(&printdevice)?[]:['-P', &printdevice])
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+ [v:fname_in])
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. delete(v:fname_in)
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+ v:shell_error
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On MS-Dos and MS-Windows machines the default is to copy the file to the
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currently specified printdevice: >
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system(['copy', v:fname_in, empty(&printdevice)?'LPT1':&printdevice])
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. delete(v:fname_in)
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If you change this option, using a function is an easy way to avoid having to
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escape all the spaces. Example: >
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:set printexpr=PrintFile(v:fname_in)
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:function PrintFile(fname)
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: call system("ghostview " . a:fname)
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: call delete(a:fname)
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: return v:shell_error
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:endfunc
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Be aware that some print programs return control before they have read the
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file. If you delete the file too soon it will not be printed. These programs
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usually offer an option to have them remove the file when printing is done.
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*E365*
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If evaluating the expression fails or it results in a non-zero number, you get
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an error message. In that case Vim will delete the file. In the default
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value for non-MS-Windows a trick is used: Adding "v:shell_error" will result
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in a non-zero number when the system() call fails.
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This option cannot be set from a |modeline| or in the |sandbox|, for security
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reasons.
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*pfn-option* *E613*
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'printfont' 'pfn' string (default "courier")
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global
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This is the name of the font that will be used for the |:hardcopy| command's
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output. It has the same format as the 'guifont' option, except that only one
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font may be named, and the special "guifont=*" syntax is not available.
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In the Win32 GUI version this specifies a font name with its extra attributes,
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as with the 'guifont' option.
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For other systems, only ":h11" is recognized, where "11" is the point size of
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the font. When omitted, the point size is 10.
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*pheader-option*
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'printheader' 'pheader' string (default "%<%f%h%m%=Page %N")
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global
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This defines the format of the header produced in |:hardcopy| output. The
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option is defined in the same way as the 'statusline' option. If Vim has not
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been compiled with the |+statusline| feature, this option has no effect and a
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simple default header is used, which shows the page number. The same simple
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header is used when this option is empty.
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*pmbcs-option*
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'printmbcharset' 'pmbcs' string (default "")
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global
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Sets the CJK character set to be used when generating CJK output from
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|:hardcopy|. The following predefined values are currently recognised by Vim:
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Value Description ~
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Chinese GB_2312-80
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(Simplified) GBT_12345-90
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MAC Apple Mac Simplified Chinese
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GBT-90_MAC GB/T 12345-90 Apple Mac Simplified
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Chinese
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GBK GBK (GB 13000.1-93)
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ISO10646 ISO 10646-1:1993
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Chinese CNS_1993 CNS 11643-1993, Planes 1 & 2
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(Traditional) BIG5
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ETEN Big5 with ETen extensions
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ISO10646 ISO 10646-1:1993
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Japanese JIS_C_1978
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JIS_X_1983
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JIS_X_1990
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MSWINDOWS Win3.1/95J (JIS X 1997 + NEC +
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IBM extensions)
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KANJITALK6 Apple Mac KanjiTalk V6.x
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KANJITALK7 Apple Mac KanjiTalk V7.x
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Korean KS_X_1992
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MAC Apple Macintosh Korean
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MSWINDOWS KS X 1992 with MS extensions
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ISO10646 ISO 10646-1:1993
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Only certain combinations of the above values and 'printencoding' are
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possible. The following tables show the valid combinations:
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euc-cn gbk ucs-2 utf-8 ~
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Chinese GB_2312-80 x
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(Simplified) GBT_12345-90 x
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MAC x
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GBT-90_MAC x
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GBK x
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ISO10646 x x
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euc-tw big5 ucs-2 utf-8 ~
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Chinese CNS_1993 x
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(Traditional) BIG5 x
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ETEN x
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ISO10646 x x
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euc-jp sjis ucs-2 utf-8 ~
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Japanese JIS_C_1978 x x
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JIS_X_1983 x x
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JIS_X_1990 x x x
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MSWINDOWS x
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KANJITALK6 x
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KANJITALK7 x
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euc-kr cp949 ucs-2 utf-8 ~
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Korean KS_X_1992 x
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MAC x
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MSWINDOWS x
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ISO10646 x x
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To set up the correct encoding and character set for printing some
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Japanese text you would do the following; >
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:set printencoding=euc-jp
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:set printmbcharset=JIS_X_1983
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If 'printmbcharset' is not one of the above values then it is assumed to
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specify a custom multi-byte character set and no check will be made that it is
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compatible with the value for 'printencoding'. Vim will look for a file
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defining the character set in the "print" directory in 'runtimepath'.
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*pmbfn-option*
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'printmbfont' 'pmbfn' string (default "")
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global
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This is a comma-separated list of fields for font names to be used when
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generating CJK output from |:hardcopy|. Each font name has to be preceded
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with a letter indicating the style the font is to be used for as follows:
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r:{font-name} font to use for normal characters
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b:{font-name} font to use for bold characters
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i:{font-name} font to use for italic characters
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o:{font-name} font to use for bold-italic characters
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A field with the r: prefix must be specified when doing CJK printing. The
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other fontname specifiers are optional. If a specifier is missing then
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another font will be used as follows:
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if b: is missing, then use r:
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if i: is missing, then use r:
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if o: is missing, then use b:
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Some CJK fonts do not contain characters for codes in the ASCII code range.
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Also, some characters in the CJK ASCII code ranges differ in a few code points
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from traditional ASCII characters. There are two additional fields to control
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printing of characters in the ASCII code range.
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c:yes Use Courier font for characters in the ASCII
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c:no (default) code range.
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a:yes Use ASCII character set for codes in the ASCII
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a:no (default) code range.
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The following is an example of specifying two multi-byte fonts, one for normal
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and italic printing and one for bold and bold-italic printing, and using
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Courier to print codes in the ASCII code range but using the national
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character set: >
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:set printmbfont=r:WadaMin-Regular,b:WadaMin-Bold,c:yes
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<
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*popt-option*
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'printoptions' 'popt' string (default "")
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global
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This is a comma-separated list of items that control the format of the output
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of |:hardcopy|:
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left:{spec} left margin (default: 10pc)
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right:{spec} right margin (default: 5pc)
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top:{spec} top margin (default: 5pc)
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bottom:{spec} bottom margin (default: 5pc)
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{spec} is a number followed by "in" for inches, "pt"
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for points (1 point is 1/72 of an inch), "mm" for
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millimeters or "pc" for a percentage of the media
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size.
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Weird example:
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left:2in,top:30pt,right:16mm,bottom:3pc
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If the unit is not recognized there is no error and
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the default value is used.
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header:{nr} Number of lines to reserve for the header.
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Only the first line is actually filled, thus when {nr}
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is 2 there is one empty line. The header is formatted
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according to 'printheader'.
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header:0 Do not print a header.
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header:2 (default) Use two lines for the header
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syntax:n Do not use syntax highlighting. This is faster and
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thus useful when printing large files.
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syntax:y Do syntax highlighting.
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syntax:a (default) Use syntax highlighting if the printer appears to be
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able to print color or grey.
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number:y Include line numbers in the printed output.
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number:n (default) No line numbers.
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wrap:y (default) Wrap long lines.
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wrap:n Truncate long lines.
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duplex:off Print on one side.
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duplex:long (default) Print on both sides (when possible), bind on long
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side.
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duplex:short Print on both sides (when possible), bind on short
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side.
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collate:y (default) Collating: 1 2 3, 1 2 3, 1 2 3
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collate:n No collating: 1 1 1, 2 2 2, 3 3 3
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jobsplit:n (default) Do all copies in one print job
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jobsplit:y Do each copy as a separate print job. Useful when
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doing N-up postprocessing.
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portrait:y (default) Orientation is portrait.
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portrait:n Orientation is landscape.
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*a4* *letter*
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paper:A4 (default) Paper size: A4
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paper:{name} Paper size from this table:
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{name} size in cm size in inch ~
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10x14 25.4 x 35.57 10 x 14
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A3 29.7 x 42 11.69 x 16.54
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A4 21 x 29.7 8.27 x 11.69
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A5 14.8 x 21 5.83 x 8.27
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B4 25 x 35.3 10.12 x 14.33
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B5 17.6 x 25 7.17 x 10.12
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executive 18.42 x 26.67 7.25 x 10.5
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folio 21 x 33 8.27 x 13
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ledger 43.13 x 27.96 17 x 11
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legal 21.59 x 35.57 8.5 x 14
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letter 21.59 x 27.96 8.5 x 11
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quarto 21.59 x 27.5 8.5 x 10.83
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statement 13.97 x 21.59 5.5 x 8.5
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tabloid 27.96 x 43.13 11 x 17
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formfeed:n (default) Treat form feed characters (0x0c) as a normal print
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character.
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formfeed:y When a form feed character is encountered, continue
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printing of the current line at the beginning of the
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first line on a new page.
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The item indicated with (default) is used when the item is not present. The
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values are not always used, especially when using a dialog to select the
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printer and options.
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Example: >
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:set printoptions=paper:letter,duplex:off
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==============================================================================
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3. PostScript Printing *postscript-printing*
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*E455* *E456* *E457* *E624*
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Provided you have enough disk space there should be no problems generating a
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PostScript file. You need to have the runtime files correctly installed (if
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you can find the help files, they probably are).
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There are currently a number of limitations with PostScript printing:
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- 'printfont' - The font name is ignored (the Courier family is always used -
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it should be available on all PostScript printers) but the font size is
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used.
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- 'printoptions' - The duplex setting is used when generating PostScript
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output, but it is up to the printer to take notice of the setting. If the
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printer does not support duplex printing then it should be silently ignored.
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Some printers, however, don't print at all.
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- 8-bit support - While a number of 8-bit print character encodings are
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supported it is possible that some characters will not print. Whether a
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character will print depends on the font in the printer knowing the
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character. Missing characters will be replaced with an upside down question
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mark, or a space if that character is also not known by the font. It may be
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possible to get all the characters in an encoding to print by installing a
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new version of the Courier font family.
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- Multi-byte support - Currently Vim will try to convert multi-byte characters
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to the 8-bit encoding specified by 'printencoding' (or latin1 if it is
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empty). Any characters that are not successfully converted are shown as
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unknown characters. Printing will fail if Vim cannot convert the multi-byte
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to the 8-bit encoding.
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==============================================================================
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4. Custom 8-bit Print Character Encodings *postscript-print-encoding*
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*E618* *E619*
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To use your own print character encoding when printing 8-bit character data
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you need to define your own PostScript font encoding vector. Details on how
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to define a font encoding vector is beyond the scope of this help file, but
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you can find details in the PostScript Language Reference Manual, 3rd Edition,
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published by Addison-Wesley and available in PDF form at
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http://www.adobe.com/. The following describes what you need to do for Vim to
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locate and use your print character encoding.
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i. Decide on a unique name for your encoding vector, one that does not clash
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with any of the recognized or standard encoding names that Vim uses (see
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|encoding-names| for a list), and that no one else is likely to use.
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ii. Copy $VIMRUNTIME/print/latin1.ps to the print subdirectory in your
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'runtimepath' and rename it with your unique name.
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iii. Edit your renamed copy of latin1.ps, replacing all occurrences of latin1
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with your unique name (don't forget the line starting %%Title:), and
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modify the array of glyph names to define your new encoding vector. The
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array must have exactly 256 entries or you will not be able to print!
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iv. Within Vim, set 'printencoding' to your unique encoding name and then
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print your file. Vim will now use your custom print character encoding.
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Vim will report an error with the resource file if you change the order or
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content of the first 3 lines, other than the name of the encoding on the line
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starting %%Title: or the version number on the line starting %%Version:.
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[Technical explanation for those that know PostScript - Vim looks for a file
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with the same name as the encoding it will use when printing. The file
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defines a new PostScript Encoding resource called /VIM-name, where name is the
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print character encoding Vim will use.]
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==============================================================================
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5. PostScript CJK Printing *postscript-cjk-printing*
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*E673* *E674* *E675*
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Vim supports printing of Chinese, Japanese, and Korean files. Setting up Vim
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to correctly print CJK files requires setting up a few more options.
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Each of these countries has many standard character sets and encodings which
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require that both be specified when printing. In addition, CJK fonts normally
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do not have the concept of italic glyphs and use different weight or stroke
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style to achieve emphasis when printing. This in turn requires a different
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approach to specifying fonts to use when printing.
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The encoding and character set are specified with the 'printencoding' and
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'printmbcharset' options. If 'printencoding' is not specified then 'encoding'
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is used as normal. If 'printencoding' is specified then characters will be
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translated to this encoding for printing. You should ensure that the encoding
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is compatible with the character set needed for the file contents or some
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characters may not appear when printed.
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The fonts to use for CJK printing are specified with 'printmbfont'. This
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option allows you to specify different fonts to use when printing characters
|
|
which are syntax highlighted with the font styles normal, italic, bold and
|
|
bold-italic.
|
|
|
|
No CJK fonts are supplied with Vim. There are some free Korean, Japanese, and
|
|
Traditional Chinese fonts available at:
|
|
|
|
http://examples.oreilly.com/cjkvinfo/adobe/samples/
|
|
|
|
You can find descriptions of the various fonts in the read me file at
|
|
|
|
http://examples.oreilly.de/english_examples/cjkvinfo/adobe/00README
|
|
|
|
Please read your printer documentation on how to install new fonts.
|
|
|
|
CJK fonts can be large containing several thousand glyphs, and it is not
|
|
uncommon to find that they only contain a subset of a national standard. It
|
|
is not unusual to find the fonts to not include characters for codes in the
|
|
ASCII code range. If you find half-width Roman characters are not appearing
|
|
in your printout then you should configure Vim to use the Courier font the
|
|
half-width ASCII characters with 'printmbfont'. If your font does not include
|
|
other characters then you will need to find another font that does.
|
|
|
|
Another issue with ASCII characters, is that the various national character
|
|
sets specify a couple of different glyphs in the ASCII code range. If you
|
|
print ASCII text using the national character set you may see some unexpected
|
|
characters. If you want true ASCII code printing then you need to configure
|
|
Vim to output ASCII characters for the ASCII code range with 'printmbfont'.
|
|
|
|
It is possible to define your own multi-byte character set although this
|
|
should not be attempted lightly. A discussion on the process if beyond the
|
|
scope of these help files. You can find details on CMap (character map) files
|
|
in the document 'Adobe CMap and CIDFont Files Specification, Version 1.0',
|
|
available from http://www.adobe.com as a PDF file.
|
|
|
|
==============================================================================
|
|
6. PostScript Printing Troubleshooting *postscript-print-trouble*
|
|
*E621*
|
|
Usually the only sign of a problem when printing with PostScript is that your
|
|
printout does not appear. If you are lucky you may get a printed page that
|
|
tells you the PostScript operator that generated the error that prevented the
|
|
print job completing.
|
|
|
|
There are a number of possible causes as to why the printing may have failed:
|
|
|
|
- Wrong version of the prolog resource file. The prolog resource file
|
|
contains some PostScript that Vim needs to be able to print. Each version
|
|
of Vim needs one particular version. Make sure you have correctly installed
|
|
the runtime files, and don't have any old versions of a file called prolog
|
|
in the print directory in your 'runtimepath' directory.
|
|
|
|
- Paper size. Some PostScript printers will abort printing a file if they do
|
|
not support the requested paper size. By default Vim uses A4 paper. Find
|
|
out what size paper your printer normally uses and set the appropriate paper
|
|
size with 'printoptions'. If you cannot find the name of the paper used,
|
|
measure a sheet and compare it with the table of supported paper sizes listed
|
|
for 'printoptions', using the paper that is closest in both width AND height.
|
|
Note: The dimensions of actual paper may vary slightly from the ones listed.
|
|
If there is no paper listed close enough, then you may want to try psresize
|
|
from PSUtils, discussed below.
|
|
|
|
- Two-sided printing (duplex). Normally a PostScript printer that does not
|
|
support two-sided printing will ignore any request to do it. However, some
|
|
printers may abort the job altogether. Try printing with duplex turned off.
|
|
Note: Duplex prints can be achieved manually using PS utils - see below.
|
|
|
|
- Collated printing. As with Duplex printing, most PostScript printers that
|
|
do not support collating printouts will ignore a request to do so. Some may
|
|
not. Try printing with collation turned off.
|
|
|
|
- Syntax highlighting. Some print management code may prevent the generated
|
|
PostScript file from being printed on a black and white printer when syntax
|
|
highlighting is turned on, even if solid black is the only color used. Try
|
|
printing with syntax highlighting turned off.
|
|
|
|
A safe printoptions setting to try is: >
|
|
|
|
:set printoptions=paper:A4,duplex:off,collate:n,syntax:n
|
|
|
|
Replace "A4" with the paper size that best matches your printer paper.
|
|
|
|
==============================================================================
|
|
7. PostScript Utilities *postscript-print-util*
|
|
|
|
7.1 Ghostscript
|
|
|
|
Ghostscript is a PostScript and PDF interpreter that can be used to display
|
|
and print on non-PostScript printers PostScript and PDF files. It can also
|
|
generate PDF files from PostScript.
|
|
|
|
Ghostscript will run on a wide variety of platforms.
|
|
|
|
There are three available versions:
|
|
|
|
- AFPL Ghostscript (formerly Aladdin Ghostscript) which is free for
|
|
non-commercial use. It can be obtained from:
|
|
|
|
http://www.cs.wisc.edu/~ghost/
|
|
|
|
- GNU Ghostscript which is available under the GNU General Public License. It
|
|
can be obtained from:
|
|
|
|
ftp://mirror.cs.wisc.edu/pub/mirrors/ghost/gnu/
|
|
|
|
- A commercial version for inclusion in commercial products.
|
|
|
|
Additional information on Ghostscript can also be found at:
|
|
|
|
http://www.ghostscript.com/
|
|
|
|
Support for a number of non PostScript printers is provided in the
|
|
distribution as standard, but if you cannot find support for your printer
|
|
check the Ghostscript site for other printers not included by default.
|
|
|
|
|
|
7.2 Ghostscript Previewers.
|
|
|
|
The interface to Ghostscript is very primitive so a number of graphical front
|
|
ends have been created. These allow easier PostScript file selection,
|
|
previewing at different zoom levels, and printing. Check supplied
|
|
documentation for full details.
|
|
|
|
X11
|
|
|
|
- Ghostview. Obtainable from:
|
|
|
|
http://www.cs.wisc.edu/~ghost/gv/
|
|
|
|
- gv. Derived from Ghostview. Obtainable from:
|
|
|
|
http://wwwthep.physik.uni-mainz.de/~plass/gv/
|
|
|
|
Copies (possibly not the most recent) can be found at:
|
|
|
|
http://www.cs.wisc.edu/~ghost/gv/
|
|
|
|
Windows
|
|
|
|
- GSview. Obtainable from:
|
|
|
|
http://www.cs.wisc.edu/~ghost/gsview/
|
|
|
|
DOS
|
|
|
|
- ps_view. Obtainable from:
|
|
|
|
ftp://ftp.pg.gda.pl/pub/TeX/support/ps_view/
|
|
ftp://ftp.dante.de/tex-archive/support/ps_view/
|
|
|
|
Linux
|
|
|
|
- GSview. Linux version of the popular Windows previewer.
|
|
Obtainable from:
|
|
|
|
http://www.cs.wisc.edu/~ghost/gsview/
|
|
|
|
- BMV. Different from Ghostview and gv in that it doesn't use X but svgalib.
|
|
Obtainable from:
|
|
|
|
ftp://sunsite.unc.edu/pub/Linux/apps/graphics/viewers/svga/bmv-1.2.tgz
|
|
|
|
|
|
7.3 PSUtils
|
|
|
|
PSUtils is a collection of utility programs for manipulating PostScript
|
|
documents. Binary distributions are available for many platforms, as well as
|
|
the full source. PSUtils can be found at:
|
|
|
|
http://knackered.org/angus/psutils
|
|
|
|
The utilities of interest include:
|
|
|
|
- psnup. Convert PS files for N-up printing.
|
|
- psselect. Select page range and order of printing.
|
|
- psresize. Change the page size.
|
|
- psbook. Reorder and lay out pages ready for making a book.
|
|
|
|
The output of one program can be used as the input to the next, allowing for
|
|
complex print document creation.
|
|
|
|
|
|
N-UP PRINTING
|
|
|
|
The psnup utility takes an existing PostScript file generated from Vim and
|
|
convert it to an n-up version. The simplest way to create a 2-up printout is
|
|
to first create a PostScript file with: >
|
|
|
|
:hardcopy > test.ps
|
|
|
|
Then on your command line execute: >
|
|
|
|
psnup -n 2 test.ps final.ps
|
|
|
|
Note: You may get warnings from some Ghostscript previewers for files produced
|
|
by psnup - these may safely be ignored.
|
|
|
|
Finally print the file final.ps to your PostScript printer with your
|
|
platform's print command. (You will need to delete the two PostScript files
|
|
afterwards yourself.) 'printexpr' could be modified to perform this extra
|
|
step before printing.
|
|
|
|
|
|
ALTERNATE DUPLEX PRINTING
|
|
|
|
It is possible to achieve a poor man's version of duplex printing using the PS
|
|
utility psselect. This utility has options -e and -o for printing just the
|
|
even or odd pages of a PS file respectively.
|
|
|
|
First generate a PS file with the 'hardcopy' command, then generate new
|
|
files with all the odd and even numbered pages with: >
|
|
|
|
psselect -o test.ps odd.ps
|
|
psselect -e test.ps even.ps
|
|
|
|
Next print odd.ps with your platform's normal print command. Then take the
|
|
print output, turn it over and place it back in the paper feeder. Now print
|
|
even.ps with your platform's print command. All the even pages should now
|
|
appear on the back of the odd pages.
|
|
|
|
There are a couple of points to bear in mind:
|
|
|
|
1. Position of the first page. If the first page is on top of the printout
|
|
when printing the odd pages then you need to reverse the order that the odd
|
|
pages are printed. This can be done with the -r option to psselect. This
|
|
will ensure page 2 is printed on the back of page 1.
|
|
Note: it is better to reverse the odd numbered pages rather than the even
|
|
numbered in case there are an odd number of pages in the original PS file.
|
|
|
|
2. Paper flipping. When turning over the paper with the odd pages printed on
|
|
them you may have to either flip them horizontally (along the long edge) or
|
|
vertically (along the short edge), as well as possibly rotating them 180
|
|
degrees. All this depends on the printer - it will be more obvious for
|
|
desktop ink jets than for small office laser printers where the paper path
|
|
is hidden from view.
|
|
|
|
|
|
==============================================================================
|
|
8. Formfeed Characters *printing-formfeed*
|
|
|
|
By default Vim does not do any special processing of |formfeed| control
|
|
characters. Setting the 'printoptions' formfeed item will make Vim recognize
|
|
formfeed characters and continue printing the current line at the beginning
|
|
of the first line on a new page. The use of formfeed characters provides
|
|
rudimentary print control but there are certain things to be aware of.
|
|
|
|
Vim will always start printing a line (including a line number if enabled)
|
|
containing a formfeed character, even if it is the first character on the
|
|
line. This means if a line starting with a formfeed character is the first
|
|
line of a page then Vim will print a blank page.
|
|
|
|
Since the line number is printed at the start of printing the line containing
|
|
the formfeed character, the remainder of the line printed on the new page
|
|
will not have a line number printed for it (in the same way as the wrapped
|
|
lines of a long line when wrap in 'printoptions' is enabled).
|
|
|
|
If the formfeed character is the last character on a line, then printing will
|
|
continue on the second line of the new page, not the first. This is due to
|
|
Vim processing the end of the line after the formfeed character and moving
|
|
down a line to continue printing.
|
|
|
|
Due to the points made above it is recommended that when formfeed character
|
|
processing is enabled, printing of line numbers is disabled, and that form
|
|
feed characters are not the last character on a line. Even then you may need
|
|
to adjust the number of lines before a formfeed character to prevent
|
|
accidental blank pages.
|
|
|
|
==============================================================================
|
|
vim:tw=78:ts=8:noet:ft=help:norl:
|