dvips man page on IRIX

Man page or keyword search:  
man Server   31559 pages
apropos Keyword Search (all sections)
Output format
IRIX logo
[printable version]

DVIPS(1)						 DVIPS(1)

NAME
       dvips - convert a TeX DVI file to PostScript

SYNOPSIS
       dvips [ options ] file[.dvi]

DESCRIPTION
       THIS  MAN PAGE IS OBSOLETE!  See the Texinfo documentation
       instead.	 You can read it either	 in  Emacs  or	with  the
       standalone  info	 program which comes with the GNU texinfo
       distribution as prep.ai.mit.edu:pub/gnu/texinfo*.tar.gz.

       The program dvips takes a DVI file file[.dvi] produced  by
       TeX  (or by some other processor such as GFtoDVI) and con-
       verts  it  to  PostScript,  normally  sending  the  result
       directly to the (laser)printer.	The DVI file may be spec-
       ified without the .dvi extension.  Fonts used  may  either
       be  resident  in	 the  printer or defined as bitmaps in PK
       files, or a `virtual' combination of both.  If the mktexpk
       program	is  installed,	dvips  will  automatically invoke
       METAFONT to generate fonts that don't already exist.

       For more information, see the Texinfo  manual  dvips.texi,
       which  should be installed somewhere on your system, hope-
       fully accessible through the standard Info tree.

OPTIONS
       -a     Conserve memory by making	 three	passes	over  the
	      .dvi  file  instead  of  two and only loading those
	      characters actually used.	 Generally only useful on
	      machines with a very limited amount of memory, like
	      some PCs.

       -A     Print only  odd  pages  (TeX  pages,  not	 sequence
	      pages).

       -b num Generate	num  copies of each page, but duplicating
	      the page body  rather  than  using  the  #numcopies
	      option.	This  can be useful in conjunction with a
	      header file setting \bop-hook to do  color  separa-
	      tions or other neat tricks.

       -B     Print  only  even	 pages	(TeX  pages, not sequence
	      pages).

       -c num Generate num copies of every page.  Default  is  1.
	      (For collated copies, see the -C option below.)

       -C num Create num copies, but collated (by replicating the
	      data in the PostScript file).  Slower than  the  -c
	      option,  but  easier  on the hands, and faster than
	      resubmitting  the	 same  PostScript  file	 multiple
	      times.

       -d num Set  the	debug  flags.	This is intended only for
	      emergencies or  for  unusual  fact-finding  expedi-
	      tions; it will work only if dvips has been compiled
	      with the DEBUG option.  If  nonzero,  prints  addi-
	      tional  information  on standard error.  The number
	      is taken as a set of independent bits.  The meaning
	      of each bit follows.  1=specials; 2=paths; 4=fonts;
	      8=pages; 16=headers; 32=font compression; 64=files;
	      128=memory;  256=Kpathsea stat(2) calls; 512=Kpath-
	      sea hash table lookups; 1024=Kpathsea path  element
	      expansion; 2048=Kpathsea searches.  To trace every-
	      thing having to do with file searching and opening,
	      use 3650 (2048 + 1024 + 512 + 64 + 2). To track all
	      classes, you can	use  `-1'  (output  is	extremely
	      voluminous).

       -D num Set  the	resolution in dpi (dots per inch) to num.
	      This affects the choice of bitmap	 fonts	that  are
	      loaded and also the positioning of letters in resi-
	      dent PostScript  fonts.  Must  be	 between  10  and
	      10000.  This affects both the horizontal and verti-
	      cal resolution.  If a  high  resolution  (something
	      greater than 400 dpi, say) is selected, the -Z flag
	      should probably also be used.

       -e num Make sure that each character  is	 placed	 at  most
	      this  many  pixels from its `true' resolution-inde-
	      pendent position on the page. The default value  of
	      this  parameter  is resolution dependent.	 Allowing
	      individual characters to `drift'	from  their  cor-
	      rectly  rounded  positions  by  a few pixels, while
	      regaining the true position  at  the  beginning  of
	      each  new	 word, improves the spacing of letters in
	      words.

       -E     makes dvips attempt to generate an EPSF file with a
	      tight  bounding  box.   This only works on one-page
	      files, and it only looks at marks made  by  charac-
	      ters  and	 rules, not by any included graphics.  In
	      addition, it gets the glyph metrics  from	 the  tfm
	      file,  so characters that lie outside their enclos-
	      ing tfm box  may	confuse	 it.   In  addition,  the
	      bounding	box might be a bit too loose if the char-
	      acter glyph has  significant  left  or  right  side
	      bearings.	  Nonetheless, this option works well for
	      creating small EPSF files for equations  or  tables
	      or  the  like.  (Note, of course, that dvips output
	      is resolution dependent and thus does not make very
	      good EPSF files, especially if the images are to be
	      scaled; use these EPSF files with a great	 deal  of
	      care.)

       -f     Run  as a filter.	 Read the .dvi file from standard
	      input and write the PostScript to standard  output.
	      The  standard  input must be seekable, so it cannot
	      be a pipe.  If you must use a pipe, write	 a  shell
	      script  that  copies the pipe output to a temporary
	      file and then points  dvips  at  this  file.   This
	      option  also  disables the automatic reading of the
	      PRINTER environment variable,  and  turns	 off  the
	      automatic	 sending of control D if it was turned on
	      with the -F option or in	the  configuration  file;
	      use -F after this option if you want both.

       -F     Causes  Control-D	 (ASCII code 4) to be appended as
	      the very last character  of  the	PostScript  file.
	      This  is	useful	when dvips is driving the printer
	      directly instead of working through a  spooler,  as
	      is common on extremely small systems.  NOTE! DO NOT
	      USE THIS OPTION!

       -G     Causes dvips to shift  non-printing  characters  to
	      higher-numbered  positions.   This  may  be  useful
	      sometimes.

       -h name
	      Prepend file name as  an	additional  header  file.
	      (However,	 if  the  name is simply `-' suppress all
	      header files from the output.)   This  header  file
	      gets added to the PostScript userdict.

       -i     Make  each  section be a separate file.  Under cer-
	      tain circumstances, dvips will split  the	 document
	      up  into	`sections' to be processed independently;
	      this is most often done for memory reasons.   Using
	      this  option tells dvips to place each section into
	      a separate file; the new	file  names  are  created
	      replacing	 the  suffix  of the supplied output file
	      name by a three-digit sequence number.  This option
	      is  most	often  used  in	 conjunction  with the -S
	      option which sets the  maximum  section  length  in
	      pages.   For instance, some phototypesetters cannot
	      print more than ten or so consecutive pages  before
	      running  out of steam; these options can be used to
	      automatically split a book into ten-page	sections,
	      each to its own file.

       -j     Download	only needed characters from Type 1 fonts.
	      This is the default in the current  release.   Some
	      debugging flags trace this operation.  You can also
	      control partial downloading on  a	 per-font  basis,
	      via the psfonts.map file.

       -k     Print  crop marks.  This option increases the paper
	      size (which should  be  specified,  either  with	a
	      paper size special or with the -T option) by a half
	      inch in each dimension.  It translates each page by
	      a	 quarter  inch	and draws cross-style crop marks.
	      It is mostly useful with typesetters that	 can  set
	      the page size automatically.

       -K     This  option causes comments in included PostScript
	      graphics, font files, and headers	 to  be	 removed.
	      This  is	sometimes necessary to get around bugs in
	      spoolers or  PostScript  post-processing	programs.
	      Specifically,  the  %%Page  comments, when left in,
	      often cause difficulties.	 Use  of  this	flag  can
	      cause  some  included  graphics  to fail, since the
	      PostScript header macros from some  software  pack-
	      ages  read  portions  of	the  input stream line by
	      line, searching for  a  particular  comment.   This
	      option  has  been	 turned	 off  by  default because
	      PostScript previewers and spoolers have  been  get-
	      ting better.

       -l num The  last	 page  printed will be the first one num-
	      bered num Default is the last page in the document.
	      If  the  num is prefixed by an equals sign, then it
	      (and any argument to the -p option) is treated as a
	      sequence	number,	 rather	 than  a value to compare
	      with \count0 values.  Thus, using -l  =9	will  end
	      with the ninth page of the document, no matter what
	      the pages are actually numbered.

       -m     Specify manual feed for printer.

       -mode mode
	      Use mode as  the	Metafont  device  name	for  path
	      searching	 and font generation.  This overrides any
	      value from configuration files.  With  the  default
	      paths,  explicitly  specifying  the mode also makes
	      the program assume the fonts are in a  subdirectory
	      named mode.

       -M     Turns  off  the automatic font generation facility.
	      If any fonts are missing, commands to generate  the
	      fonts  are appended to the file missfont.log in the
	      current directory; this file can then  be	 executed
	      and deleted to create the missing fonts.

       -n num At  most	num  pages  will  be  printed. Default is
	      100000.

       -N     Turns off structured comments; this might be neces-
	      sary   on	  some	systems	 that  try  to	interpret
	      PostScript comments  in  weird  ways,  or	 on  some
	      PostScript printers.  Old versions of TranScript in
	      particular  cannot   handle   modern   Encapsulated
	      PostScript.

       -o name
	      The  output  will	 be  sent to file name If no file
	      name is given, the default name  is  file.ps  where
	      the  .dvi	 file was called file.dvi; if this option
	      isn't given, any default in the configuration  file
	      is  used.	  If  the first character of the supplied
	      output file name is an exclamation mark,	then  the
	      remainder	 will  be  used	 as an argument to popen;
	      thus, specifying !lpr as the output file will auto-
	      matically queue the file for printing.  This option
	      also disables the automatic reading of the  PRINTER
	      environment  variable,  and turns off the automatic
	      sending of control D if it was turned on	with  the
	      -F  option  or  in  the  configuration file; use -F
	      after this option if you want both.

       -O offset
	      Move the origin by a certain amount.  The offset is
	      a	 comma-separated  pair	of  dimensions,	 such  as
	      .1in,-.3cm (in the same syntax used in  the  paper-
	      size  special).	The origin of the page is shifted
	      from the default position (of one	 inch  down,  one
	      inch to the right from the upper left corner of the
	      paper) by this amount.

       -p num The first page printed will be the first	one  num-
	      bered  num.  Default is the first page in the docu-
	      ment.  If the num is prefixed by	an  equals  sign,
	      then  it	(and  any  argument  to the -l option) is
	      treated as a sequence number, rather than	 a  value
	      to  compare with \count0 values.	Thus, using -p =3
	      will start with the third page of the document,  no
	      matter what the pages are actually numbered.

       -pp pagelist
	      A	 comma-separated  list	of pages and ranges (a-b)
	      may be given, which will be interpreted as  \count0
	      values.	Pages  not specified will not be printed.
	      Multiple -pp options may be specified or all  pages
	      and  page	 ranges	 can  be  specified  with one -pp
	      option.

       -P printername
	      Sets up the output  for  the  appropriate	 printer.
	      This  is	implemented by reading in config.printer-
	      name , which can then set the output pipe	 (as  in,
	      !lpr  -Pprintername  as  well as the font paths and
	      any other config.ps defaults for that printer only.
	      Note  that config.ps is read before config.printer-
	      name In addition, another file called ~/.dvipsrc is
	      searched for immediately after config.ps; this file
	      is intended for user defaults.  If no -P command is
	      given, the environment variable PRINTER is checked.
	      If that variable exists, and a  corresponding  con-
	      figuration  file exists, that configuration file is
	      read in.

       -q     Run in quiet mode.  Don't chatter about pages  con-
	      verted, etc.; report nothing but errors to standard
	      error.

       -r     Stack pages in reverse  order.   Normally,  page	1
	      will be printed first.

       -R     Run  in  secure  mode. This means that ``backtick''
	      commands from a \special{} or \psffile{}	macro  in
	      the   (La)TeX  source  like  \special{psfile="`zcat
	      foo.ps.Z"}  or  \psffile[72  72	540   720]{"`zcat
	      screendump.ps.gz"} are not executed.

       -s     Causes the entire global output to be enclosed in a
	      save/restore pair.  This causes the file to not  be
	      truly  conformant, and is thus not recommended, but
	      is useful if you are driving the	printer	 directly
	      and  don't  care	too much about the portability of
	      the output.

       -S num Set the maximum number of pages in each  `section'.
	      This  option  is	most  commonly	used  with the -i
	      option;  see  that  documentation	 above	for  more
	      information.

       -t papertype
	      This  sets the paper type to papertype.  The paper-
	      type should be defined in one of the  configuration
	      files,  along  with  the appropriate code to select
	      it.  (Currently known types include letter,  legal,
	      ledger,  a4,  a3,	 )  You can also specify -t land-
	      scape, which rotates a document by 90 degrees.   To
	      rotate a document whose size is not letter, you can
	      use the -t option twice, once for	 the  page  size,
	      and  once	 for landscape.	 The upper left corner of
	      each page in the .dvi file is placed one inch  from
	      the  left	 and  one inch from the top.  Use of this
	      option is highly	dependent  on  the  configuration
	      file.   Note  that  executing  the  letter or a4 or
	      other PostScript operators cause the document to be
	      nonconforming and can cause it not to print on cer-
	      tain printers, so the paper size should not execute
	      such an operator if at all possible.

       -T offset
	      Set the paper size to the given pair of dimensions.
	      This option takes its arguments in the  same  style
	      as  -O.  It overrides any paper size special in the
	      dvi file.

       -u psmapfile
	      Set psmapfile to be the file that	 dvips	uses  for
	      looking  up  PostScript font aliases.  If psmapfile
	      begins with a + character, then  the  rest  of  the
	      name  is	used as the name of the map file, and the
	      map file is appended  to	the  list  of  map  files
	      (instead	of  replacing the list).  In either case,
	      if psmapfile has no extension, then .map	is  added
	      at the end.

       -U     Disable  a  PostScript  virtual memory saving opti-
	      mization that stores the character metric	 informa-
	      tion  in	the same string that is used to store the
	      bitmap information.  This is  only  necessary  when
	      driving  the Xerox 4045 PostScript interpreter.  It
	      is caused by a bug in that interpreter that results
	      in  `garbage' on the bottom of each character.  Not
	      recommended unless you must drive this printer.

       -v     Print the dvips version number and exit.

       -V     Download non-resident PostScript fonts as	 bitmaps.
	      This  requires use of `gsftopk' or `pstopk' or some
	      other such program(s)  in	 order	to  generate  the
	      required	bitmap fonts; these programs are supplied
	      with dvips.

       -x num Set the x magnification ratio to	num/1000.   Over-
	      rides the magnification specified in the .dvi file.
	      Must be between 10 and 100000.  Instead of an inte-
	      ger,  num may be a real number for increased preci-
	      sion.

       -X num Set the horizontal resolution in dots per	 inch  to
	      num.

       -y num Set  the y magnification ratio to num/1000.  See -x
	      above.

       -Y num Set the vertical resolution in  dots  per	 inch  to
	      num.

       -z     Pass  html  hyperdvi specials through to the output
	      for eventual distillation into PDF.   This  is  not
	      enabled  by  default  to avoid including the header
	      files unnecessarily, and use of temporary files  in
	      creating the output.

       -Z     Causes bitmapped fonts to be compressed before they
	      are downloaded, thereby reducing the  size  of  the
	      PostScript   font-downloading  information.   Espe-
	      cially useful at	high  resolutions  or  when  very
	      large  fonts  are	 used.	 Will  slow down printing
	      somewhat,	  especially   on    early    68000-based
	      PostScript printers.

SEE ALSO
       mf(1), afm2tfm(1), tex(1), latex(1), lpr(1), dvips.texi.

ENVIRONMENT
       Dvipsk  uses the same environment variables and algorithms
       for finding font files as TeX and its friends do.  See the
       documentation   for  the	 Kpathsea  library  for	 details.
       (Repeating it here is too cumbersome.)

       KPATHSEA_DEBUG: Trace Kpathsea lookups; set to -1 for com-
       plete tracing.

       PRINTER: see above.

NOTES
       PostScript  is  a  registered  trademark	 of Adobe Systems
       Incorporated.

AUTHOR
       Tomas Rokicki <rokicki@cs.stanford.edu>; extended to  vir-
       tual fonts by Don Knuth.	 Path searching and configuration
       modifications by kb@mail.tug.org.

			   1 June 1996			 DVIPS(1)
[top]

List of man pages available for IRIX

Copyright (c) for man pages and the logo by the respective OS vendor.

For those who want to learn more, the polarhome community provides shell access and support.

[legal] [privacy] [GNU] [policy] [cookies] [netiquette] [sponsors] [FAQ]
Tweet
Polarhome, production since 1999.
Member of Polarhome portal.
Based on Fawad Halim's script.
....................................................................
Vote for polarhome
Free Shell Accounts :: the biggest list on the net