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Posterazor ubuntu
Posterazor ubuntu





posterazor ubuntu

If you have an image file (.svg not included), PosteRazor should work for you. If you have Adobe Reader 10 or later, supposedly you can do the same thing from Reader’s dialog. The man page will get you rolling without much ado. Original Maintainer (usually from Debian): Marcelo Soares Mota It should generally not be necessary for users to contact the original maintainer. To install from debian derivatives (Ubuntu, Mint, etc.): sudo apt-get install poster Ubuntu MOTU Developers (Mail Archive) Please consider filing a bug or asking a question via Launchpad before contacting the maintainer directly. The following command specifies the number of pages to use for the output instead of a scale factor (in this case 3 pages wide and 3 pages high): poster -v -mLet -p3x3 original_file.ps > output_file.ps Standard path syntax applies to the file names. …specifies that you want verbose output (-v), are using letter size paper (-mLet), and that you want the output scaled to 4 times the size of the original.

#POSTERAZOR UBUNTU PDF#

The resulting poster is saved as a multipage PDF document.

posterazor ubuntu posterazor ubuntu

As input, the PosteRazor takes a raster image. This command… poster -v -mLet -s4 original_file.ps > output_file.ps PosteRazor cuts a raster image into pieces which can afterwards be printed out and assembled to a poster. You have the option of specifying what scale factor you want to use or the number of pages you want to output to. Save your original file as a postscript (.ps) file–which you should should be able to do from your print dialog in most distros with the “save to file” option. After struggling to print a simple text banner onto multiple pages using LibreOffice and a variety of other solutions prompted by the conventional online search, I came across the simple command line utility poster.







Posterazor ubuntu