ogonkify
does various munging of PostScript files related to printing in
different languages. Its main use is to filter the output of
Netscape, Mosaic and other programs in order to print in languages
that don't use the standard Western-European encoding (ISO 8859-1).
SUMMARY USAGE
Installation instructions are provided in the file INSTALL. Assuming
the installation has been correctly completed, save the PostScript
output of Netscape or Mosaic to a file, say
output.ps.
Then print it using
% ogonkify -AT -N output.ps | lpr
in the case of Netscape, or
% ogonkify -AT -M output.ps | lpr
in the case of Mosaic.
You may want to change the
-AT
option to
-CT
in order to use a high quality Courier font from IBM (at the price of
slower printing).
An alternative way to print from Netscape is to set the printing
command in the printing dialog box to:
ogonkify -AT -N | lpr
For more details, see the USAGE section below.
OPTIONS
-p
Includes the specified procset in the output file.
-e
Set the encoding of the output. Defaults to
L2
(ISO 8859-2, a.k.a. ISO Latin-2). Other possible values are
L1
(ISO 8859-1, a.k.a. ISO Latin-1),
L3
(ISO 8859-3, a.k.a. ISO Latin-3),
L4
(ISO 8859-4, a.k.a. ISO Latin-4),
L5
(ISO 8859-9, a.k.a. ISO Latin-5),
L6
(ISO 8859-10, a.k.a. ISO Latin-6),
L7
(ISO 8859-13, a.k.a. ISO Latin-7),
L9
(ISO 8859-15, a.k.a. ISO Latin-9),
CP1250
(Microsoft Code Page 1250, a.k.a. CeP),
ibmpc
(Original IBM-PC encoding),
mac
(Apple Macintosh encoding) and
hp
(HP Roman Encoding).
-r
Use the font
New
in place of
Old.
Will lead to ugly or unreadable output when the metrics mismatch.
-a
Do the right font remappings for using Courier-Ogonki in place of Courier
(the
a
stands for Adobe Courier). This avoids downloading any fonts
to the printer.
-c
Do the right font remappings for using IBM Courier in place of Adobe
Courier.
-t
Do the right font remappings for using Times-Roman-Ogonki in place of
Times-Roman.
-h
Do the right font remappings for using Helvetica-Ogonki in place of
Helvetica.
-A
Like
-a
but also downloads the Courier-Ogonki fonts.
-C
Like
-c,
but also downloads the IBM Courier fonts.
-H
Like
-h,
but also downloads the Helvetica-xxx-Ogonki fonts.
-T
Like
-t,
but also downloads the Times-xxx-Ogonki fonts.
-CT
Equivalent to
-C-T.
-CTH
Equivalent to
-C-T -H.
-E
Add the
Euro
currency sign to all standard fonts (use with
-eL9).
-N
Do
Netscape
processing.
-M
Do
Mosaic
processing.
-mp
Do
mp
processing. Will not work with the
-A
option (use
-C
instead).
-SO
Do
StarOffice
processing.
-AX
Do
ApplixWare
processing.
-F
Do
XFig
processing.
-RS
Recode standard fonts. This is likely to work with applications that
leave fonts in
AdobeStandardEncoding,
typically applications that do not even support printing even of
characters.
--
End options.
USAGE
Let us assume that you want to print a WWW page encoded in
ISO Latin-2. Netscape stubbornly insists on printing it as
ISO Latin-1. By using the File->Print command, have Netscape send the
output to a file, say alamakota.ps.
As
ogonkify
is configured for ISO Latin-2 by default, passing it the PostScript
generated by Netscape will correct the encoding of the fonts. It is
enough to do:
% ogonkify -N <alamakota.ps | lpr
However, most printers do not have fonts with the needed characters
installed; synthesized fonts will be downloaded and used instead of
Courier and Times-Roman with
-AT,
and a very good Courier font from IBM will be used with:
-CT.
The command will therefore typically be:
Characters with an `ogonek' should be constructed differently (for
instance, the `ogonek' used with an `a' should be differently shaped
than the one used with an `e'.)
It would be better to patch the programs we have the sources to than
to post-process the produced PostScript.
The program is written in Perl.
NOTES
In order to view the output PostScript with Ghostscript, you might
need to run
gs
with the flag
-dNOPLATFONTS,
and
ghostview
with the flag
-arguments -dNOPLATFONTS.
Netscape, IBM, Adobe, PostScript, StarOffice, ApplixWare and possibly
others are registered trademarks.
THANKS
Much of the composite character data have been provided by Primoz Peterlin, H. Turgut Uyar, Ricardas Cepas, Kristof Petrovay and Jan Prikryl.
Jacek Pliszka provided the support for
StarOffice.
Andrzej Baginski
provided the support for
ApplixWare.
Markku Rossi wrote
genscript
and provided many useful encoding vectors with the distribution.
Throughout writing the Postscript code, I used the
ghostscript
interpreter, by Peter Deutsch.
Larry Wall wrote
perl,
the syntax and semantics of which are a never ending source of
puzzlement.
AUTHOR
Juliusz Chroboczek <jec@dcs.ed.ac.uk>, with help from loads of people.