TeXhax Digest Tuesday, December 2, 1988 Volume 88 : Issue 105 Moderators: Tiina Modisett and Pierre MacKay %%% The TeXhax digest is brought to you as a service of the TeX Users Group %%% %%% in cooperation with the UnixTeX distribution service at the %%% %%% University of Washington %%% Today's Topics: TeXhax Problems Multipage split tables RE: Multi-page tables with page headings on each page Wanted: PStoDVI Needed: dvi2proprinter driver for the IBM Proprinter(X24) family LISP Pretty Printer BluTeX discussion list Problems with LaTeX picture environment LaTeX \stackrel for chemical equations Son Of Texpictex.tex RE: including Macdraw and laserprep Macintosh illustrations and psfig Questions in TeXtures ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Date: Fri, 2 Dec 88 08:49:23 PST From: mackay (Pierre MacKay) Subject: TeXhax Problems. We must appeal for your patience. These are nightmare days for anyone involved with a mail system. As most readers will know by now, one of the primary targets in the recent invasion of Berkeley 4.3 Unix systems was the sendmail program, and the often panicky response has not done the network any good at all. It is our strong impression that network performance has declined steadily from issue 100 through 104, and this is not surprising. You are likely to find yourselves receiving truncated copies (many did of 104 but this also happened with 95, so it is not unique to the present state) duplicate copies (many did of 103) and heaven knows what else. Our return mailbox is a minimum of half a Megabyte on each issue now, and there is an almost equal amount bucked back into the texhax submissions by mailers which can't or don't read the Errors-to: line. We have only minimal control over any of this. Our people are working long and hard to control any errors that can be traced to our own mailer, but the complex topology of the network makes the sources hard to isolate in some cases. We expect that things will get worse before they get better. Since we cannot be sure who got good copies of 104, we will have to resend. Please bear with us if you get two copies. For the BITNET people, We can only say that every address received from the Stanford list was put onto our server. We don't know how to reach the people who are not getting bitnet copies, there is a traditional logical problem there "If you happen to be deaf or dumb "Or do not understand a word I say, "Then wave your hand to signify as much." A.E. Housman The BITNET (non)recipients who have communicated directly with us do not appear explicitly on the SCORE listing, so they must be on some BITNET remailer or other. We have certainly tried not to leave any such remailer out. In fact we hope to foster them. We are hoping that it will be possible to set up a LISTSERV archive of TeXhax and other things here to serve the BITNET community better. We can only appeal for patience. At the moment we are nearly buried under the more direct mailer problems. One last, and we hope a positive note. The trailer now includes a list of the generally current versions of TeX and Metafont software. These versions shown represent the versions that have been ported over a wide range of systems, and should never be more than one behind what is on SCORE. (For example, TeX is officially at 2.94, but we want to know from a few more sites that it works on a wide range of machines before listing it). Email: modisett@cs.washington.edu Tiina Modisett Email: mackay@cs.washington.edu Pierre A. MacKay ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ Date: Sun, 20 Nov 88 01:54 PST From: Subject: Multipage split tables Keywords: tables I may have what Greg McGary is after. I have a macro for splitting tables, and it is very easy to use: just put \splittable between two lines of the table. Unfortunately it is for my own set of table macros which are too long to post. The idea though is simple, and should even be usable with LaTeX tables with a bit of study. First put the title, \halign command, preamble, and column headings in one or two global macros. Use them to start the table. Somewhere in the table, between two lines put \splittable which should be defined to o end the \halign (\crcr\egroup) o say continued o end any boxes (\vfil\egroup) o end the insert (\endinsert) o start new page (\pageinsert etc.) o regurgitate the table title o regurgitate the table headings. What this will NOT do is split the table automatically at the bottom of the page. To do that would require a different class of insertion for long tables and then it would be very difficult to preserve the order of tables in the output. Besides, I get so few very long tables that it is easier to split them by hand. Donald Arseneau asnd@triumfcl.bitnet asnd@mtsg.ubc.ca ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- Date: 21-NOV-1988 16:56:34 GMT From: ABBOTTP%aston.ac.uk@NSS.Cs.Ucl.AC.UK (Peter Abbott) Subject: RE: Multi-page tables with page headings on each page Keywords: tables In TeXhax V88 #100 (the first issue from Washington) Greg McGray asks about multi-page tables with column headings on each page. For LaTeX users:- There is a file in the Aston Archive ( and probably also in the US wherever the score directories are now held) called taj.txh. This is supertabular which allows multipage tables with headings repeated on continuation pages. Supertabular is described in earlier issues of TeXhax. Peter Computing Service JANET abbottp@uk.ac.aston Aston University ARPA pabbott@nss.cs.ucl.ac.uk Aston Triangle or abbottp%uk.ac.aston@nss.cs.ucl.ac.uk Birmingham B4 7ET UUCP ...!ukc!aston!abbottp U.K. BITNET abbottp%uk.ac.aston@ac.uk Tel (+44) 21 359 5492 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Date: Sat, 19 Nov 88 10:54:50 EST From: spooky!witr@bu-it.BU.EDU Subject: Wanted: PStoDVI Keywords: dviware I know that there are such things as DVItoPS programs that convert a DVI file to a PS file. I know that there are PStoXXX programs that convert a PS file to an XXX file where XXX is some laser printer. What I need is a PStoDVI program that would convert a PS file to a DVI file. It seems that these days a lot of documentation is being distributed in the form of Postscript files and I dont have a Postscript printer. I DO have an old clunky Cannon LBP8A1 (the one with almost no memory) and I have written a DVItoCANNON program that works nicely with it (which cannot be said for the Beebe drivers which only work on the A2). I doubt that I will find a PStoCANNON program and I sure don't want to write one! Hence ``PStoDVI psfile | DVItoCANNON > /dev/cannon''. What's a poor TeXhacker to do??? Robert Withrow, R.W. Withrow Assoc., 27 Greenwood Ter., Swampscott, MA 01907 witr%spooky.UUCP@buita.bu.edu, (Work) +1 617 593 8452. ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Date: Tue, 22 Nov 88 09:08:40 EST From: anderson@secd.cs.umd.edu (Gary Anderson) Subject: Needed: dvi2proprinter driver for the IBM Proprinter(X24) family Keywords: dviware I am looking for a dvi2proprinter driver that will generate rough drafts for the ibm proprinter(X24) family of printers on ibm ps/2 machines. I suppose I could use/modify dvitty (I have microsoft C.), but I am hoping that there is a public domain program that drives the printer in graphics mode. Thanks in advance. Gary Organization: UMIACS, Univ. of Maryland, College Park, MD 20742 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- Date: Mon, 21 Nov 88 08:09:10 -0800 From: eric@cs2.wsu.edu Subject: LISP Pretty Printer Keywords: printer Hi TeXXies, Does anyone know of a pretty printer for LISP code? I have been using Tgrind for other languages, but I miss 'vpr' from BSD for LISP code. I would most like something that works with LaTeX. Thanks in advance, Eric Schneider (eric@cs2.wsu.edu) ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Date: Sat, 19 Nov 88 15:11:28 CST From: J E PITTMAN Subject: BluTeX discussion list Keywords: BluTeX, TeX BluTeX is a TeX format for theses, dissertations, and records of study at Texas A&M University. It is public domain and may be ported to other universities under the restrictions of proper acknowledgement of the author and proper software engineering practices. I have established a BluTeX discussion list on the list server at TAMVM1. To subscribe to the list, please mail the command: subscribe BluTeX-L full_name to LISTSERV@TAMVM1 (bitnet). As soon as possible, I will be placing the BluTeX code and the manual on the list server for distribution. I would like to begin a discussion on thesis, et cetera, production using TeX beginning two weeks after this submission is redistributed through TeXhax. One of the items that I would like to determine is ``How heterogeneous are the thesis requirements of various universities?'' J E Pittman User Services Group Computing Services Center Texas A&M University P.S. To send material to myself only, please send mail to the address BluTeX@Venus.TAMU.EDU (internet) or BluTeX@TAMVenus (bitnet). ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Date: Sun, 20 Nov 88 13:17 EST From: Jeffrey Mark Siskind Subject: Problems with LaTeX picture environment Keywords: LaTeX I have been struggling with the LaTeX picture environment for the past two days. I am trying to align several superimposed objects. I have isolated the problem down to a very small core. Here is the sample problem: I want a square with cross hatching with an inscribed circle and a disk located at the center whose diameter is half the length of the side of the square. Enclosed is a LaTeX file which is very simple and which prints five obvious pages most of which fail in alignment. The first page prints a cross-hatched square with an inscribed circle and disk. It fails to align. The second page prints a non-cross-hatched square with a circle and disk and does align. The third page prints both squares and both circles and fails to align. The fourth and fifth pages are the same as the first and third but use a version of the cross-hatched square created by a \savebox with the dimensions specified while the first and third pages use a version where \savebox was called without the dimensions specified. Help me please, what am I doing wrong? Thanks, Jeffrey Mark Siskind % -*- Mode: Latex -*- \documentstyle{article} \newcommand{\LastEditDate}{November 20, 1988} \newcommand{\LastEditTime}{Sunday, 20--November--1988 12:56:46 EST} \begin{document} % \setlength{\unitlength}{0.05in} \newsavebox{\DarkSquareA} \savebox{\DarkSquareA}{ \begin{picture}(10,10) \thinlines \put(0,0){\framebox(10,10){}} \put(0,9){\line(1,1){1}} \put(0,8){\line(1,1){2}} \put(0,7){\line(1,1){3}} \put(0,6){\line(1,1){4}} \put(0,5){\line(1,1){5}} \put(0,4){\line(1,1){6}} \put(0,3){\line(1,1){7}} \put(0,2){\line(1,1){8}} \put(0,1){\line(1,1){9}} \put(0,0){\line(1,1){10}} \put(1,0){\line(1,1){9}} \put(2,0){\line(1,1){8}} \put(3,0){\line(1,1){7}} \put(4,0){\line(1,1){6}} \put(5,0){\line(1,1){5}} \put(6,0){\line(1,1){4}} \put(7,0){\line(1,1){3}} \put(8,0){\line(1,1){2}} \put(9,0){\line(1,1){1}} \end{picture}} % \newsavebox{\DarkSquareB} \savebox{\DarkSquareB}(10,10){ \begin{picture}(10,10) \thinlines \put(0,0){\framebox(10,10){}} \put(0,9){\line(1,1){1}} \put(0,8){\line(1,1){2}} \put(0,7){\line(1,1){3}} \put(0,6){\line(1,1){4}} \put(0,5){\line(1,1){5}} \put(0,4){\line(1,1){6}} \put(0,3){\line(1,1){7}} \put(0,2){\line(1,1){8}} \put(0,1){\line(1,1){9}} \put(0,0){\line(1,1){10}} \put(1,0){\line(1,1){9}} \put(2,0){\line(1,1){8}} \put(3,0){\line(1,1){7}} \put(4,0){\line(1,1){6}} \put(5,0){\line(1,1){5}} \put(6,0){\line(1,1){4}} \put(7,0){\line(1,1){3}} \put(8,0){\line(1,1){2}} \put(9,0){\line(1,1){1}} \end{picture}} Hello 18. \setlength{\unitlength}{0.05in} \begin{picture}(10,10) \put(0,0){\usebox{\DarkSquareA}} \put(5,5){\circle*{5}} \put(5,5){\circle{10}} \end{picture} Goodbye. \newpage Hello 18. \setlength{\unitlength}{0.05in} \begin{picture}(10,10) \put(0,0){\framebox(10,10){}} \put(5,5){\circle*{5}} \put(5,5){\circle{10}} \end{picture} Goodbye. \newpage Hello 18. \setlength{\unitlength}{0.05in} \begin{picture}(10,10) \put(0,0){\usebox{\DarkSquareA}} \put(0,0){\framebox(10,10){}} \put(5,5){\circle*{5}} \put(5,5){\circle{10}} \end{picture} Goodbye. \newpage Hello 18. \setlength{\unitlength}{0.05in} \begin{picture}(10,10) \put(0,0){\usebox{\DarkSquareB}} \put(5,5){\circle*{5}} \put(5,5){\circle{10}} \end{picture} Goodbye. \newpage Hello 18. \setlength{\unitlength}{0.05in} \begin{picture}(10,10) \put(0,0){\usebox{\DarkSquareB}} \put(0,0){\framebox(10,10){}} \put(5,5){\circle*{5}} \put(5,5){\circle{10}} \end{picture} Goodbye. \end{document} ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Date: 22-NOV-1988 11:11:43 GMT From: Subject: LaTeX \stackrel for chemical equations Keywords: LaTeX The LaTeX command \stackrel{top}{bottom} is fine for most equations, stacking one symbol above another but does not cope with chemical reactions too well. For example: Pt/Rh catalyst 4 NH_3 + 5 O_2 --------------------> 4 NO + 6 H_2O 1120 K 5 atm where one would want to have text and/or math both atop and below the (usually) \longrightarrow . Does the command \stack{top}{middle}{bottom} exist? Any pointers? John Simmie EARN address: CHESIMMIE@cs8700.ucg.ie Chemistry Dept. Tel. (091)24411 ext. 2451 University College, Galway Fax. (091)25700 Ireland. ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ Date: Tue, 22 Nov 88 12:22:07 CST From: grunwald%guitar.cs.uiuc.edu@a.cs.uiuc.edu (Dirk Grunwald) Subject: Son Of Texpictex.tex Office: 72 DCL (217) 333-1925 Keywords: macros Although I am loath to submit another version of this, the following changes to texpictex.tex clip the line drawing to the bounding box. It works in the standard way: just say \setboundscheckon. Actually, this garbage should be done by extending the set of texpic/tpic specials to provide a ``current clipping region''. Then, while those changes are being made, you could slip in a modified arc command to avoid computing arctan() in TeX and a texpic/tpic special to handle quads. If someone does this, please do write, I'd love to use it. % % texpictex.tex -- The following macros over-ride certain definitions in the % PiCTeX macro package. The net effect is that line-drawing is done using % the \special's used by texpic (tpic). Several DVI printers understand % and handle these specials. % % Currently, only straight lines are translated. Recently, I added a % clipping routine to clip to the bounding box. % % If people extend this to included elliptic circles and quadratics, % please forward the extensions to me (quads are used in the \arrow % macro, making them very slow). % % Dirk Grunwald % Univ. of Illinois % grunwald@m.cs.uiuc.edu % \def\makebangletter{\catcode`\!=11\relax} \def\makebangother{\catcode`\!=12\relax} % \makebangletter % % The units that texpic deals in. You should define it this way instead % of simply saying ``0.001in'' because the difference in resolution % actually makes a big difference % \newdimen\!tpu \!tpu=1in \divide\!tpu by 1000 %%% %% \!maptpus -- map a PiCTeX dimension to a TeXPiC dimension %% using the \!tpu conversion factor. %% %% uses: dimen0 %% \def\!maptpus#1#2 {\dimen0=#1\divide \dimen0 by \!tpu #2=\dimen0} % % ** \setplotsymbol ({PLOTSYMBOL} [ ] < , >) % ** Save PLOTSYMBOL away in an hbox for use with curve plotting routines % ** See Subsection 5.2 of the manual. \def\setplotsymbol(#1#2){% \!setputobject{#1}{#2} \setbox\!plotsymbol=\box\!putobject% \!plotsymbolxshift=\!xshift \!plotsymbolyshift=\!yshift % % Additions: compute size of dot, convert to TPUs and issue a pensize % \!dimenB=\wd\!plotsymbol \!dimenC=\ht\!plotsymbol \advance\!dimenC by \dp\!plotsymbol \ifdim\!dimenB<\!dimenC \!dimenF=\!dimenC \else \!dimenF=\!dimenB\fi \!maptpus{\!dimenF}{\!countC} \special{pn \the\!countC} \ignorespaces} \setplotsymbol({\fiverm .})% ** initialize plotsymbol % ** The following routine is used to draw a "solid" line between (xS,yS) % ** and (xE,yE). Points are spaced nearly every \plotsymbolspacing length % ** along the line. % % Note: this is a replacement for PicTeX \!linearsolid. % If line clipping is enabled, the line to be drawn is % clipped using \!clipline. If there's anything left % to draw after clipping, it's drawn. If clipping is off, % the line is simply drawn. In either case, line drawing % is done by \!texpicline. % \def\!linearsolid{% \let\!nextLinearAct=\!texpicline \expandafter\ifx \!initinboundscheck \relax \else \!clipline \if!InBounds \else \let\!nextLinearAct=\relax \fi \fi% \!nextLinearAct% } % % Texpic has increasing origin in the upper left corner, while % pictex has origin in bottom left corner. Ergo, we flip the signs % for y-coordinates. % \def\!texpicline{% \!maptpus{\!xS}{\!countC} \!maptpus{\!yS}{\!countD} \!countD=-\!countD% \special{pa \the\!countC \space \the\!countD}% \!maptpus{\!xE}{\!countC} \!maptpus{\!yE}{\!countD} \!countD=-\!countD% \special{pa \the\!countC \space \the\!countD}\special{fp}% \ignorespaces} % %%% % Code to support line clipping % % Line clipping routine. Clips to bounding box specified % by (!checkleft, !checkbot) and (!checkright, !checktop). % Note that this box is only defined if \initboundscheckon % has been called. % % The clipping algorithm was published in ACM TOG Vol 3 No 1 % by people at Berkeley, but I've forgotten the complete reference. % This was translated from a version I wrote in C. % %% % After calling \!cliplines, !InBounds tells you if the line contains % any points within the clipping window. % \newif\if!InBounds % %% % \!clipt -- this corresponds to the routine by the same name % in the published algorithm. % % Dimens used are descibed below. All are grouped and know that % PiCTeX doesn't use dimen0..9. Variable names are taken from % the TOG article. The junk on the r.h.s. is indenting information % % Globals: dimen8 corresponds to t0 % dimen9 corresponds to t1 % % clipt dimen0 corresponds to p % dimen1 corresponds to q % dimen2 corresponds to r % % !fastclip Uses bounding boxes % % !clipline passes dimen3 to clipt as p % passes dimen4 to clipt as q % uses dimen0, dimen2 % % \def\!clipt#1#2{% \dimen0=#1 \relax \dimen1=#2 \relax \ifdim \dimen0 < \!zpt% >0 \!divide{\dimen1}{\dimen0}{\dimen2}% \ifdim \dimen2 > \dimen9% >1 \global\!InBoundsfalse \else% =1 \ifdim \dimen2 > \dimen8 \dimen8=\dimen2 \fi \fi% <1 \else \ifdim \dimen0 > \!zpt% =0>1 \!divide{\dimen1}{\dimen0}{\dimen2}% \ifdim \dimen2 < \dimen8% >2 \global\!InBoundsfalse \else% =2 \ifdim \dimen2 < \dimen9 \dimen9=\dimen2 \fi \fi% <2 \else% =1 \ifdim \dimen1 < \!zpt \global\!InBoundsfalse \fi \fi% <1 \fi% <0 } % % fastclipcheck % \def\!fastclip#1#2{% \ifdim #1<\!checkleft \global\!InBoundsfalse \else \ifdim #1>\!checkright \global\!InBoundsfalse \else \ifdim #2<\!checkbot \global\!InBoundsfalse \else \ifdim #2>\!checktop \global\!InBoundsfalse \else \fi \fi \fi \fi} % % clipline - clip a line to the current bounding box. % assumes line is in (!xS, !yS) and extends to (!xE,!yE) and that % \!xdiff and \!ydiff has been set up. This is normally done % in \!lstart. % % \!clipline first checks to see if the start & end points are % conainted in the clipping box. If the simple compare works, % then no clipping is done, else \!doclip is called to % do the actually clipping computations. % \def\!clipline{% \!!initinboundscheck \!InBoundstrue \!fastclip{\!xS}{\!yS}% \!fastclip{\!xE}{\!yE}% \if!InBounds\else\!doclip\fi} % \def\!doclip{% \begingroup% \global\!InBoundstrue% \dimen8=0pt \dimen9=1pt % \dimen3=-\!xdiff \dimen4=\!xS \advance\dimen4 by -\!checkleft% fromX-minX \!clipt{\dimen3}{\dimen4}% % \if!InBounds% 0 \dimen3=\!xdiff \dimen4=\!checkright \advance\dimen4 by -\!xS% maxX - fromX \!clipt{\dimen3}{\dimen4}% % \if!InBounds% 1 % \dimen3=-\!ydiff \dimen4=\!yS \advance\dimen4 by -\!checkbot% fromY-minY \!clipt{\dimen3}{\dimen4}% % \if!InBounds% 2 % \dimen3=\!ydiff \dimen4=\!checktop \advance\dimen4 by -\!yS% maxY-fromY \!clipt{\dimen3}{\dimen4}% % \if!InBounds% 3 \dimen0=1pt % % The following \if's truncate the line based on the solution % to the parametric solution to the bounding box. % % Note that we don't have a \!multiply, the equivilent to \!divide. % The code below compute X * Y as (x / ( 1/ Y)), which is far % from optimal. % \ifdim\dimen9 < \dimen0% 4 \!divide{\dimen0}{\dimen9}{\dimen2}% % \dimen3=\!xdiff \!divide{\dimen3}{\dimen2}{\dimen4}% \global\!xE=\dimen4 \global\advance\!xE by \!xS % \dimen3=\!ydiff \!divide{\dimen3}{\dimen2}{\dimen4}% \global\!yE=\dimen4 \global\advance\!yE by \!yS \fi% 4 \ifdim\dimen8 > \!zpt% 4 \!divide{\dimen0}{\dimen8}{\dimen2}% % \dimen3=\!xdiff \!divide{\dimen3}{\dimen2}{\dimen4}% \global\advance\!xS by \dimen4 % \dimen3=\!ydiff \!divide{\dimen3}{\dimen2}{\dimen4}% \global\advance\!yS by \dimen4 \fi% 4 \fi% 3 \fi% 2 \fi% 1 \fi% 0 \endgroup} % \makebangother ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- Date: Tue, 22 Nov 88 08:55:17 pdt From: mcdonald%loki.edsg@hac2arpa.hac.com (louis mcdonald) Subject: RE: including Macdraw and laserprep Keywords: MacDraw, Laserprep In the last couple of issues, questions about mixing Macdraw, Macpaint, or most postscript files from the Macintosh have appeared. In our environment, we have be successfully mixing the two (TeX and pictures). We use DVIPS from Arbortext with no problem. NOTE: when using the pictures, the `printer memory' needs to be reduced in DVIPS, otherwise the printer will have problems. The following is a response I sent out last time, but seemed to get lost. >I would like to include MacDraw documents in a Tex file and then >print the resulting .PS file on a DEC LPS40 printer. I am using >DVIALW to convert .DVI files to .PS files and have been >able to include the sample file given in the DVIALW manual, but >have not had any luck with MacDraw files. I have a suspicion that >a special Apple dictionary is required, but don't know enough about >Postscript etc. to be sure. Any help greatly appreciated. The infamous Laserprep problem. If I remember correctly, the Macdraw sample that you have been using with DVIALW has an old laserprep file, or a `hacked' version. The main problem with Macdraw (or Mac-anything) is having the correct Postscript dictionary (laserprep-xxx). When we got Arbortext's DVIPS program, it included a laserprep dictionary. However, our Macs where using Laserprep 40, so the Postscript output by the Macs would not work with the Laserprep dictionary from Arbortext. So, we had to move the Laserprep 40 dictonary from the Mac to our Apollo system. Thanks to Jim Sterken's comments in the Arbortext Laserprep for making it easy to get the new Laserprep dictionary working. To get the Laserprep dictionary from your Mac - (from JS's comments) To put the PostScript description of a MacDraw document into a file, select the PRINT option, and then LASERWRITER from the menu. Note that the LaserWriter driver must be installed in order to do this. When the Mac comes back and says ``printing'', press F together. A PostScript file will be generated on the disk. If you press K you get a PostScript file prefaced with the LaserPrep file. We don't know how you get just the LaserPrep file itself, but one approach is to make a document that is trivially short and then edit it---the separation point between the LaserPrep stuff and the regular MacDraw figure stuff is obvious. It should be noted that some items in the Laserprep dictionary need to be commented out. I have been able to send a MacDraw/MacPaint file to LPS40 with our `fixed' Laserprep. Things to comment out (based on Laserprep 40 and JS's comments) - The next step is to edit a few lines in your LaserPrep file to keep it from trying to load itself in the printer permanently, and to keep it from blanking the page before printing the figure---both of these things cause problems when trying to merge MacDraw figures into TeX generated pages containing other material. It is difficult to explain which lines should be edited since this may change with each version of LaserPrep released by Apple. Generally only five to ten lines need be commented out to make things work. The following excerpts from Apple's version 36.0 LaserPrep file show the lines we commented out to make things work. If your version of LaserPrep is significantly different from this, you are on your own to figure out what must be done... After you've finished making the necessary changes to LaserPrep, you should again verify that you are still on the right track by concatenating your edited LaserPrep file and your MacDraw test figure and transmitting them to your printer. File laserprp.pro (excerpts): %! % LaserPrep. % % Modified a little to keep it from doing any permanent downloading % or page pre-blanking. All changed lines are marked with "%-jjs-%". % % Jim Sterken % ArborText, Inc. % September 6, 1986 % %-jjs-% 0000000000 % ) CopyRight Apple Computer, Inc. 1984, 1985 All Rights Reserved. %{appledict version #36.0 %-jjs-% serverdict begin exitserver systemdict /currentpacking known{currentpacking true setpacking}if /LW{save statusdict /product get(LaserWriter)anchorsearch exch pop{length 0 eq{1}{2}ifelse}{0}ifelse exch restore}bind def /LW+{LW 2 eq}bind def /ok{systemdict /statusdict known dup{LW 0 gt and}if}bind def %-jjs-% ok{statusdict begin 9 sccinteractive 3 ne exch 0 ne or{9 0 3 setsccinteractive}if %-jjs-% waittimeout 300 lt{/waittimeout 300 def}if end}if /md 250 dict def md begin /av 36.0 def . . . /fe{tmp /Encoding 2 copy get dup length array copy put}bdf /ce{tmp /Encoding get 3 1 roll put}bdf %-jjs-%/xs{JJ serverdict begin exitserver}bdf %/xs{0 serverdict begin exitserver}bdf %-jjs-% /bmbc{wd begin . . . statusdict begin bind end readonly def}if systemdict /currentpacking known{setpacking}if %-jjs-%currentfile ok userdict /smooth known not and{eexec}{flushfile}ifelse In Laserprep 40, there was a LARGE block of hexidecimal values. I had to comment these out also. Found out later it was microcode fixes for the Laserwriter (not used by our Apollo printer). Finally, I was able to successfully host Laserprep 65 into our Postscript environment by following these rules. Good Luck!!! PS. Maybe Laserprep files should be put into an accessible area for easy FTPing. Or is this a legal problem Louis McDonald Company: Hughes Aircraft; El Segundo, CA 90245 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- >Date: Fri, 4 Nov 88 17:31:18 PST >From: munson@renoir.Berkeley.EDU (Ethan V. Munson) >Subject: Macintosh illustrations and psfig >Keywords: Macintosh, macros, PostScript > >I am trying to create documents which include figures generated by >drawing programs on a Macintosh. I have the psfig macros and am able to >use them successfully with hand generated PostScript and with PostScript >generated by a program called "PS from Mac". The latter solution is >the most useful, but the PostScript files created by "PS from Mac" do >not have a perfect correspondence with the normal Mac output. I >would like to do better. > >I have tried Ed Moy's prepfix, but while it permits me to print the >MacDraw files using the UNIX lpr command, it doesn't solve the problem >with psfig. I have also tried Encapsulated PostScript files generated >by Cricket Draw. I can't get these to print anything other than a blank >page. I had the same problems when I tried to print an Encapsulated PostScript file generated by Cricket Draw. By changing the line: [] settransfer into %[] settransfer I was able to print the ps file and I was also able to include it with the psfig-macro into a LaTeX document :-) Henk Tullemans Philips Research Laboratories Eindhoven, The Netherlands tullemans@apolloway.prl.philips.nl ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Date: Tue, 22 Nov 88 12:47 GMT From: GTEO%cs.tcd.ie@Forsythe.Stanford.EDU Subject: Questions in TeXtures Keywords: LaTeX, TeXtures Can TeXtures run LaTeX as described in the LaTeX manual? If it can what is the System configuration requiredment, such as main memory, disk space etc? How long does it normally take to print a page on a Image writer? Thanks in advance. 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