Provided by: mpage_2.5.6-1_amd64 bug

NAME

       mpage - print multiple pages per sheet on PostScript printer

SYNOPSIS

       mpage  [-1248aAceEfHloOrRStTuUvVxX]  [-b papersize]  [-B[num[lrtb]]...]   [-C  [encoding]]
       [-da|p]    [-D dateformat]    [-F fontname]    [-h header]    [-j first[-last][%interval]]
       [-J startpageno]    [-L lines]    [-m[num[lrtb]]...]    [-M[num[lrtb]]...]    [-p[prprog]]
       [-P[printer]] [-s tabstop] [-W width] [-z printcmd] [-Z printcmd_args] [file ...]

DESCRIPTION

       mpage reads plain text files or PostScript documents  and  prints  them  on  a  PostScript
       printer  with the text reduced in size so that several pages appear on one sheet of paper.
       This is useful for viewing large printouts on a small amount of paper.  It uses ISO 8859.1
       to print 8-bit characters.

       The following options are recognized (note that arguments to options may be separated from
       the option by spaces, except for -B, -m, -M, -p and -P): Also when mpage encounters --  as
       option  it  will  stop  parsing  arguments  and the remaining arguments are interpreted as
       filenames.

       -1     Print 1 normal page per sheet (included for symmetry).

       -2     Print 2 normal pages per sheet.

       -4     Print 4 normal pages per sheet (default).

       -8     Print 8 normal pages per sheet.

       -a     Toggle layout of the pages on the sheet so that  successively  numbered  pages  run
              down the sheet, as opposed to left to right.  (default updown).

       -A     This option is deprecated, use -bA4 instead.

       -bpapersize
              Prepare  output  for the selected paper type.  Papersize can be A3 for European A3,
              A4 for European A4, Letter for US Letter, or Legal  for  Legal  sized  paper.   For
              available types, see option -bl.  For the default, see 'mpage -x'.  This default is
              taken from the system; see papersize(5).  If it isn't found, mpage  exits  with  an
              error.

       -bl, -b?
              List the currently available paper types, then exit.

       -B[<num>[lrtb]*]
              Setup  a  box  around a particular part of your page.  Specify text box margins and
              line thickness.  The default is 0 columns (lines) for both left and right (top  and
              bottom) margins and 0 line thickness.  Specifying -B solely toggles printing of the
              box.  l, r, t or b set the left, right, top or bottom margin respectively to  <num>
              columns (lines).  Not specifying any of the sides, will set the line thickness when
              <num> is given.  For example -B1 sets the line thickness to 1.  Sides with negative
              margins will not print.

       -c     Toggle concatenation of pages from different files on single sheets (default off).

       -C[encodingfile]
              Specify  the  character  encoding  file.   The  file should be in the mpage library
              directory (/usr/lib/mpage).  Mpage  has  an  internal  default  encoding  based  on
              Latin-1  or  IBM  codepage  850.   Depending  on  compile time option this encoding
              definition is on or not.  Not specifying an encodingfile will toggle the  usage  of
              the internal encoding.

       -da|p  Force  input  to  be  taken  as ascii (a) or postscript (p) text.  This way you can
              print your postscript code as text, or print postscript code that  mpage  does  not
              recognise.  When  using  -dp, make sure that the the postscript code contains %Page
              page separators or else things will probably look odd.

       -Ddateformat
              Set the date format as in strftime(3) to be used in date/time representations (e.g.
              in headers).  (Note: to make this useful you probably need the -H option.)

       -e     Print  2  normal pages per sheet in duplex mode: every first and fourth page on one
              side and every second and third  on  the  other  side.  This  is  more  or  less  a
              combination of the -O and -E options but in one pass.

       -E     Print  2  normal  pages  per sheet, namely: print only the second and third page of
              every set of four pages. See also -O. These options  override  -a  and  -l.   Using
              these options double sided prints can be created without a duplex printer.

       -f     Toggles folding lines longer than page width (default off).

       -Ffontname
              Specify  font.   (default  Courier).  Check your printer for supported fonts. Note:
              this has almost nothing to do with the  fonts  used  for  your  X-windows/KDE/Gnome
              environment.

       -hheader
              This is used only when the -p or -H switch is used and is passed as the "-h header"
              option to pr(1) or as the header for -H.

       -H     Create header line for each logical page separated from page text by  a  horizontal
              line.  Unless  -h  is  given,  the  header consists of last file modification time,
              filename and page number, all in bold and slightly larger font.  This  option  only
              applies to non-postscript files.

       -Iindent
              Indent text by indent characters.

       -jfirst[-last][%interval]
              Print  just  the  selected sheets, specified by a number, starting at 1.  Here last
              defaults to the end of data, interval to 1.  Several -j options can be given (up to
              MAXJARGS, default 100) to create a complex selection of pages.  Thus -j1-10 selects
              the first 10 sheets, while -j 1%2 prints just the odd-numbered  sheets  and  -j 2%2
              prints just the even ones.

              You  can  do  double-sided  printing, in two passes, as follows.  If you use 3-hole
              punched paper, put it in the printer such that the holes will appear at the top  of
              the  page  -- on the right as you pull out the printer tray, in our Laser writer II
              NTX.  Print the odd-numbered sheets with

                   mpage ... -j 1%2 ...

              Note the number of pages it reports.  (Only half this many will really be printed).
              When  printing  finishes, if mpage reported an odd number of pages, remove the last
              one from the stack, since there will be no even-numbered sheet to match  it.   Then
              arrange  the  stack of paper for printing on the other side.  (If it's punched, the
              holes will now be on the left.)  On our II NTX, the paper comes out blank-side  up;
              replace  it  in  the  tray  still blank-side up but rotated 180 degrees.  For other
              printers, you figure it out.  Now print the even-numbered sheets in  reverse  order
              with

                   mpage ... -r -j 2%2 ...

              hoping no one else reaches the printer before you do.

       -Jstartpageno
              Set the start value of the sheet page count to startpageno instead of 1.

       -k     When  mpage  finds  a  %%Trailer  or  %%PSTrailer  in  the postscript input file it
              normally assumes this is the end of the postscript file and stops reading the input
              file.  But when the PS file includes EPS files, %%Trailers might be anywhere. Using
              this option ignores the %%Trailer and %%PSTrailer lines.

       -l     Toggle printing landscape or portrait mode (default portrait).  Landscape pages are
              55  lines long by 132 characters wide by default.  Portrait pages are 66 lines long
              by 80 characters wide by default.

       -Llines
              Adjust the page reduction parameters so that lines lines will fit in the  space  of
              one page.  This overrides the default values normally supplied.  (See -l.)  If used
              in conjunction with -p then this value is passed to the pr(1) as well.  As  a  side
              effect  this  changes the font size as well (as will the -W option.) So while there
              is an option to change font family, there is no  explicit  option  to  change  font
              size!

       -m[<num>[lrtb]*]
              Specify  sheet  margin.  The  default margin is 20 points.  Only specifying -m sets
              left margin to 40 points.  l, r, t or b set  left,  right,  top  or  bottom  margin
              respectively  to  <num> points.  Not specifying any of the sides will set all sides
              when <num> is given.  <num> defaults to  40  points.  For  example  -m10  sets  all
              margins  to  10  points.  -ml50tb sets left margin to default 40 and top and bottom
              margins to 50 points.  -m50l25bt30r sets bottom and top margin to 25,  left  margin
              to 50 and right margin to 30 points.  Margins can have negative numbers.

       -M[<num>[lrtb]*]
              Specify  logical  page  margins.  For syntax, see -m option.  Defaults are 4 for -M
              solely, and 8 for <num>.  Margins can be negative.  This way large white borders in
              your (postscript) documents can be reduced.

       -o     Toggle printing of outlines around each reduced page (default on).

       -O     Print  2  normal  pages  per sheet, namely: print only the first and fourth page of
              every set of four pages. See also -E. These options  override  -a  and  -l.   Using
              these options double sided prints can be created without a duplex printer.

       -p[prprog]
              Pipe  input  through  prprog  command (including specified options) before printing
              (assumes the input is a text file).  When no command is specified, it  defaults  to
              pr(1).

       -P[printer]
              Specify  the  printer  to which the PostScript output is sent (e.g. lpr -Pprinter).
              Using -P with no printer specified sends the  PostScript  to  the  default  printer
              queue  (e.g.  lpr).  Using -P- returns output to stdout, useful in combination with
              the MPAGE environment variable. Without -P output is sent to standard output.

       -r     Reverse printing.  The last sheet is printed first.  The way of  arranging  reduced
              pages on the sheets doesn't change.

       -R     Switch  to  left  to  right  mode, starting first page on left bottom corner.  This
              might be useful for landscape postscript files.  (Note: using -l  after  -R  undoes
              -R, and switches to normal landscape mode.)

       -stabstop
              Set tabstop width (default 8 characters).  Should be >= 2.

       -S     Accept non-square page reduction.  By default, pages are shrunk equally in X and Y,
              even if this wastes some space on the sheet.  With -S, reduced pages are larger but
              slightly distorted. (Only used when printing postscript files.)

       -t     Toggle  printing  on  both sides of the paper.  This option has 3 states: nop, yes,
              no, which mean:

              NOP:   don't do anything in PostScript, use the printer default;

              YES:   force printer to do duplex;

              NO:    force printer not to do it.

              If there is no -t, then the duplex is NOP. If you put some -t on the command  line,
              the  state  toggles as "yes,no,yes,no...".  So, if your printer is set to print, by
              default, in duplex mode, you will use "-t -t" on the command line to  force  it  to
              print  in  non-duplex  mode.  Use  this  option  only if your printer is capable of
              printing in duplex mode.  (default NOP).

       -T     Toggle tumble of every second pages.  This option has 3 states: nop, yes, no  (with
              behaviour  similar  to  -t).   So,  if your printer is set to print, by default, in
              duplex mode, with tumble on, you will use "-T -T"  on  command  line  to  print  in
              nontumble  mode.   Use  this  option only if your printer is capable of printing in
              duplex mode.  With this version of mpage, you may use this option even  if  you  do
              not use -t.  (default NOP).

       -u     Toggle checking for UTF-8 input (not relevant for postscript input).

       -U     This option is deprecated, use -bLetter instead.

       -v     Toggle  printing  a  count  of  the number of sheets produced for printing (default
              off).

       -V     Print version information and exit.

       -Wwidth
              Adjust the page reduction parameters so that a line width characters long will  fit
              in  the  space  of  one page.  This overrides the default values normally supplied.
              (See -l.)  If used in conjunction with -p then this value is passed  to  the  pr(1)
              program as well.  See also the -L option on font sizes.

       -x     Print usage information (including current defaults), then exit.

       -X[header]
              Print  header  on  the  left and the page number on the right of each physical page
              (sheet).  If no header  is  given,  the  default  is  the  current  filename  (note
              influence of -c), the filename of the first file on the page is used.

       -zprintcommand
              Specify command to use to send output to.  Default is lpr(1) for BSD style spooler,
              lp(1) for SYSV style spooler.  You can specify command line options, but  note  -Z.
              For example -zlp for system V Unix.

       -Zprintprog_queuename_arg
              Specify  what option to use for the "-z printcommand" to specify a printqueue.  For
              example -zlp -Z-d for system V Unix.  Default is -P for BSD style spooler,  -d  for
              SYSV style spooler.

ENVIRONMENT

       mpage  examines  the  PRINTER  (or  LPDEST for SYSV style spooler) environment variable to
       override its default printer.

       The MPAGE_LIB environment variable can be used to control  where  the  character  encoding
       files (-C) can be found.

       mpage  also  examines  the  MPAGE  environment  variable for default option settings.  Any
       option or combination of options can be specified in the MPAGE environment variable.   For
       example, if MPAGE is set to the string:

              -2oPqms -L60

       it  would  (in  the  absence  of other command line arguments) print 2 pages per sheet, 60
       lines per page, with outlines, on the printer named  qms  (overriding  the  PRINTER/LPDEST
       environment  variable, if it exists).  In the environment variable, white space is used as
       an option delimiter, and no quoting is recognized.

       Any command line options will override both the PRINTER and MPAGE environment variables.

FILES

       /tmp/mpageXXXXXX
       /usr/lib/mpage

BUGS

       Suffers under the burden of far too many switches.  (But you wanted the choices!)

       NULL characters in a postscript input file will cause mpage to crash!

       Many others, we're sure.

       Mpage is year 2000 compliant, as long as the underlying operating system is!!!

VERSION

       Version 2.5.6, Released January 2008.
       Location:

              http://www.mesa.nl/pub/mpage
              ftp://ftp.mesa.nl/pub/mpage

AUTHORS

       Marcel Mol <marcel@mesa.nl> (current maintainer).

       Mark P. Hahn (Original author)

                                            2008/01/14                                   MPAGE(1)