Provided by: yudit_2.9.6-8build1_amd64 bug

NAME

       uniprint - produce postscript output from unicode text for printing

SYNOPSIS

       uniprint  [  -out  output-file  ]  [  -in input-file ] [ -decode encoding ] [ -printer printer ] [ -L ] [
       -media media ] [ -us ] [ -nus ] [ -break ] [ -wrap ] [ -left ] [ -right ] [ -size font-size  ]  [  -hsize
       header-font-size ] [ -font truetype-font-file ]

DESCRIPTION

       uniprint is a program from the yudit distribution. It makes a formatted poscript output that can be saved
       or directly sent to the printer.  The program needs a TrueType font that has unicode table in  order   to
       operate.

       If  you  are  running  Linux  you  most  probably have unicode truetype fonts, because there are very few
       vendors, if any. who give discount if you do not buy Windows. If you are running other Unices it is still
       possible  to  get  a  freely available font. I have made ciberbit.ttf a default font for uniprint, mainly
       because it is freely downloadable from http://www.bitstream.com/.

       The postcript output contains all drawing information. No extra fonts are needed, and it can  be  printed
       on  any  postscript  printer.  You may encounter probkems with old ghostview or old printers. I used this
       program with ghostscript 5.10 because 2.6.2 gave me stack overflow error.

OPTIONS

       -out ouput-file
              Do not sent the output to the printer, put it in the  file  instead.   If  the  '-'  character  is
              specified, send the postscript data  to the standard output.

       -in input-file
              If specified read the document from a file. Read stdin otherwise.

       -decode encoding
              specifies  the  encoding  of  the input text.  All encodings that are available for uniconv can be
              used. If not specified encoding is set to utf-8.

       -printer printer
              Send the postscript output to printer through the 'lpr -P Printer' command.

       -break option makes this program print a graphical representation of line breaking characters.

       -us    option turns on uniscribe emulation. For some scripts emulation is turned on by default.

       -nus   option turns off uniscribe emulation. For some scripts emulation is turned off by default.

       -wrap  option makes this program do a simplistic line breaking on word boundaries.

       -left  option sets the embedding of the document to Left.

       -right option sets the embedding of the document to Right.

       -L     Selects landscape printing. The default is portrait.

       -media media
              Sets paper size. The default is A4. The following media values are accepted: A3, A4, A5,  B4,  B5,
              Executive, Folio, Ledger, Legal, Letter, Quarto, Statement, Tabloid

       -size font-size
              sets the size of the font for the text body in points.

       -hsize heder-font-size
              sets  the  size  of  the  font  for the header in points.  If zero size is specified, no header is
              printed.

       -font truetype-font
              specifies the font to be used for printing.

              truetype-font is the full pathname of the font, like /somepath/myfonts/cyberbit.ttf  or  just  the
              name  of  the  file  cyberbit.ttf.   The  fonts  are  searched  using   yudit.fontpath property in
              ~/.yudit/yudit.properties or /usr/share/yudit/config/yudit.properties.  directory where  the  font
              files  are  kept.  By default /usr/share/yudit/fonts and ~/.yudit/fonts are searched.  This option
              can be specified multiple times, to create a virtual font.

FILES

       ~/.yudit/yudit.properties  or  /usr/share/yudit/config/yudit.properties  can  have   yudit.fontpath   and
       yudit.datapath  properties.   The  former  is where the font files, the latter is where the map files are
       kept.  By default /usr/share/yudit/fonts is searched.

SEE ALSO

        uniconv

AUTHOR

       This program  was written by gsinai@iname.com (Gaspar Sinai), using the code of ttf2pfa program that  was
       written by Adrew Weeks.  Last Updated Tokyo, 2 November, 2001.