Date: Wed, 6 Oct 1993 09:26:11 -0400 From: steve@gec-epl.co.uk (Steve_Kilbane) Message-Id: <9310061326.AA12492@zombie.gec-epl.co.uk> To: sam-fans@hawkwind.utcs.toronto.edu Subject: printing utf X-Sun-Charset: US-ASCII Content-Length: 287 ok, so i've got sam and 9term running with the utf fonts - having produced some files with utf in them, any idea how i'd print them on a postscript printer..? [ this is probably a dumb question, but then it took me 2.5 hours last night just to get the X fonts installed. sigh. ] steve Currently to print I am doing two things. I have a latin1 `device' for troff which uses ISOLatin1Encoding for PostScript fonts rather than the Adobe StandardEndcoding. I have a filter which reads utf files and can produce plain ascii approximations (`;-)' for `☺' (a smiley) for example) or troff codes when asked, so `→' (that's a right arrow) becomes `\(->'). It's a hack, but hey, it gets Welsh poetry printed with wcirumflex and ycircumflex! I can make this available but it's written using bio at the moment and I can't release that so I'd have to rewrite it. I also want a more general solution to the problems `unutf' tackles. I originally intended it for use in our department here as a MIME decoder for utf-2 so the members of our department without 9terms could handle utf-2 mail. A more general solution again I've thought about but requires a rethinking to some extent of the tools people use when printing. To handle the printing of utf-2 strings in PostScript you'd need something to decode the encoding at the PostScript level if you want to include them in the strings themselves, perhaps something akin to `(general utf string) utfshow'. Matty. -- James Matthew Farrow | "For in that moment I beheld the ruin matty@cs.su.OZ.AU | of my existence. My world fell dark Basser Department of Computer Science | and my life became a shallow dream. Sydney University - FAX: +61 2 692 3838 | `Odi et amo. Excrucior.'" - Tlindah