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- #!/bin/sh -f
- # $Id: pv.sh 8104 2007-07-05 10:41:52Z till $
- #
- # pv - preview a specified page of a dvi file in a Ghostscript window
- # usage: pv page file
- #
- # pv converts the given page to PostScript and displays it
- # in a Ghostscript window.
- #
- if [ $# -lt 2 ] ;then
- echo usage: $0 'page_number file_name[.dvi]'
- exit 1
- fi
- #
- # The following line used to appear here:
- #
- #RESOLUTION=100
- #
- # But according to Peter Dyballa
- # <pete@lovelace.informatik.uni-frankfurt.de>, "Modern versions of dvips are
- # taught to read configuration files which tell them the paths to PK, TFM,
- # VF and other files for example PostScript font programmes. These files
- # tell #dvips too which default resolution is used and therefore which
- # series of PK files (based on 300 DPI or 400 DPI or 600 DPI or even more)
- # are held on the system." So we have deleted this line, and also removed
- # the -D switch from the call of dvips below.
- #
-
- # This definition is changed on install to match the
- # executable name set in the makefile
- GS_EXECUTABLE=gs
-
- TEMPDIR=.
- PAGE=$1
- shift
- FILE="$1"
- shift
- if test -z "$TEMPDIR"; then
- TEMPDIR=/tmp
- fi
- if which mktemp >/dev/null 2>/dev/null; then
- tmpfile="`mktemp $TEMPDIR/\"$FILE\".pv.XXXXXX`"
- else
- tmpfile="$TEMPDIR/$FILE.$$.pv"
- fi
- trap "rm -rf $tmpfile" 0 1 2 15
- #dvips -D$RESOLUTION -p $PAGE -n 1 "$FILE" "$@" -o $tmpfile
- dvips -p $PAGE -n 1 "$FILE" "$@" -o $tmpfile
- $GS_EXECUTABLE $tmpfile
- exit 0
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