Hi, I used to edit raw postscript (writing display postscript on an old unix box), and I used emacs+postscript mode. (I fail to see how the fonts one uses in the postscript program has anything to do with the editor).
However, if you need to edit machine generated postscript using something that parses it, presents it to you, and re-generates postscript, Umm, I don't know if there is any such beast out there. Postscript is a fairly complete programming language, and it only a postscript engine can understand what the output should look like. By the time the engines is done, you have a description of each non-background pixel on the page (some hidden behind others and so on). Umm, to get the text back you need to run an OCR on the data. Also, an elegant 5 lines of postscript code can generate fairly complex final output, so it is as hard to reverse engineer postscript as is C++. What I am bumbling around trying to say is that this is quite hard. I have never seen a product, on any OS, that does something like this. Having said that, I realize that a dozen people shall now jump out and prove how wrong I am, and that would answer your question. manoj who still has the red and blue books ;-). -- I think for the most part that the readership here uses the c-word in a similar fashion. I don't think anybody really believes in a new, revolution- ary literature --- I think they use `cyberpunk' as a term of convenience to discuss the common stylistic elements in a small subset of recent sf books. Jeff G. Bone Manoj Srivastava <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> <http://www.datasync.com/%7Esrivasta/> Key C7261095 fingerprint = CB D9 F4 12 68 07 E4 05 CC 2D 27 12 1D F5 E8 6E -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]