* Tzafrir Cohen <tzaf...@cohens.org.il> 15.03.2009 > On Sun, Mar 15, 2009 at 11:47:43PM +0200, Dotan Cohen wrote: > > I just noticed that I can in fact print PDF files this way, so the > > problem is that I am trying to print an ODT file. How can I convert > > that ODT to PDF on the command line? I have googled that before and > > could not figure it out, even after installing OOo scripts and other > > nasties. > > As mentioned in previous threads: abirod should be able to do that.
Or you can use the "cups-pdf" package. -------------------------------------------------------------------------+ Package: cups-pdf | Priority: optional | Version: 2.5.0-1 | Depends: ghostscript, libpaper-utils, cups-client, libc6 (>= 2.7-1) | Pre-Depends: cups (>= 1.1.15) | Suggests: system-config-printer-gnome | system-config-printer-kde | \ | system-config-printer | Description: PDF printer for CUPS | CUPS-PDF provides a PDF Writer backend to CUPS. This can be used as a | virtual printer in a paperless network or to perform testing on CUPS. | . | Documents are written to a configurable directory (by default to ~/PDF) | or can be further manipulated by a post-processing command. | . | Homepage: http://www.cups-pdf.de | Enhances: cups | Tag: role::app-data, use::converting, use::printing, works-with::text, | works-with-format::pdf | -------------------------------------------------------------------------+ With this package you can make a PDF in every application. Hth Michael -- UNIX always presumes you know what you're doing. You're the human being, after all, and it is a mere operating system.
signature.asc
Description: Digital signature