On Sun, 24 Jun 2007, Matthew R. Lee wrote: > On Sunday 24 June 2007 04:36, Mick wrote: > > On Sunday 24 June 2007 01:13, Christian wrote: > > > Ok, I have found the solution of my problem: > > > > > > emerge --unmerge ghostscript-gpl > > > emerge ghostscript-esp > > > > > > That solves my problem. Maybe it helps you too. > > > > It seems that soon they will be merged: > > > > http://www.cups.org/articles.php?L463 > > > > > Am Freitag, 22. Juni 2007 22:28 schrieb Matthew R. Lee: > > > > I'm having problems with printing to pdf, both with kprint system and > > > > cups-pdf. The fonts are a right mess, see attached example. > > > > Now I know one work-around is to print to postscript than do a ps2ps > > > > followed by ps2pdf, but this is a less than perfect solution, though > > > > the only one I've come across so far. > > > > Has anyone else had this problem? And if so, how did you solve it? > > > > Comments greatly received > > > > Matt > Swaping ghostscript-gpl for ghostscript-esp improved the situation, at least > now the pdf is readable. However the fonts are still a little ugly and I > can't see any option in the cups interface under set printer options for > embeding the fonts. I'm offered pdf-general, pdf-banners, pdf-policies
Try to use the ghostpdf.ppd printer description with your cups-pdf printer to get the options to embed the fonts. You should have this file already on your system, on mine it is /usr/share/ghostscript/8.15/lib/ghostpdf.ppd. The steps are: Webbrowser http://localhost:631 Printers tab, search for the cups-pdf printer Modify Printer Continue Continue paste the location of your ghostpdf.ppd in the field "Or Provide a PPD File:", press "Modify Printer" Now you can set the printer options. urs -- [EMAIL PROTECTED] mailing list