David Kastrup <d...@gnu.org> writes: > Peter Van Kranenburg <peter.van.kranenb...@meertens.knaw.nl> writes: > >> Dear all, >> >> I have to provide a bitmapped image to a publisher: >> 1200dpi, width: 11cm. It only contains one system. >> >> This implies a width of (11.0/2.54)*1200.0 = 5196 pixels. >> >> I followed the directions from the 'usage' manual, and I put this on >> top of my source file. >> >> \paper{ >> indent=0\mm >> line-width=110\mm >> oddFooterMarkup=##f >> oddHeaderMarkup=##f >> bookTitleMarkup = ##f >> scoreTitleMarkup = ##f >> ragged-right = ##f >> ragged-last = ##f >> } >> >> However. The resulting pdf has a width of 11.19 cm, and the png a >> width of 5283 pixels, which is too large. >> >> I tried to add: >> >> left-margin=0\mm >> right-margin=0\mm >> paper-width=110\mm >> check-consistency=##t >> >> Then I get a width of 11.15 cm. >> >> How can I set the with of resulting pdf at exactly 11.0 cm? > > Try setting the paper-width variable.
Sorry, I should better read to the end before replying. However, writing \paper { paper-width=110\mm } \score { { c4 c4 c4 c4 } } and using lilypond -dresolution=1200 --png I get an image with 5197 pixels width, which is to a pixel exactly what was demanded. So perhaps you need to check what throws a spanner in your works, starting from a simple paper definition. -- David Kastrup _______________________________________________ lilypond-user mailing list lilypond-user@gnu.org https://lists.gnu.org/mailman/listinfo/lilypond-user