John, you may have to rotate the thing (something like angle=90?)
greetings, el On 2018-06-07 09:04 , John White wrote: > Dr. Lisse, > > Brilliant! Thank you so much. This is clearly the best option, I > still have to learn more before using it. > > For example, I get the error: > > "LaTeX Error: Cannot determine size of graphic in lines.pdf (no > BoundingBox)." > > But if I "show output anyway" I get lined paper. Lines are going > horizontal rather than vertical, but nonetheless there is my text AND > numbered lines in the same document! > > Thanks again! > > John > > > On Tuesday, June 5, 2018 11:44:33 PM PDT Dr Eberhard Lisse wrote: >> John, >> >> why don't you generate the lines separately into lines.pdf and then use >> the background package in the preamble like so >> >> \usepackage{background} >> \backgroundsetup{ >> contents={% >> \includegraphics[width=\pagewidth]{lines.pdf} >> }, >> angle=0, >> scale=1.0, >> opacity=1.0 >> } >> >> I do something like that with a lab request form, where I position >> demographic data (with textpos) which remains searchable. >> >> greetings, el -- Dr. Eberhard W. Lisse / Obstetrician & Gynaecologist (Saar) e...@lisse.na / * | Telephone: +264 81 124 6733 (cell) PO Box 8421 / Bachbrecht, Namibia ;____/