Dennis Lee Bieber <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes: > On Fri, 22 Apr 2005 17:41:22 -0500, Mike Meyer <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> declaimed > the following in comp.lang.python: > >> No, you don't. My print system does that, and I don't have acrobat >> installed. I have ghostscript installed, which includes pdf2ps - which >> handles this particular translation. >> > Okay, so you've converted one page layout language (PDF) to > another (PS)... To actually print it you still need a RIP. A PostScript > laser printer has the RIP built-in, but consumer level Windows printers > do not have a PostScript RIP -- and some printers don't even have their > own specific RIP built-in ("winprinters" put the RIP into the software > driver that runs on the Windows machine, rather than sending drawing > commands to the printer for rendering).
RIP? That term is to generic for google to be much use. If you're saying you need a tool to convert from PDF to whatever the printer understands, you're right. You can't avoid that. On Unix, PS is used as the "universal" printer language. Unix vendors selling printers sold PS printers 20 years ago. That's when apsfilter showed up on the scene, automatically converting everything to PS to send it to the printer. (These days, magicfilter is a much better tool than apsfilter, though it's harder to install). That's why a "competent" printer installation these days will include ghostscript (or something equivalent) to drive the printer, and why my primary printer speaks PostScript. I disagree with your description of WinPrinters. Those are printers to stupid to handle flat ASCII, so your computer has to convert flat ASCII files to postscript or some other graphics format before you can print them. (This is where magicfilter beats apsfilter - apsfilter converts ASCII to PS to graphics images, whereas magicfilter can pass the text straight through. This has caused apsfilter to fail on some systems where magicfilter would work like a charm). Such printers typically only come with drivers for Windows, and are completely useless - unable to even print flat ASCII text - on other systems, hence the moniker "WinPrinters". Non-winprinters can be used to print flat ASCII without a driver of any kind. GhostScript now includes graphics drivers for several winprinters. The only way to have Python render PDF (or PS, or JPEG, or any other graphics format) without a "driver" of some kind is to write the driver in Python. That's a pretty silly thing to want to do. For one thing, the performance will probably suck. For another, there are lots of drivers already written that you can use. The only thing better than writing it in Python is finding that someone else has already written it. <mike -- Mike Meyer <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> http://www.mired.org/home/mwm/ Independent WWW/Perforce/FreeBSD/Unix consultant, email for more information. -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list