1PSNUP(1) User Commands PSNUP(1)
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6 psnup - put multiple pages of a PostScript document on to one page
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9 psnup [OPTION...] -NUP [INFILE [OUTFILE]]
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12 Put multiple pages of a PostScript document on to one page.
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14 -NUMBER
15 number of pages to impose on each output page
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17 -p, --paper=PAPER
18 output paper name or dimensions
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20 -P, --inpaper=PAPER
21 input paper name or dimensions
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23 -m, --margin=DIMENSION
24 width of margin around each output page [default 0pt]; useful
25 for thumbnail sheets, as the original page margins will be
26 shrunk
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28 -b, --border=DIMENSION
29 width of border around each input page
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31 -d, --draw[=DIMENSION]
32 draw a line of given width around each page [relative to input
33 page size; argument defaults to 1pt; default is no line]
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35 -l, --rotatedleft
36 input pages are rotated left 90 degrees
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38 -r, --rotatedright
39 input pages are rotated right 90 degrees
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41 -f, --flip
42 swap output pages' width and height
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44 -c, --transpose
45 swap columns and rows (column-major order)
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47 -t, --tolerance=NUMBER
48 maximum wasted area in square pt [default: 100,000]
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50 -q, --quiet
51 don't show page numbers being output
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53 --help display this help and exit
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55 --version
56 display version information and exit
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58 psnup aborts with an error if it cannot arrange the input pages so as
59 to waste less than the given tolerance.
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61 The output paper size defaults to the input paper size; if that is not
62 given, the default given by the `paper' command is used.
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64 The input paper size defaults to the output paper size.
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66 In row-major order (the default), adjacent pages are placed in rows
67 across the paper; in column-major order, they are placed in columns
68 down the page.
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70 Psnup uses Pstops to impose multiple logical pages on to each physical
71 sheet of paper.
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73 Paper sizes can be given either as a name (see paper(1)) or as widthx‐
74 height (see psutils(1) for the available units).
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77 Exit status:
78 0 if OK,
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80 1 if arguments or options are incorrect, or there is some other
81 problem starting up,
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83 2 if there is some problem during processing, typically an error
84 reading or writing an input or output file.
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87 The potential use of this utility is varied but one particular use is
88 in conjunction with psbook(1). For example, using groff to create a
89 PostScript document and lpr as the UNIX print spooler a typical command
90 line might look like this:
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92 groff -Tps -ms file | psbook | psnup -2 | lpr
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94 where file is a 4 page document this command will result in a two page
95 document printing two pages of file per page and rearranges the page
96 order to match the input pages 4 and 1 on the first output page and
97 pages 2 then 3 of the input document on the second output page.
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100 Written by Angus J. C. Duggan and Reuben Thomas.
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103 Copyright © Reuben Thomas 2016-2021. Released under the GPL version 3,
104 or (at your option) any later version.
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107 PostScript is a trademark of Adobe Systems Incorporated.
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110 psutils(1), paper(1)
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114psnup 2.07 October 2021 PSNUP(1)