The HPGS documentation

Introduction

HPGS has been developed by EV-i Informationstechnologie GmbH and has been published under the LGPL.

For Details visit the project's homepage.

Installation

See the file INSTALL of the distribution.

Invoking hpgs

 hpgs v1.1.9 - HPGl Script, a hpgl/2 interpreter/renderer.

 (C) 2004-2009 ev-i Informationstechnologie GmbH (http://www.ev-i.at)
     published under the LGPL (http://www.fsf.org/licenses/lgpl.html).

usage: hpgs [-i] [-v] [-q] [-d <dev>] [options...] [-o <out>] <in1> <in2>...
       -i ... Ignore plotsize from PS and determine
              the plotsize from the file content.
       --linewidth-size ... Account for linewidths in the plotsize
              calculation for -i (default behaviour).
       --no-linewidth-size ... Ignore linewidths in the plotsize
              calculation for -i.
       -v ... Increase verbosity.
       -q ... Decrease verbosity, be quiet.
       -o <out> ... specifiy the output filename. If not specified, write
                    to stdout.
       -m ... Switch to multipage mode, if a single file is given on the.
              command line. If not specified, only the first page of the input
              file is processed.
       -w ... Correct linewidth by given factor (default: 1).
       -d ... Specifiy the output device. The default is the
              native 'eps' device, which writes a simple eps file.
              See section `Supported devices' below.
       -a ... Use antialiasing when rendering to a png image.
       --thin-alpha=<a>
              Specifiy the minimal alpha value for thin lines.
              allowed values lie in the interval [0.001,1.0] (default: 0.25).
       -I ... Specifiy image interpolation.
       --rop3 ... Use ROP3 raster operations for rendering on devices
              with ROP3 capabilities (default).
       --no-rop3 ... Suppress usage of ROP3 raster operations.
       -c ... Specifiy the compression level for png writing.
       -r ... Specifiy the device resolution in dpi.
              If no y-resolution is given, the y-resolution
              is set to the same value as the x-resolution.
       -p ... Specifiy the maximum pixel size of the device.
              This is in fact an alternate method to specify the
              resolution of the device. If -p is given, the device
              resolution is caclulated in a way, that the plot fits
              into the given rectangle.
              If no y-size is given, the size y-size
              is set to the same value as the x-size.
       -s<papersize> ... Specifiy the plot size in pt (1/72 inch).
              If -s is not given, the size is calculated from
              the contents of the hpgl file.
              The <papersize> may be either one of the standard
              paper sizes A0,A1,A2,A3 or A4, their landscape versions
              A0l,A1l,A2l,A3l or A4l or a size in the format <width>x<height>
              where <width> and <height> specify a physical length in one of the
              formats <l>,<l>mm,<l>cm,<l>inch or <l>pt. <l> is a floating point
              number, the default unit is PostScript pt (1/72 inch).
       --origin=<origin> ... Specifiy the origin of the displayed content.
              If -s is not given, the origin is calculated from
              the contents of the hpgl file.
              The <origin> may be in the format <width>x<height>
              as described above for the option -s.
       --paper=<papersize>
              Specify a paper size of the output device. All plots
              are scaled to this paper size respecting the given border.
              If no fixed paper size is given, each page in the output
              file has an individual size adapted to the size of the HPGL
              content of the page.
              The format of <papersize> is decribed above for -s.
       --border=<border>
              Specify a border for placing plots on output pages.
       --rotation=<angle>
              Specify an angle for placing plots on output pages.
       --stamp=<stamp>
              Specify a string, which is printed in the background.
       --stamp-encoding=<enc>
              Specify an the name of the encoding of the string, which
              is given in --stamp. Default is iso-8859-1.
       --stamp-size=<pt>
              Specify the size of the stamp specified with --stamp
              in point. Default value: 500pt.
       --dump-png=<filename>
              Specify a filename for dumping inline PCL images in.
              PNG format. The actual filenames written are:
                 <filename>0001.png
                 <filename>0002.png
                  .....
              If <filename> contains an extension '.png' the counter
              is put between the basename and the '.png' extension.
       --help
              Displays this usage information.
       --version
              Displays the version information.

Supported devices (option -d):

       bbox    ... writes a PostScript BoundingBox to stdout.
       ps      ... writes a multipage PostScript file.
       eps     ... writes an eps files.
       png_256 ... writes an indexed 8bpp png image.
       png_gray... writes a grayscale 8bpp png image.
       png_rgb ... writes a rgb 24bpp png image.
       png_gray_alpha ... writes a grayscale 16bpp png image
                          with an alpha channel.
       png_rgb_alpha ... writes a rgb 32bpp png image
                         with an alpha channel.
       cairo_png ... writes a rgb 32bpp png image using
                     the cairo library (experimental).

The hpgs API.

HPGS is designed to be highly modular and may be used inside C or C++ programs for either displaying HPGL files or drawing a vector graphics sceneery to an image.

Refer to the Reader, Basic vector graphics devices., Paint device. and The public pixel image API. modules in order to get an impression what the hpgs API can do for you.

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