Next: PostScript Variables, Up: Printing [Contents][Index]
These commands convert buffer contents to PostScript, either printing it or leaving it in another Emacs buffer.
Print hardcopy of the current buffer in PostScript form.
Print hardcopy of the current region in PostScript form.
Print hardcopy of the current buffer in PostScript form, showing the faces used in the text by means of PostScript features.
Print hardcopy of the current region in PostScript form, showing the faces used in the text.
Generate and spool a PostScript image for the current buffer text.
Generate and spool a PostScript image for the current region.
Generate and spool a PostScript image for the current buffer, showing the faces used.
Generate and spool a PostScript image for the current region, showing the faces used.
Send the spooled PostScript to the printer.
Generate/print PostScript for the current buffer as if handwritten.
The ps-print-buffer and
ps-print-region commands print buffer contents in
PostScript form. One command prints the entire buffer; the other,
just the region. The commands
ps-print-buffer-with-faces and
ps-print-region-with-faces behave similarly, but use
PostScript features to show the faces (fonts and colors) of the
buffer text.
Interactively, when you use a prefix argument (C-u), the command prompts the user for a file name, and saves the PostScript image in that file instead of sending it to the printer.
The commands whose names have ‘spool’ instead of ‘print’, generate the PostScript output in an Emacs buffer instead of sending it to the printer.
Use the command ps-despool to send the spooled
images to the printer. This command sends the PostScript
generated by ‘-spool-’ commands (see
commands above) to the printer. With a prefix argument
(C-u), it prompts for a file name, and saves the
spooled PostScript image in that file instead of sending it to
the printer.
M-x handwrite is more frivolous. It generates a
PostScript rendition of the current buffer as a cursive
handwritten document. It can be customized in group
handwrite. This function only supports ISO 8859-1
characters.
Next: PostScript Variables, Up: Printing [Contents][Index]