Sponsored Content
Full Discussion: Copy a file from Linux
Homework and Emergencies Emergency UNIX and Linux Support Copy a file from Linux Post 302473784 by vbe on Monday 22nd of November 2010 11:15:50 AM
Old 11-22-2010
Thread closed before more Hijacking occurs...Anyway nothing new since page 2...And original poster lost has not replied since 07-22-10
These 2 Users Gave Thanks to vbe For This Post:
 

8 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. Where do I download LINUX & UNIX?

Where can i get a copy of Unix or Linux?

where can i get a free copy of unix? any kind... (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: gregtampa
5 Replies

2. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

linux, copy a:\file to /tmp in linux?

hi, i am on linux 8. i wanted to copy a file from my a:\filename to my linux 8 /tmp directroy. how do i do this or any directions as in how to accompilsh. thanks (6 Replies)
Discussion started by: yls177
6 Replies

3. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

command for copy file from CD to Linux box

Hi , I have simple question as i am beginner , I have to copy one file from cd(compact disc) to my linux box on some directory. With which command and how can i do that? Thanks sam71 (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: sam70
2 Replies

4. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

copy and paste certain many lines of huge file in linux

Dear All, I am working with windoes OS but remote a linux machine. I wonder the way to copy an paste some part of a huge file in linux machine. the contain of file like as follow: ... dump annealling all custom 10 anneal_*.dat id type x y z q timestep 0.02 run 200000 Memory... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: ariesto
2 Replies

5. Shell Programming and Scripting

I want to copy a file from Linux

Hi Experts, I want to copy a file from a Linux machine to another Linux machine or a windows machine shared drive. I mean to say.. cp filename //hostname/shareddrive. I don't want to mount. Is there any way we can do it. Regards Naree Double post. Replies here moved to... (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: naree
0 Replies

6. SuSE

I want to copy a file from Linux

Hi Experts, I want to copy a file from a Linux machine to another Linux machine or a windows machine shared drive. I mean to say.. cp filename //hostname/shareddrive. I don't want to mount. Is there any way we can do it. Regards Naree (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: naree
1 Replies

7. IP Networking

Need to copy file from Linux to DOS.

I have two PCs with Ubuntu 10.4 and DOS 5.0, which are connected with a 9 pins serial cable. I need to copy some files from the Linux box to the DOS box. I tried UUCP but it's too difficult and i didn't found a working client for DOS. Can you help me? Thanks for any reply! (10 Replies)
Discussion started by: mghis
10 Replies

8. Shell Programming and Scripting

how to copy the directory but not copy certain file

Hi experts cp bin root src /mnt but not copy bin/bigfile any help? ( I post this thread in the "redhat" forum wrongly, I don't know how to withdraw that question in that wrong forum) Thanks (6 Replies)
Discussion started by: yanglei_fage
6 Replies
pdfposter(1)															      pdfposter(1)

NAME
pdfposter - Scale and tile PDF images/pages to print on multiple pages. SYNOPSIS
pdfposter <options> infile outfile DESCRIPTION
Pdfposter can be used to create a large poster by building it from multple pages and/or printing it on large media. It expects as input a PDF file, normally printing on a single page. The output is again a PDF file, maybe containing multiple pages together building the poster. The input page will be scaled to obtain the desired size. The program uses a simple but efficient method which is possible with PDF: All new pages share the same data stream of the scaled page. Thus resulting file grows moderatly. To control its operation, you need to specify either the size of the desired poster or a scale factor for the image: o Given the poster size, it calculates the required number of sheets to print on, and from that a scale factor to fill these sheets opti- mally with the input image. o Given a scale factor, it derives the required number of pages from the input image size, and positions the scaled image centered on this area. OPTIONS
General Options --version Show program's version number and exit -h , --help Show help message and exit --help-media-names List available media and disctance names and exit -v , --verbose Be verbose. Tell about scaling, rotation and number of pages. Can be used more than once to increase the verbosity. -n , --dry-run Show what would have been done, but do not generate files. Defining Output -m BOX, --media-size=BOX Specify the desired media size to print on. See below for BOX. The default is A4 in the standard package. -p BOX, --poster-size=BOX Specify the poster size. See below for BOX. pdfposter will autonomously choose scaling and rotation to best fit the input onto the poster (see EXAMPLES below). If you give neither the -s nor the -p option, the default poster size is identical to the media size. -s NUMBER Specify a linear scaling factor to produce the poster. Together with the input image size and optional margins, this induces an output poster size. So don't specify both -s and -p. Default is deriving the scale factor to fit a given poster size. Box Definition The BOX mentioned above is a specification of horizontal and vertical size. The syntax is as follows (with multipier being specified optionally): box = [ multiplier ] unit multiplier = number "x" number unit = medianame or distancename Many international media names are recognised by the program, in upper and lower case, and can be shortened to their first few characters, as long as unique. For instance 'A0', 'Let'. Distance names are like 'cm', 'inch', 'ft'. Medias are typically not quadratic but rectangular, which means width and hight differ. Thus using medianames is a bit tricky: 10x20cm obviuos: 10 cm x 20 cm (portrait) 20x10cm same as 10x20cm, since all boxes are rotated to portrait format Now when using medianames it gets tricky: 1x1a4 same as approx. 21x29cm (21 cm x 29 cm, portrait) 1x2a4 same as approx. 21x58cm (21 cm x 58 cm, portrait) This are two a4 pages put together at the small side: One portrait page wide and two portrait pages high. 2x1a4 same as approx. 42x29cm, which is rotated to portrait and is the same a 29x42cm (29 cm x 42 cm) This are two a4 pages put together at the long side: Two portrait pages wide and one portrait page high. EXAMPLES
pdfposter -mA3 -pA0 a4.pdf out.pdf Prints an A4 input file on 8 A3 pages, forming an A0 poster. pdfposter -p3x3Let a4.pdf out.pdf Prints an inputfile on a poster of 3x3 Letter pages. pdfposter -mA0 input.pdf out.pdf Enlarges an inputfile to print on a large-media A0 capable device. pdfposter -s4 input.pdf out.pdf Enlarge an inputfile exactly 4 times, print on the default A4 media, and let pdfposter determine the number of pages required. pdfposter -m10x10cm -pa0 a4.pdf out.pdf Just to show how efficient pdfposter is: This will create a file containing 192 pages, but only 15 times as big as the single page. With a4.pdf being a quite empty page, this ratio should be even better for filled pages. More examples including sample pictures can be found at http://pdfposter.origo.ethz.ch/wiki/examples Examples for automatic scaling o For printing 2 portrait A4 pages high (approx. 58cm) and let pdfposter determine how many portrait pages wide, specify a lage number of vertical pages. eg: pdfposter -p999x2a4 testpage-wide.pdf out.pdf o For printing 2 landscape A4 pages high (approx. 20cm) and let pdfposter determine how many landscape pages wide, specify a lage number of horizontal pages. eg: pdfposter -p2x999a4 testpage-wide.pdf out.pdf SEE ALSO
poster(1) Project Homepage http://pdfposter.origo.ethz.ch/ AUTHOR
Hartmut Goebel <h.goebel@goebel-consult.de> COPYRIGHT
GNU Public Licence v3 (GPLv3) Version 0.4.4 pdfposter(1)
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 09:05 AM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy