--- On Mon, 9/8/08, Pierre Marchand <capparis at free.fr> wrote:
From: Pierre Marchand <[email protected]>
Subject: Re: [scribus] Booklets
To: "Scribus User Mailing List" <scribus at lists.scribus.info>
Date: Monday, September 8, 2008, 3:59 PM

Vous (Mike Morris) avez ?crit?:
> If I correctly understand the Scribus documentation, in order to do this
> with Scribus, one needs an additional utility, either "psutils"
or
> Multivalent.
>
> Is that correct?

Yes. The idea here is that while it would be nice to have such printing 
feature into Scribus, it?s well handled by dedicated softwares and thus we 
can spend more time coding critical features - and some imposition tool :)

>
> I found a mailing list response from March of 2006 that provides sources
to
> download either in Windows versions.  I connected to the two websites, but
> I am still unclear which to use (if, in fact I am correct in concluding
> that one or the other must be used).  In order to use Multivalent, is it
> necessary to convert the Scribus file to PDF first?  From the description
> on the website, that appears to be the case.

I don?t know any tool that can impose a native Scribus file. So yes, you need

to first export the document in a suitable format. Although it can be an 
hidden operation if your printer driver offers such a feature.

> Apparently, with psutils, the booklet can be created directly from the
> Scribus file.  Is that correct?

No.


> What are the advantages/disadvantages of each approach?

It depends. If you want to print it on an office printing device attached to 
our box, I would vote for the smart driver option. If you want to store the 
resulting file, for getting it to a print shop or having it ready for 
re-prints etc., the external tool which would produce an imposed PDF seems 
fine.

my 2 ?

-- 
Pierre Marchand

-----
I just came across this VERY useful tool (for LINUX). I don't know if something 
equivalent is available for Windows or Mac.? I had been very confused about? 
something:

All the Scribus advice I have seen suggests that you should limit .sla files to 
documents of about 20 pages.

I had seen nothing that clearly told me how to combine all these files (or the 
exported PDF documents that could be created from them) and was about to ask 
how to do this (again!) as I had not really understood all the previous 
discussions on the topic. I then came across this website:
http://www.pdfhacks.com/pdftk/
VOILA!!!? -- this stuff is really GREAT! I have also used it with PDF files 
created with OpenOffice, and other applications printing to PDF (all on 
LINUX).? I do have Adobe Acrobat on a Windows computer, but find that I almost 
never have to use it. Besides, I rarely do any work on the WIndows machine 
except for Video editing with Pinnacle Studio. I would drop that and stick 
STRICTLY with LINUX if Cinelerra ever became stable enough.

For making booklets (which was my original interest in DTP in the first place, 
and what led me to the discovery of Scribus), I have found the directions given 
here to be most helpful, and have now made several booklets using them:
http://twopoint718.blogspot.com/2008/05/make-book.html

Printing from the resulting .ps file works great for me (both on LINUX and 
Windows). However, if I were taking the results to a Copy Centre or Print Shop, 
I would add a final step:

ps2pdf {file name}.ps > {filename}.pdf

I hope this is helpful.

Murray





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