On Mon, Jun 30, 2003 at 11:42:15PM +0100, Mark C wrote:
Have you tried gpdf?
Are Gnome applications still supposed to do stuff like this?
rei $ gpdf LJ1300.pdf
(gpdf:20471): GdkPixbuf-CRITICAL **: file gdk-pixbuf-io.c: line 729
(gdk_pixbuf_new_from_file): assertion `filename != NULL' failed
On Mon, Jun 30, 2003 at 09:04:59PM -0700, Marc Wilson wrote:
Are Gnome applications still supposed to do stuff like this?
rei $ gpdf LJ1300.pdf
(gpdf:20471): GdkPixbuf-CRITICAL **: file gdk-pixbuf-io.c: line 729
(gdk_pixbuf_new_from_file): assertion `filename != NULL' failed
Hi,
Am Mon, 2003-06-30 um 15.23 schrieb Pigeon:
I have a map of the British mainland as a .pdf file. In order to see
useful local details on it, I want to be able to zoom in by about 50x.
I have tried xpdf, gv, ghostview and kghostview, but nothing appears
to be able to zoom in more than 10x.
On Mon, Jun 30, 2003 at 11:42:15PM +0100, Mark C wrote:
On Mon, 2003-06-30 at 14:23, Pigeon wrote:
I have a map of the British mainland as a .pdf file. In order to see
useful local details on it, I want to be able to zoom in by about 50x.
I have tried xpdf, gv, ghostview and kghostview, but
I have a map of the British mainland as a .pdf file. In order to see
useful local details on it, I want to be able to zoom in by about 50x.
I have tried xpdf, gv, ghostview and kghostview, but nothing appears
to be able to zoom in more than 10x.
The solution that occurs to me is to hack the
On Mon, 2003-06-30 at 14:23, Pigeon wrote:
I have a map of the British mainland as a .pdf file. In order to see
useful local details on it, I want to be able to zoom in by about 50x.
I have tried xpdf, gv, ghostview and kghostview, but nothing appears
to be able to zoom in more than 10x.
Have
6 matches
Mail list logo