On Sunday 22 May 2005 17:05, G. Roderick Singleton wrote:
> On Sun, 2005-05-22 at 16:00 +0100, Jim Higson wrote:
> > On Sunday 22 May 2005 00:24, Chris Aitken wrote:
> > > Doug Thompson wrote:
> > >
> > > <snip>
> > >
> > > > I haven't tried the following, but if I understand the question, it
> > > > might be possible to achieve the desired result using a page style
> > > > with two columns in landscape mode.  The shortcoming of this approach
> > > > is that you will have to manually control the content of the first
> > > > and last book pages because of the order in which they will appear,
> > > > i.e.:
> > > >
> > > >  +----------+----------+    +----------+----------+
> > > >
> > > >  |          !          |    |          !          |
> > > >  |          !          |    |          !          |
> > > >  |          !          |    |          !          |
> > > >  | Page 4   ! Page 1   |    | Page 2   ! Page 3   |
> > > >  |          !          |    |          !          |
> > > >  |          !          |    |          !          |
> > > >
> > > >  +----------+----------+    +----------+----------+
> > > >        Side 1 of paper          Side 2
> > > >
> > > > This is a "Beat to fit, paint to match" solution, but it should allow
> > > > you to use OOo successfully.  Of course, once you exceed a page count
> > > > of 4 book pages, you're on your own.
> > >
> > > I do this all the time ( I call it a pamphlet, the W98 driver for epson
> > > c86 calls it "Multi-page (2 per page)". However, I can't do it in linux
> > > -- I have to choose Windows 98 instead of linux) at the grub selector.
> >
> > The KDE print system has had this feature for a while.
> > Granted, you can't use it from OOo directly, but exporting to PDF and
> > then loading in KPDF (which is a really nice app since 3.4) makes this
> > pretty easy.
>
> I am aware of the limitation he placed. Still how do you print two
> USletter pages to a letter page without reduction?  Remember I asked for
> a better explanation so we could help. Otherwise he will have to use
> brochure or printing from print preview both of which reduce the output
> to fit the paper.

I was writing in response to Chris's post:

"you can't do this [Multi-page (2 per page)] in linux"

To let Chris know he can get the same result in Linux. This isn't relavent to 
the OP, who uses Windows anyway.

-- 
Jim

---------------------------------------------------------------------
To unsubscribe, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
For additional commands, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Reply via email to