Utility that calculates the optimal placement of the pages for n-up printing
PyQt5 is a set of Python bindings for Digia's Qt5 application framework.
This package provides the QtPrintSupport module.
ReportLab is a software library that lets you directly create
documents in Adobe's Portabe Document Format (PDF) using the Python
programming language.
The ReportLab library directly creates PDF based on your graphics
commands. There are no intervening steps. Your applications can
generate reports extremely fast - sometimes orders of magnitude
faster than traditional report-writing tools.
The ReportLab library is expected to be useful in at least the
following contexts:
- Dynamic PDF generation on the web
- High-volume corporate reporting and database publishing
- An embeddable print engine for other applications, including
a 'report language' so that users can customize their own reports.
- A 'build system' for complex documents with charts, tables
and text such as management accounts, statistical reports and
scientific papers
- Going from XML to PDF in one step!
ReportLab is a software library that lets you directly create
documents in Adobe's Portabe Document Format (PDF) using the Python
programming language.
The ReportLab library directly creates PDF based on your graphics
commands. There are no intervening steps. Your applications can
generate reports extremely fast - sometimes orders of magnitude
faster than traditional report-writing tools.
The ReportLab library is expected to be useful in at least the
following contexts:
- Dynamic PDF generation on the web
- High-volume corporate reporting and database publishing
- An embeddable print engine for other applications, including
a 'report language' so that users can customize their own reports.
- A 'build system' for complex documents with charts, tables
and text such as management accounts, statistical reports and
scientific papers
- Going from XML to PDF in one step!
Libmspub is library providing ability to interpret and import Microsoft
Publisher content into various applications.
Six free UNIX/Windows command-line tools for dealing with Type 1 fonts. This is
a revision of I. Lee Hetherington's beloved t1utils package.
o t1ascii changes PFB (binary) fonts into PFA (ASCII) format.
o t1binary changes PFA fonts into PFB format.
o t1disasm translates PFBs or PFAs into a human-readable and -editable format.
o t1asm changes the (potentially edited) output of t1diasm back to either PFAF
or PFB.
o t1unmac (formerly unpost) translates a Type 1 font in Mac format (either
MacBinary or a raw resource fork) into either PFB or PFA format.
o t1mac translates PFA or PFB format font files into Mac format.
texvc takes LaTeX-compatible equations and produces formatted output in
HTML, MathML, and (via LaTeX/dvips/ImageMagick) rasterized PNG images.
Input data is parsed and scrutinized for safety, and the output includes
an estimate of whether the code is simple enough that HTML rendering will
look acceptable.
This port provides the PostScript Type 1 version of Adobe Utopia for use
with GNU Troff, as it is configured in a FreeBSD basic install.
For details on usage, invoke: man utopia_font.
The LCDF Typetools package contains several programs for manipulating
PostScript Type 1, Type 1 multiple master, and PostScript-flavored OpenType
fonts.
cache-init, cache-update, find-updated and portindex are a set of perl
scripts built around the common core of the FreeBSD::Portindex
modules. Their use is to generate and maintain the ports INDEX or
INDEX-5 files speedily and efficiently. Ultimately they work in a very
similar way to the standard make index command, except that the
FreeBSD::Portindex tools keep a cache of the make describe output from
each port, and can update that cached data incrementally as the ports
tree itself is updated.