On Thu, Aug 21, 2008 at 11:44 PM, Chris Vine <chris@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: No, you are not missing anything obvious. Doing it "in the ordinary way" means I think writing your own postscript interpreter for writing the pages to the cairo surface via pango. It will be hard work, but looking at the evince and poppler source may give you some ideas. Poppler would probably lighten the load if you were to convert the file to PDF format. You do not explain why you want to print a postscript file under windows in the first place, but unless you have a special need I strongly suspect this approach will not be worth the effort. I do not use windows, but I believe there are some command-line tools available for printing postscript (via ghostscript, which has been ported to windows, for non-postscript printers) which might be suitable for your purposes. Chris The reason I have a PS file in the first place is historical. Back when I originally wrote my plotting program, it was v2.4 of GTK+, thus, no Cairo, and no GtkPrint. To print, then, I plot my image internally, convert to a pixbuf, read the pixel data and output this to a postscript file, i.e., it's an image I'm plotting, with a little bit of text thrown in. I realize that with the advent of Cairo and GtkPrint, this solution is dated. However, in order to convert to the current standard, I would need to modify all of my gdk_* drawing calls to Cairo equivalents (and a little re-architecting), not something I currently have the luxury to do. What I was wanting to do, then, was to take advantage of the new GtkPrint dialog (specifically, that it knows about all printers, allowing the user to select one) and send this internally generated PS file directly to the selected printer. On a different note, a question: One trick I employ when creating the PS file is to plot my image in memory twice as large as the screen, save this to the PS file, and then let the printer re-scale to fit the page. Since printers (typically) have a better resolution than a screen, this results in a plot that is very sharp, (better than what the user sees on the screen even). When, one day, I do change all my gdk_* drawing calls to Cairo, will I be able to effectuate this extra sharpness as well? Or must the Cairo calls in my GtkPrint callback conform to the paper size? Or, is this not a concern, i.e., the resulting printed image using Cairo would be as sharp as possible given that Cairo takes into account the available dpi of the selected printer? Thanks for the feedback. At this point I will have to recommend to my users that a 3rd party program be used to send the PS file I create to a printer. (There is a nice free-ware version of this functionality available, btw.) Essentially making them have to engage in a 2-step process to get a print out of my program instead of through a single step. richard _______________________________________________ gtk-list mailing list gtk-list@xxxxxxxxx http://mail.gnome.org/mailman/listinfo/gtk-list