| 1 | .TH mupdisp 1 "November 4, 2006" "Arkkra Enterprises" |
| 2 | .SH NAME |
| 3 | .PP |
| 4 | mupdisp - display output from Mup music publisher program |
| 5 | .SH SYNOPSIS |
| 6 | .PP |
| 7 | mupdisp \fI[mup_options] file\fP |
| 8 | .SH DESCRIPTION |
| 9 | .PP |
| 10 | Mupdisp provides a way to view Mup output on your screen. |
| 11 | The \fIfile\fP is Mup input. Any other Mup options can be given, |
| 12 | except -f, -m, -M, -r, or -v, which don't produce print output. |
| 13 | .PP |
| 14 | Mupdisp will run under MS-DOS or will run under |
| 15 | UNIX with a TERM of AT386, linux, or xterm (under X windows). |
| 16 | .PP |
| 17 | When running under X windows, several standard X options are |
| 18 | available: |
| 19 | .TP |
| 20 | \fB-geometry\fP \fIXxY+M+N\fP |
| 21 | Sets the window size and/or location on the screen. The actual window |
| 22 | width will be determined by the width of the Mup output. The height |
| 23 | will be adjusted if necessary to be between 400 and the actual height |
| 24 | of the Mup output. The window placment specifications can be positive |
| 25 | or negative. The actual placement may be adjusted by your window manager. |
| 26 | .TP |
| 27 | \fB-fg\fP \fIcolor\fP or \fB-foreground\fP \fIcolor\fP |
| 28 | Specifies the foreground color to use. |
| 29 | .TP |
| 30 | \fB-bg\fP \fIcolor\fP or \fB-background\fP \fIcolor\fP |
| 31 | Specifies the background color to use. |
| 32 | .PP |
| 33 | These X options can also be set in your .Xdefaults file using resource names of |
| 34 | mupdisp.geometry, mupdisp.foreground, and mupdisp.background. Command |
| 35 | line arguments will override values in the .Xdefaults file. |
| 36 | As an example, you could add these lines to your .Xdefaults file: |
| 37 | .nf |
| 38 | .na |
| 39 | .ft CW |
| 40 | .in +1i |
| 41 | |
| 42 | mupdisp.foreground: navy |
| 43 | mupdisp.background: gray |
| 44 | mupdisp.geometry: 400x760+100-34 |
| 45 | |
| 46 | .in -1i |
| 47 | .ft P |
| 48 | .fi |
| 49 | .ad |
| 50 | .PP |
| 51 | The Mupdisp program begins in partial page mode, |
| 52 | which displays output at approximately actual size (depending |
| 53 | on the size of your monitor). In this mode, most likely |
| 54 | not all of the page fits on the |
| 55 | screen, so the scrolling commands can be used to move up and down to view |
| 56 | different parts of the page. In full page mode, a small version of the |
| 57 | entire page is displayed. This is useful |
| 58 | for seeing overall page layout, but is generally too small to see much detail. |
| 59 | This mode is now somewhat of a relic of the days when screens were typically |
| 60 | much smaller than they are today, and is thus becoming less useful. |
| 61 | .PP |
| 62 | If the environment variable MUPDISPMODE is set to some value, |
| 63 | Mupdisp will start in full page rather than partial page mode. |
| 64 | .PP |
| 65 | The commands are: |
| 66 | .TP |
| 67 | \fInum\fP<Enter> |
| 68 | Go to page number \fInum\fP. |
| 69 | .TP |
| 70 | + or <space> or <control-E> or <control-F> |
| 71 | move forward on the page by about 1/8 of an inch |
| 72 | (partial page mode only) |
| 73 | .TP |
| 74 | - or <backspace> or <control-Y> or <control-B> |
| 75 | move backward on the page by about 1/8 of an inch |
| 76 | (partial page mode only) |
| 77 | .TP |
| 78 | b or <control-U> or <control-P> or <up-arrow-key> |
| 79 | move backward on the page by about an inch |
| 80 | (partial page mode only) |
| 81 | .TP |
| 82 | f or <Enter> or <control-D> or <control-N> or <down-arrow-key> |
| 83 | move forward on the page by about an inch |
| 84 | (partial page mode only) |
| 85 | .TP |
| 86 | h or ? |
| 87 | display help screen |
| 88 | .TP |
| 89 | m |
| 90 | toggle between partial page and full page modes. |
| 91 | .TP |
| 92 | n or <PageDown> |
| 93 | go to next page |
| 94 | .TP |
| 95 | p or <PageUp> |
| 96 | go to previous page |
| 97 | .TP |
| 98 | q or ZZ |
| 99 | quit |
| 100 | .TP |
| 101 | r |
| 102 | Repaint the page (useful for exiting help page) |
| 103 | .PP |
| 104 | When in X windows, the mouse can be used for scrolling. The left button scrolls |
| 105 | downward like the f command, while the right button scrolls backwards like |
| 106 | the b command. |
| 107 | .PP |
| 108 | Mupdisp supports page sizes of letter (8.5 x 11.0 inches), |
| 109 | note (7.5 x 10.0 inches), legal (8.5 x 14.0 inches), |
| 110 | A4 (8.26 x 11.69 inches), A5 (5.85 x 8.26 inches), |
| 111 | A6 (4.125 x 5.85 inches), flsa (8.5 x 13.0 inches), and |
| 112 | halfletter (5.5 x 8.5 inches). |
| 113 | .SH FILES |
| 114 | .P |
| 115 | $HOME/.Xdefaults default X window resource definitions |
| 116 | .SH "SEE ALSO" |
| 117 | .PP |
| 118 | gs(1), mup(1), mupmate(1), mupprnt(1). |
| 119 | .br |
| 120 | Mup \(em Music Publisher User's Guide |
| 121 | .SH "CAVEATS AND BUGS" |
| 122 | .PP |
| 123 | You must have mup in your PATH. |
| 124 | You must have ghostscript (gs or gs386.exe) in your PATH |
| 125 | and it must be built to include the "bit" device. |
| 126 | .PP |
| 127 | Resizing the window does not resize the full page view. |