ftp.nice.ch/peanuts/GeneralData/Usenet/news/1989/CSN-89.tar.gz#/comp-sys-next/1989/Nov/dwrite-Mail-ps4014+lpr

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Date: Sun 24-Nov-1989 19:06:23 From: Unknown Subject: dwrite Mail / ps4014+lpr Has anybody succeeded in changed the font in the Mailer with dwrite? I.e. dwrite Mail Font Symbol does nothing for me. I also get occasional problems when trying to print PS files generated by ps4014. The printer just seems to die completely. (The file given to ps4014 was created by SAS on another computer; ps4014 is quite happy to convert it.) Responses are appreciated. /ivo ivo@next.agsm.ucla.edu = [128.97.74.50] iwelch@agsm.ucla.edu phd_ivo@gsbacd.uchicago.edu >From: tsui@silver.ucs.indiana.edu (Yufeng Tsui)
Date: Sun 27-Nov-1989 15:45:42 From: Unknown Subject: Re: dwrite Mail / ps4014+lpr In article <6403@tank.uchicago.edu> phd_ivo@gsbacd.uchicago.edu writes: >Has anybody succeeded in changed the font in the Mailer >with dwrite? I.e. > dwrite Mail Font Symbol >does nothing for me. The Font default was renamed NXFont in 1.0. Thus dwrite Mail NXFont Symbol should work. This sort of name change occured to many other Application defaults (FontSize -> NXFontSize, etc). Ali >From: phd_ivo@gsbacd.uchicago.edu
Date: Sun 27-Nov-1989 18:32:44 From: Unknown Subject: Re: dwrite Mail / ps4014+lpr ******************************************** In article <12887@polya.Stanford.EDU>, ali@polya.Stanford.EDU (Ali T. Ozer) writes... +In article <6403@tank.uchicago.edu> phd_ivo@gsbacd.uchicago.edu writes: + dwrite Mail NXFont Symbol + +should work. This sort of name change occured to many other Application +defaults (FontSize -> NXFontSize, etc). + + Ali Thanks for your and other people's notes. I mistakenly looked at 0.9 documentation. I also wonder what NX stands for, and why some variables prefix by it, whereas others do not. The problem with ps4014 displays 2 bugs. (1) It outputs (reproducibly) incorrect postscript code. (2) This incorrect code stops the printer queue. Users should not be able to kill the printer queue by sending garbage to it. /ivo ivo@[128.97.74.50] = next.agsm.ucla.edu >From: rca@brunix (Ronald C.F. Antony)
Date: Sun 27-Nov-1989 20:51:26 From: Unknown Subject: Re: dwrite Mail / ps4014+lpr I guess that NX stands short for NeXT. The reason is probably to distinguish NeXT-specific and/or standard variables from application specific stuff. Ronald ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ "The reasonable man adapts himself to the world; the unreasonable one persists in trying to adapt the world to himself. Therefore all progress depends on the unreasonable man." - Bernhard Shaw >From: pmy@jeeves.acc.Virginia.EDU (Pete Yadlowsky)
Date: Sun 28-Nov-1989 02:01:02 From: Unknown Subject: Re: dwrite Mail / ps4014+lpr In article <6403@tank.uchicago.edu> phd_ivo@gsbacd.uchicago.edu writes: Has anybody succeeded in changed the font in the Mailer with dwrite? I.e. dwrite Mail Font Symbol does nothing for me. The correct defaults are NXFont NXFontSize TocFont TocFontSize The defaults for each are Helvetica 12. I have my Toc left at Helvetica 12, and NXFont at Courier 12. This makes it easier to read the mail that comes from non-NeXT places. (As I'm sure you've noted, Helvetica looks pretty terrible if the text is already wrapped!). The names changed in 1.0, apparently to let everybody use a global NXFont and Size default. BTW, the easiest way to do this is to use Mail's Font menu. If you are positioned in the TOC, it changes the TOC defaults, and if you're reading a message it changes the NXFont default. Denis Lynch ESL, Inc. >From: rbeach@csm9a.UUCP (Captain Entropy)
Date: Sun 28-Nov-1989 05:02:29 From: Unknown Subject: Re: dwrite Mail / ps4014+lpr Is there any sort of list of all, or most, of the default names that you can set (fonts, fontsizes, window positions, ect)? I too noticed that a number of the names had been changed, and found some of them (like the terminal font and font size), but even under 0.8 and 0.9 I never was able to find a list of these beasts. Is going through the manuals for the aplication we are interested in the only way to find these, or is there a list that is easily overlooked? Richard Beach. (a man without a .sig file) >From: rlp@beach.cis.ufl.edu (Bob Powell)

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