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.TH XDVIK 1 "11 December 1994" "X Version 11"
.SH NAME
xdvi \- DVI Previewer for the X Window System
.SH SYNOPSIS
.B xdvi
.nh
[\fB+\fP[\fIpage\fP]]
[\fB\-d\fP \fIdebugnum\fP]
[\fB\-s\fP \fIshrink\fP] [\fB\-S\fP \fIdensity\fP]
#ifgrey
[\fB\-nogrey\fP] [\fB\-gamma\fP \fIg\fP]
#endif
[\fB\-p\fP \fIpixels\fP]
[\fB\-margins\fP \fIdimen\fP]
[\fB\-sidemargin\fP \fIdimen\fP] [\fB\-topmargin\fP \fIdimen\fP]
[\fB\-offsets\fP \fIdimen\fP]
[\fB\-xoffset\fP \fIdimen\fP] [\fB\-yoffset\fP \fIdimen\fP]
[\fB\-paper\fP \fIpapertype\fP] [\fB\-altfont\fP \fIfont\fP] [\fB\-l\fP]
[\fB\-rv\fP]
#ifbuttons
[\fB\-expert\fP] [\fB\-fn\fP \fIfont\fP]
#endif
[\fB\-mgs\fP[\fIn\fP] \fIsize\fP]
[\fB\-hush\fP]
[\fB\-hushspecials\fP] [\fB\-hushchars\fP] [\fB\-hushchecksums\fP]
[\fB\-fg\fP \fIcolor\fP] [\fB\-bg\fP \fIcolor\fP] [\fB\-hl\fP \fIcolor\fP]
[\fB\-bd\fP \fIcolor\fP] [\fB\-cr\fP \fIcolor\fP]
[\fB\-bw\fP \fIwidth\fP] [\-maketexpk] [\-mfmode \fImode\fP]
[\fB\-display\fP \fIhost:display\fP] [\fB\-geometry\fP \fIgeometry\fP]
[\fB\-icongeometry\fP \fIgeometry\fP] [\fB\-iconic\fP]
[\fB\-keep\fP] [\fB\-copy\fP] [\fB\-thorough\fP]
#ifps
[\fB\-nopostscript\fP]
#endif
#ifdps
[\fB\-nodps\fP]
#endif
#ifnews
[\fB\-nonews\fP]
#endif
#ifghost
[\fB-noghostscript\fP]
#endif
[\fB\-version\fP]
[
.I dvi_file
]
.hy
.SH DESCRIPTION
.B xdvi
is a program which runs under the X window system. It is used to preview
.I dvi
files, such as are produced by
.BR tex (1).
.PP
This program has the capability of showing the file shrunken by various
(integer) factors, and also has a ``magnifying glass'' which allows one
to see a small part of the unshrunk image momentarily.
.PP
Before displaying any page or part thereof, it checks to see if the
.I dvi
file has changed since the last time it was displayed.  If this is the case,
then
.B xdvi
will reinitialize itself for the new
.I dvi
file.  For this reason, exposing parts of the
.B xdvi
window while TeX is running should be avoided.  This feature allows you
to preview many versions of the same file while running
.B xdvi
only once.
#ifbuttons
.PP
In addition to using keystrokes to move within the file,
.B xdvi
provides buttons on the right side of the window, which are synonymous
with various sequences of keystrokes.
#endif
#ifps
.PP
.B xdvi
can show PostScript<tm> specials by any of three methods.
It will try first to use Display PostScript<tm>, then NeWS, then it
will try to use Ghostscript to render the images.  All of these options
depend on additional software to work properly; moreover, some of them
may not be compiled into this copy of
.BR xdvi .
.PP
For performance reasons,
.B xdvi
does not render PostScript specials in the magnifying glass.  Furthermore,
it does not yet support
.RB ` ! '
or
.RB ` header= '
specials.
#endif
If
.I dvi_file
is not specified, a file-selection widget is popped up for you to choose
the dvi file from.
.SH OPTIONS
In addition to specifying the
.I dvi
file (with or without the
.B .dvi
extension),
.B xdvi
supports the following command line options.  If the option begins with a
.RB ` + '
instead of a
.RB ` \- ',
the option is restored to its default value.  By default, these options can
be set via the resource names given in parentheses in the description of
each option.
.TP
.BI + page
Specifies the first page to show.  If
.B +
is given without a number, the last page is assumed; the first page is
the default.
.TP
.BI \-altfont " font"
.RB ( .altFont )
Declares a default font to use when the font in the
.I dvi
file cannot be found.  This is useful, for example, with PostScript <tm> fonts.
.TP
.BI \-background " color"
.RB ( .background )
Determines the color of the background.  Same as
.BR -bg .
.TP
.BI \-bd " color"
.RB ( .borderColor )
Determines the color of the window border.
.TP
.BI \-bg " color"
.RB ( .background )
Determines the color of the background.
.TP
.BI \-bordercolor " color"
Same as
.BR -bd .
.TP
.BI \-borderwidth " width"
.RB ( .borderWidth )
Specifies the width of the border of the window.  Same as
.BR -bw .
.TP
.BI \-bw " width"
.RB ( .borderWidth )
Specifies the width of the border of the window.
.TP
.B \-copy
.RB ( .copy )
Always use the
.I copy
operation when writing characters to the display.
This option may be necessary for correct operation on a color display, but
overstrike characters will be incorrect.
#ifgrey
If greyscale anti-aliasing is in use, the
.B \-copy
operation will disable the use of colorplanes and make overstrikes come
out incorrectly.
#endif
See also
.BR \-thorough .
.TP
.BI \-cr " color"
.RB ( .cursorColor )
Determines the color of the cursor.  The default is the color of the page
border.
.TP
.B \+maketexpk
(.maketexpk)
Invoke MakeTeXPK to create missing fonts, regardless of the
compile-time default.
-maketexpk says not to invoke MakeTeXPK.
.TP
.BI \-mfmode string
(%%dot%%mfmode)
Use
.I string
for the Metafont mode passed to MakeTeXPK. If this is not set, the
`mfmode' resource is used. if that is not set, the mode is left
unspecified, which causes MakeTeXPK to guess from the resolution.
.TP
.BI \-d " debugnum"
.RB ( .debugLevel )
If nonzero, prints additional information on standard output.  The
number is taken as a set of independent bits.  The meaning of each bit
follows. 1=bitmaps; 2=dvi translation; 4=pk reading; 8=batch
operation; 16=events; 32=file opening; 64=PostScript communication;
128=Kpathsea stat(2) calls; 256=Kpathsea hash table lookups; 512=Kpathsea
path definitions; 1024=Kpathsea path expansion; 2048=Kpathsea searches.
To trace everything having to do with file searching and opening, use 4000.
.TP
.BI \-density " density"
.RB ( .densityPercent )
Determines the density used when shrinking bitmaps for fonts.
A higher value produces a lighter font.  The default value is 40.  Same as
.BR \-S .
.TP
.BI \-display " host" : display
Specifies the host and screen to be used for displaying the
.I dvi
file.  By default this is obtained from the environment variable
DISPLAY.
#ifbuttons
.TP
.B \-expert
.RB ( .expert )
Prevent the buttons from appearing.  See also the
.RB ` x '
keystroke.
#endif
.TP
.BI \-fg " color"
.RB ( .foreground )
Determines the color of the text (foreground).
.TP
.BI \-foreground " color"
Same as
.BR -fg .
#ifgrey
.TP
.BI \-gamma " gamma"
.RB ( .gamma )
Controls the interpolation of colors in the greyscale anti-aliasing color
palette.  Default value is 1.0.  For 0 < 
.I gamma
< 1, the fonts will be lighter (more like the background), and for
.I gamma
> 1, the fonts will be darker (more like the foreground).  Negative
values behave the same way, but use a slightly different algorithm.
#endif
.TP
.BI \-geometry " geometry"
.RB ( *geometry )
Specifies the initial geometry of the window.
.TP
.BI \-hl " color"
.RB ( .highlight )
Determines the color of the page border.  The default is the foreground color.
.TP
.B \-hush
.RB ( .Hush )
Causes
.B xdvi
to suppress all suppressable warnings.
.TP
.B \-hushchars
.RB ( .hushLostChars )
Causes
.B xdvi
to suppress warnings about references to characters which are not defined
in the font.
.TP
.B \-hushchecksums
.RB ( .hushChecksums )
Causes
.B xdvi
to suppress warnings about checksum mismatches between the
.I dvi
file and the font file.
.TP
.B \-hushspecials
.RB ( .hushSpecials )
Causes
.B xdvi
to suppress warnings about
.B \especial
strings that it cannot process.
.TP
.BI \-icongeometry " geometry
.RB ( .iconGeometry )
Specifies the initial position for the icon.
.TP
.B \-iconic
.RB ( .iconic )
Causes the
.B xdvi
window to start in the iconic state.  The default is to start with the
window open.
.TP
.B \-keep
.RB ( .keepPosition )
Sets a flag to indicate that
.B xdvi
should not move to the home position when moving to a new page.  See also the
.RB ` k '
keystroke.
.TP
.B \-l
.RB ( .listFonts )
Causes the names of the fonts used to be listed.
.TP
.BI \-margins " dimen"
.RB ( .Margin )
Specifies the size of both the top margin and side margin.
This should be a decimal number optionally followed by
.RB `` cm '',
.IR e.g. ,
.B 1.5
or
.BR 3cm ,
giving a measurement in inches or centimeters.
It determines the ``home'' position of the page within the window as
follows.  If the entire
page fits in the window, then the margin settings are ignored.  If, even
after removing the margins from the left, right, top, and bottom, the page
still cannot fit in the window, then the page is put in the window such that
the top and left margins are hidden, and presumably the upper left-hand corner
of the text on the page will be in the upper left-hand corner of the window.
Otherwise, the text is centered in the window.  See also
.BR \-sidemargin ", " \-topmargin ,
and the keystroke
.RB ` M .'
.TP
.BI \-mgs " size"
Same as
.BR \-mgs1 .
.TP
.BI "\-mgs\fR[\fIn\fR]" " size"
.RB ( .magnifierSize\fR[\fIn\fR] )
Specifies the size of the window to be used for the ``magnifying glass''
for Button
.IR n .
The size may be given as an integer (indicating that the magnifying glass
is to be square), or it may be given in the form
.IR width x height .
See the MOUSE ACTIONS section.  Defaults are 200x150, 400x250, 700x500,
1000x800, and 1200x1200.
#ifdps
.TP
.B \-nodps
.RB ( .nodps )
Inhibits the use of Display PostScript<tm> for displaying PostScript<tm>
specials.  Other forms of PostScript emulation, if installed, will be used
instead.
#endif
#ifghost
.TP
.B \-noghostscript
.RB ( .noghostscript )
Inhibits the use of GhostScript for displaying PostScript<tm> specials.
#endif
#ifgrey
.TP
.B \-nogrey
.RB ( .grey )
Turns off the use of greyscale anti-aliasing when printing shrunken bitmaps.
(In this case, the logic of the corresponding resource is the reverse:
.B \-nogrey
corresponds to
.BR grey:off ;
.B +nogrey
to
.BR grey:on .)
See also the
.RB ` G '
keystroke.
#endif
#ifnews
.TP
.B \-nonews
.RB ( .nonews )
Inhibits the use of NeWS<tm> for displaying PostScript<tm> specials.
Ghostscript, if enabled by the installation, will be used instead.
#endif
#ifps
.TP
.B \-nopostscript
.RB ( .nopostscript )
Turns off rendering of PostScript<tm> specials.  Bounding boxes, if known,
will be displayed instead.  This option can also be toggled with the
.RB ` v '
keystroke.
#endif
.TP
.BI \-offsets " dimen"
.RB ( .Offset )
Specifies the size of both the horizontal and vertical offsets of the
output on the page.  This should be a decimal number optionally followed by
.RB `` cm '',
.IR e.g. ,
.B 1.5
or
.BR 3cm ,
giving a measurement in inches or centimeters.
By decree of the Stanford TeX Project, the default TeX page origin is
always 1 inch over and down from the top-left page corner, even when
non-American paper sizes are used.  Therefore, the default offsets
are 1.0 inch. See also
.B \-xoffset
and
.BR \-yoffset .
.TP
.BI \-p " pixels"
.RB ( .pixelsPerInch )
Defines the size of the fonts to use, in pixels per inch.  The
default value is %%bdpi%%.
.TP
.BI \-paper " papertype"
.RB ( .paper )
Specifies the size of the printed page.  This may be of the form
\fIwidth\fBx\fIheight\fR (or \fIwidth\fBx\fIheight\fBcm\fR), where
.I width
is the width in inches (or cm) and
.I height
is the height in inches (or cm), respectively.
There are also synonyms which may be used:
.B us
(8.5x11),
.B usr
(11x8.5),
.B legal
(8.5x14),
.B foolscap
(13.5x17),
as well as the ISO sizes
.BR a1 - a7 ,
.BR b1 - b7 ,
.BR c1 - c7 ,
.BR a1r - a7r
.RB ( a1 - a7
rotated), etc.  The default size is %%defaultpagesize%%.
.TP
.B \-rv
.RB ( .reverseVideo )
Causes the page to be displayed with white characters on a black background,
instead of vice versa.
.TP
.BI \-s " shrink"
.RB ( .shrinkFactor )
Defines the initial shrink factor.  The default value is 3.
.TP
.BI \-S " density"
.RB ( .densityPercent )
Determines the density used when shrinking bitmaps for fonts.
A higher value produces a lighter font.  The default value is 40.
Same as
.BR \-density .
.TP
.BI \-sidemargin " dimen"
.RB ( .sideMargin )
Specifies the side margin (see
.BR \-margins ).
.TP
.B \-thorough
.RB ( .thorough )
.B xdvi
will usually try to ensure that overstrike characters
.RI ( e.g. ,
.BR \enotin )
are printed correctly.  On monochrome displays, this is always possible
with one logical operation, either
.I and
or
.IR or .
On color displays, however, this may take two operations, one to set the
appropriate bits and one to clear other bits.  If this is the case, then
by default
.B xdvi
will instead use the
.I copy
operation, which does not handle overstriking correctly.  The
.B \-thorough
option chooses the slower but more correct choice.  See also
.BR \-copy .
.TP
.BI \-topmargin " dimen"
.RB ( .topMargin )
Specifies the top and bottom margins (see
.BR \-margins ).
.TP
.BI \-version
Print information on the version of
.BR xdvi .
.TP
.BI \-xoffset " dimen"
.RB ( .xOffset )
Specifies the size of the horizontal offset of the output on the page.  See
.BR -offsets .
.TP
.BI \-yoffset " dimen"
.RB ( .yOffset )
Specifies the size of the vertical offset of the output on the page.  See
.BR -offsets .
.SH KEYSTROKES
.B xdvi
recognizes the following keystrokes when typed in its window.
Each may optionally be preceded by a (positive or negative) number, whose
interpretation will depend on the particular keystroke.
Also, the ``Home'', ``Prior'', ``Next'', and arrow cursor keys are synonyms for
.RB ` ^ ',
.RB ` b ',
.RB ` f ',
.RB ` l ',
.RB ` r ',
.RB ` u ',
and
.RB ` d '
keys, respectively.
.TP
.B q
Quits the program.  Control-C and control-D will do this, too.
.TP
.B n
Moves to the next page (or to the
.IR n th
next page if a number is given).  Synonyms are
.RB ` f ',
Space, Return, and Line Feed.
.TP
.B p
Moves to the previous page (or back
.I n
pages).  Synonyms are
.RB ` b ',
control-H, and Delete.
.TP
.B g
Moves to the page with the given number.  Initially, the first page is assumed
to be page number 1, but this can be changed with the
.RB ` P '
keystroke, below.  If no page number is given, then it goes to the last page.
.TP
.B P
``This is page number
.IR n .''
This can be used to make the
.RB ` g '
keystroke refer to actual page numbers instead of absolute page numbers.
.TP
Control-L
Redisplays the current page.
.TP
.B ^
Move to the ``home'' position of the page.  This is normally the upper
left-hand corner of the page, depending on the margins as described in the
.B \-margins
option, above.
.TP
.B u
Moves up two thirds of a window-full.
.TP
.B d
Moves down two thirds of a window-full.
.TP
.B l
Moves left two thirds of a window-full.
.TP
.B r
Moves right two thirds of a window-full.
.TP
.B c
Moves the page so that the point currently beneath the cursor is moved to
the middle of the window.  It also (gasp!) warps the cursor to the same place.
.TP
.B M
Sets the margins so that the point currently under the cursor is the upper
left-hand corner of the text in the page.  Note that this command itself does
not move the image at all.  For details on how the margins are used, see
the
.B \-margins
option.
.TP
.B s
Changes the shrink factor to the given number.  If no number is given, the
smallest factor that makes the entire page fit in the window will be used.
(Margins are ignored in this computation.)
.TP
.B S
Sets the density factor to be used when shrinking bitmaps.  This should
be a number between 0 and 100; higher numbers produce lighter characters.
.TP
.B R
Forces the
.I dvi
file to be reread.  This allows you to preview many versions of the same
file while running
.B xdvi
only once.
.TP
.B k
Normally when
.B xdvi
switches pages, it moves to the home position as well.  The
.RB ` k '
keystroke toggles a `keep-position' flag which, when set, will keep
the same position when moving between pages.  Also
.RB ` 0k '
and
.RB ` 1k '
clear and set this flag, respectively.  See also the
.B \-keep
option.
#ifbuttons
.TP
.B x
Toggles expert mode (in which the buttons do not appear).  Also
.RB ` 0x '
and
.RB ` 1x '
clear and reset this mode, respectively.  See also the
.B \-expert
option.
#endif
#ifgrey
.TP
.B G
This key toggles the use of greyscale anti-aliasing for displaying shrunken
bitmaps.  In addition, the key sequences
.RB ` 0G '
and
.RB ` 1G '
clear and set this flag, respectively.  See also the
.B \-nogrey
option.
.PP
If given a numeric arg that is not 0 or 1, greyscale anti-aliasing is
turned on, and the gamma resource is set to the value divided by
100. E.g.,
.RB ` 150G '
turns on greyscale and sets gamma to 1.5.
#endif
#ifps
.TP
.B v
This key toggles the rendering of PostScript<tm> specials.  If rendering
is turned off, then bounding boxes are displayed when available.
In addition the key sequences
.RB ` 0v '
and
.RB ` 1v '
clear and set this flag, respectively.  See also the
.B \-nopostscript
option.
#endif
.TP
.B F
Read a new DVI file (if the SELFILE file selection widget was not
disabled at compile-time).
.SH MOUSE ACTIONS
If the shrink factor is set to any number other than one, then clicking
any mouse button will pop up a ``magnifying glass'' which shows the unshrunk
image in the vicinity of the mouse click.  This subwindow disappears when
the mouse button is released.  Different mouse buttons produce different sized
windows, as indicated by the
.B \-mgs
option.  Moving the cursor while holding the button down will move the
magnifying glass.
.PP
Also, the scrollbars (if present) behave in the standard way:  pushing Button 2
in a scrollbar moves the top or left edge of the scrollbar to that point
and optionally drags it;
pushing Button 1 moves the image up or right by an amount equal to the distance
from the button press to the upper left-hand corner of the window; pushing
Button 3 moves the image down or left by the same amount.
.SH ENVIRONMENT
Uses the environment variable
DISPLAY
to specify which bit map display terminal to use.
.PP
The environment variable
XDVIFONTS
determines the path(s) searched for
fonts in the following manner.  The string consists of one or more strings
separated by colons.  In each such string, the substring
.B %f
is changed to the font name;
.B %d
is changed to the magnification; and
.B %p
is changed to the font file format
.RB (`` pk ''
or
.RB `` gf '').
If no
.B %f
appears in the string, then the string
.RB `` /%f.%d%p ''
is added on the end.  For example, if the string is
.RB `` /usr/local/tex/fonts ''
and the font is
.B cmr10
at 300 dots per inch, then it searches for
.B /usr/local/tex/fonts/cmr10.300pk
and
.BR /usr/local/tex/fonts/cmr10.300gf ,
in that order.  An extra colon anywhere in
XDVIFONTS
causes the system default paths to be tried at that point.  If the font is not
found in the desired size, then
.B xdvi
will
#ifmakepk
invoke Metafont to create the font in the correct size.  Failing that, it will
#endif
try to find the nearest size.
If the font cannot be found at all, then
.B xdvi
will try to vary the point size of the font (within a certain range),
and if this fails, then it will use the font specified as the alternate
font (cf.
.BR \-altfont ).
.PP
In addition, a
.B %F
specifier is available; it is a synonym for
.BR %f ,
but it does not inhibit putting the string
.RB `` /%f.%d%p ''
at the end.  Finally, a
.B %b
specifier is available; it is converted to the current resolution being used
.RI ( i.e. ,
the value of the
.B \-p
parameter or the
.B .pixelsperinch
resource.
#iftexfonts
.PP
For compatibility with TeX, you may also use
TEXFONTS
in place of
XDVIFONTS,
although in that case the variable should not include any
.RB `` % ''
specifiers.  The reason for recognizing
TEXFONTS
is that certain versions of TeX also support the convention regarding an extra
colon in the font path; therefore, users who create their own fonts can
put both their
.RI . tfm
and raster files in the same directory and do
.RB `` "setenv TEXFONTS :MFdir" ''
or
.RB `` "setenv TEXFONTS MFdir:" ''
in order to get both TeX and
.B xdvi
to search their directory in addition to the system standard directories.  The
XDVIFONTS
variable overrides the
TEXFONTS
variable, so that on those sites where
TEXFONTS
must be set explicitly, and therefore this feature is not useful, the
XDVIFONTS
variable may be set to an empty string
.RI ( i.e. ,
.RB  `` "setenv XDVIFONTS" '')
to cause
.B xdvi
to ignore
TEXFONTS.
.PP
.B xdvi
also recognizes the
PKFONTS
and
TEXPKS
variables, which are checked after
XDVIFONTS
but before
TEXFONTS.
#endif
#ifsubdir
.PP
You can also enable recursive searching in the font path by using the
.RB `` * ''
and
.RB `` ** ''
specifiers.  At this point in the path,
.B xdvi
will recursively
search subdirectories of the given directory in order to find font files.
A single asterisk limits the search to one level; a double asterisk will search
through an arbitrary number of levels.  Also, the variable
TEXFONTS_SUBDIR
can be used to give a colon-separated list of directories to recursively search.
This is equivalent to including the specifiers with a
.RB `` * ''
after each; the usual conventions regarding extra colons applies here, too,
relative to a default subdirectory path.  Asterisks may not be preceded by a
.RB `` % ''
specifier in any path component.
#endif
.PP
The
XDVISIZES
environment variable may consist of a list of resolutions separated by colons,
expressed in integer dots per inch. If a font cannot be found or made at its
stated size, these sizes are tried as a fallback.  See the Kpathsea
manual for more details.
.B xdvi
will also try the actual size of the font before trying any of the given sizes.
.PP
Virtual fonts are also supported, although
.B xdvi
does not have any built-in fonts to which they can refer.  The search path for
.RB . vf
files can be specified with the environment variable
XDVIVFS
in a similar manner to that for the
XDVIFONTS
variable.
#iftexfonts
.B xdvi
will also check the
VFFONTS
variable if the
XDVIFONTS
variable is not set.
#endif
Virtual fonts are searched for immediately after looking for the font
as a normal font in the exact size specified.
.SH FILES
.PD 0
.TP 40
%%DEFAULT_FONT_PATH%%   Font pixel files.
%%DEFAULT_VF_PATH%%   Virtual font files.
.PD
.SH "SEE ALSO"
.BR X (1).
.SH AUTHORS
Eric Cooper, CMU, did a version for direct output to a QVSS.
Modified for X by
Bob Scheifler, MIT Laboratory for Computer Science.
Modified for X11 by Mark Eichin, MIT SIPB.
Additional enhancements by many others.

These are the contents of the former NiCE NeXT User Group NeXTSTEP/OpenStep software archive, currently hosted by Netfuture.ch.