-----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE----- Hash: SHA1 The Wednesday 2005-10-12 at 20:09 -0700, Randall R Schulz wrote:
The gimp.
GIMP is a raster image processor. PostScript is (mostly) structured graphics. To use GIMP to manipulate a PostScript document requires GIMP to render the PostScript document (at a specific resolution). Once that's done, you're in raster land, and there's no going back.
I know, I know. But if the intention is to rotate a single ps file and print it, it would work. I havent tried vector graphics :-?
On the other hand, it's one of PostScript's most basic capabilities to apply a standard transformation matrix to any existing document or any portion thereof. So in practice, it's a trivial to rotation, scale, reflect, shear (including anamorphically, if so desired).
I thought so, but I couldn't find out that yesterday O:-)
Perhaps "pstops" could do. Ah, no, changing the orientation doesn't rotate...
My reading of the man page suggests rotation by 90% increments _is_ possible. To wit:
You are right! - -- Cheers, Carlos Robinson -----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE----- Version: GnuPG v1.4.0 (GNU/Linux) Comment: Made with pgp4pine 1.76 iD8DBQFDTwRPtTMYHG2NR9URAhmtAJ4uCY1mxNFgb0q3oYh/jUUF+TwF/wCfevg+ h19yMPIN8emNHYeHG/pj3Dw= =CVyf -----END PGP SIGNATURE-----