Steve Holden wrote: > Michael Galvin wrote: > > To see an example of what I am trying to accomplish, look at this page > > on my personal website: > > > > http://mysite.verizon.net/michaelgalvin/jan06call.html > > > > I now realize my attachement could not be posted on this usenet group. > > > I suspect your best option would be to use ReportLab's open source > package (www.reportlab.org) to generate PDF files.
One alternative, although I'm not convinced that it is actively maintained any more, is the Piddle/Sping library [1]. As mentioned elsewhere, the Cairo bindings would provide a similar developer experience to that, and Cairo is increasingly fashionable. > You may, however, be able to get at the Windows device context through > wxPython (www.wxpython.org): if you download the demonstration you'll > see that on Windows they do send fairly arbitrary graphics to the > Windows printer queue. PyQt [2] seems to support printing fairly conveniently. Consider this very simple example: from qt import * import sys qapp = QApplication(sys.argv) printer = QPrinter(QPrinter.PrinterResolution) printer.setPageSize(printer.A4) printer.setOutputToFile(1) printer.setOutputFileName("qtprint.ps") painter = QPainter(printer) painter.drawText(painter.window(), painter.AlignCenter, "Hello") painter.end() I haven't used printing in Qt [3] before, so apologies must go out if I've made fundamental mistakes in the above code which did, admittedly, produce output that resembled my expectations. Another route might be to use a Tkinter canvas - at least in times of old, such canvases were able to dump their contents as PostScript. Paul [1] http://piddle.sourceforge.net/ [2] http://www.riverbankcomputing.co.uk/pyqt/index.php [3] http://doc.trolltech.com/3.3/graphics.html -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list