Re: [gentoo-user] I finally ditched acroread
Hey dude, i have acroread installed but use okular since long time ago. In fact my i was in doubt if acroread still installed. I'll uninstall acroread, but how to recompile packages without 32-bit ABI? Is there a smart way or I need to change e recompile each one? Best regards. On 10/22/2016 09:32 PM, Grant Edwards wrote: For the past several years, I've had to keep acroread installed on one of my desktop machines because I occasionally need to use the "print current view" feature to print a portion of a page of a PDF document (usually a section of a sechematic or a table out of a data sheet). Acroread is only available as a 32-bit binary and it required that _89_ packages be built with a 32-bit ABI use flag. [There are various other reasons to dislike acroread, but that's the one the really bugged me...] When I noticed that the latest versions of Qoppa's PDFStudio has added the "print current view" feature, I happily coughed up the $36 to upgrade. Emerge is now busy rebuilding those 89 packages without the 32-bit ABI use flags.
Re: [gentoo-user] I finally ditched acroread
On Sunday 23 Oct 2016 00:32:02 Grant Edwards wrote: > For the past several years, I've had to keep acroread installed on one > of my desktop machines because I occasionally need to use the "print > current view" feature to print a portion of a page of a PDF document > (usually a section of a sechematic or a table out of a data sheet). > Acroread is only available as a 32-bit binary and it required that > _89_ packages be built with a 32-bit ABI use flag. [There are various > other reasons to dislike acroread, but that's the one the really > bugged me...] > > When I noticed that the latest versions of Qoppa's PDFStudio has added > the "print current view" feature, I happily coughed up the $36 to > upgrade. > > Emerge is now busy rebuilding those 89 packages without the 32-bit ABI > use flags. I haven't used acroread or Qoppa's PDFStudio, but qpdfview and okular will copy and save selections as images, which you can save and print thereafter. If you prefer to work on a terminal mutool will also extract images. -- Regards, Mick signature.asc Description: This is a digitally signed message part.
[gentoo-user] I finally ditched acroread
For the past several years, I've had to keep acroread installed on one of my desktop machines because I occasionally need to use the "print current view" feature to print a portion of a page of a PDF document (usually a section of a sechematic or a table out of a data sheet). Acroread is only available as a 32-bit binary and it required that _89_ packages be built with a 32-bit ABI use flag. [There are various other reasons to dislike acroread, but that's the one the really bugged me...] When I noticed that the latest versions of Qoppa's PDFStudio has added the "print current view" feature, I happily coughed up the $36 to upgrade. Emerge is now busy rebuilding those 89 packages without the 32-bit ABI use flags. -- Grant