On Lu, 11 apr 11, 13:05:36, Joel Roth wrote:
Solves the vi/vim how do I read in text problem as well:
:r !xp
That's quite a bit better than what I was doing before:
:r!cat mouse-middle-click CR ^D
If you don't mind installing the -gtk or -gnome version of vim you can
just
on 14:46 Sat 09 Apr, Joel Roth (jo...@pobox.com) wrote:
On Sat, Apr 09, 2011 at 05:22:04PM -0700, Todd A. Jacobs wrote:
On Sat, Apr 9, 2011 at 4:20 AM, Arthur Marsh
arthur.ma...@internode.on.netwrote:
Is there any Free PDF viewer in Debian that works outside of GNOME/KDE
that
can
On Mon, Apr 11, 2011 at 03:00:03PM -0700, Dr. Ed Morbius wrote:
on 14:46 Sat 09 Apr, Joel Roth (jo...@pobox.com) wrote:
On Sat, Apr 09, 2011 at 05:22:04PM -0700, Todd A. Jacobs wrote:
On Sat, Apr 9, 2011 at 4:20 AM, Arthur Marsh
arthur.ma...@internode.on.netwrote:
Is there any
Op 09-04-11 07:52, Hans-J. Ullrich schreef:
Am Samstag, 9. April 2011 schrieb Arthur Marsh:
Hi, I'm running Debian unstable but don't have GNOME or KDE 4 installed.
Can anyone suggest a Free PDF viewer that can search for text phrases
that may be broken by a line break in the original PDF?
On Sat 09 Apr 2011 at 15:13:55 +0930, Arthur Marsh wrote:
Hi, I'm running Debian unstable but don't have GNOME or KDE 4 installed.
Can anyone suggest a Free PDF viewer that can search for text phrases
that may be broken by a line break in the original PDF?
Mupdf can do it.
--
To
Brian wrote, on 09/04/11 18:33:
On Sat 09 Apr 2011 at 15:13:55 +0930, Arthur Marsh wrote:
Hi, I'm running Debian unstable but don't have GNOME or KDE 4 installed.
Can anyone suggest a Free PDF viewer that can search for text phrases
that may be broken by a line break in the original PDF?
On Sat 09 Apr 2011 at 20:50:55 +0930, Arthur Marsh wrote:
Thanks, the '/' command in mupdf 'just works' tm.
Is there any Free PDF viewer in Debian that works outside of GNOME/KDE
that can both search for text across line breaks and allows copying of
text from the PDF document to the
Brian wrote, on 09/04/11 23:40:
On Sat 09 Apr 2011 at 20:50:55 +0930, Arthur Marsh wrote:
Thanks, the '/' command in mupdf 'just works'tm.
Is there any Free PDF viewer in Debian that works outside of GNOME/KDE
that can both search for text across line breaks and allows copying of
text from
On Sun 10 Apr 2011 at 01:22:21 +0930, Arthur Marsh wrote:
Thanks, right again. From the manual page:
Dragging with the right mouse button selects an area and copies the
enclosed text to the clipboard buffer.
I generally just paste with the middle mouse button but Parcellite, with
Use
Brian wrote, on 10/04/11 01:39:
On Sun 10 Apr 2011 at 01:22:21 +0930, Arthur Marsh wrote:
Thanks, right again. From the manual page:
Dragging with the right mouse button selects an area and copies the
enclosed text to the clipboard buffer.
I generally just paste with the middle mouse button
On Sat, Apr 9, 2011 at 4:20 AM, Arthur Marsh
arthur.ma...@internode.on.netwrote:
Is there any Free PDF viewer in Debian that works outside of GNOME/KDE that
can both search for text across line breaks and allows copying of text from
the PDF document to the clip-board?
Install pdfgrep and
On Sat, Apr 09, 2011 at 05:22:04PM -0700, Todd A. Jacobs wrote:
On Sat, Apr 9, 2011 at 4:20 AM, Arthur Marsh
arthur.ma...@internode.on.netwrote:
Is there any Free PDF viewer in Debian that works outside of GNOME/KDE that
can both search for text across line breaks and allows copying of
* 2011-04-09T14:46:07-10:00 * Joel Roth wrote:
xclip! how is it I didn't know about you for so long?
Another similar utility is xsel which seems to have a bit nicer set of
command-line options (like -b for using clipboard).
--
To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to debian-user-requ...@lists.debian.org
Hi, I'm running Debian unstable but don't have GNOME or KDE 4 installed.
Can anyone suggest a Free PDF viewer that can search for text phrases
that may be broken by a line break in the original PDF?
I've tried xpdf and evince-gtk and neither seem to offer that capability.
Arthur.
--
To
Am Samstag, 9. April 2011 schrieb Arthur Marsh:
Hi, I'm running Debian unstable but don't have GNOME or KDE 4 installed.
Can anyone suggest a Free PDF viewer that can search for text phrases
that may be broken by a line break in the original PDF?
I've tried xpdf and evince-gtk and neither
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