Dear Mihai,
Thank you.
I think mupdf supports more file formats than xpdf, which is a benefit for some.
Sincerely,
Xianwen
On Sat, Feb 17, 2018 at 5:13 PM, Mihai Popescu
> wrote:
> I guess that evince is heavier than mupdf, when I consider its
Dear Stuart and Edgar,
Thank you. I am only looking for the most lightweight PDF viewer. I am in the
process of compiling xpdf now.
Sincerely,
Xianwen
On Sat, Feb 17, 2018 at 5:32 PM, Edgar Pettijohn
> wrote:
On 02/17/18 07:14, Stuart
Dear Stuart,
Thank you! I compiled mupdf and it works like a charm!
I do have one additional question. How do I compile a "flavour" of a package?
For example, for mupdf, there is mupdf and mupdf-js. I ran "make package" and
it gave me mupdf. How would I obtain mupdf-js?
Sincerely,
Xianwen
On
On 02/17/18 07:14, Stuart Henderson wrote:
On 2018-02-17, Xianwen Chen wrote:
Dear Vincent,
Thank you.
I am surprised that mupdf is actually close to 30 MB of size. You are right
that it is not lightweight in terms of package size.
It has the full PDF renderer in
> I guess that evince is heavier than mupdf, when I consider its dependent
> libraries.
Some of that dependencies are already requested by another must have
applications.
mupdf looks like it is written by a company with ties in ghostscript.
Must try it!
On 2018-02-17, Xianwen Chen wrote:
> Dear Vincent,
>
> Thank you.
>
> I am surprised that mupdf is actually close to 30 MB of size. You are right
> that it is not lightweight in terms of package size.
It has the full PDF renderer in it, unlike evince which just uses
Dear Vincent,
Thank you.
I am surprised that mupdf is actually close to 30 MB of size. You are right
that it is not lightweight in terms of package size.
I guess that evince is heavier than mupdf, when I consider its dependent
libraries. I do not know a good way to list evince's dependencies,
Dear Vincent,
Thank you for the suggestion!
I thought about using evince. I think I can use Firefox to open the document,
before I obtain an updated mupdf. I use mupdf mainly because it is more
lightweight than evince.
Sincerely,
Xianwen
On Fri, Feb 16, 2018 at 11:30 PM, vincent delft
On 2018-02-16, Xianwen Chen wrote:
> Dear Stuart,
>
> Thank you.
>
> I am interested in trying to build it from ports. I checked OpenBSD's FAQs
> and did not find information on building packages from ports. Could you point
> me to a web page or a manual page?
>
>
Dear Stuart,
Thank you.
I am interested in trying to build it from ports. I checked OpenBSD's FAQs and
did not find information on building packages from ports. Could you point me to
a web page or a manual page?
Sincerely,
Xianwen
On Thu, Feb 15, 2018 at 11:37 PM, Stuart Henderson
On 2018-02-15, Xianwen Chen wrote:
> Dear Carlin and Erling,
> Thank you both!
> Yes, I am using 6.2 with mupdf-1.11p1. Then I shall just wait until next
> release and use Firefox to read the document at the moment.
> Sincerely,
> Xianwen
BTW I've just backported this fix
Dear Carlin and Erling,
Thank you both!
Yes, I am using 6.2 with mupdf-1.11p1. Then I shall just wait until next
release and use Firefox to read the document at the moment.
Sincerely,
Xianwen
On Thu, Feb 15, 2018 at 5:13 PM, Erling Westenvik
On Fri, Feb 16, 2018 at 05:38:11AM +1300, Carlin Bingham wrote:
> On 16/02/2018 4:28 a.m., Xianwen Chen wrote:
> > mupdf crashes and reports segmentation fault when I try to open a
> > particular PDF file:
> >
On 16/02/2018 4:28 a.m., Xianwen Chen wrote:
Dear OpenBSD users,
mupdf crashes and reports segmentation fault when I try to open a particular PDF
file:
https://brage.bibsys.no/xmlui/bitstream/handle/11250/2440173/SoL-Rapport-2014-06.pdf?sequence=1=y
If you use mupdf too, could you try to
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