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NAME
       pdfxup - n-up tool with reduced margins

SYNOPSIS
       pdfxup [OPTIONS] [FILE]

DESCRIPTION
       pdfxup  creates a PDF document where each page is obtained by combining
       several pages of a PDF file given as output. The important  feature  of
       pdfxup,  compared  to similar programs, is that it tries to compute the
       (global) bounding box of the input PDF file, in  order  to  remove  the
       margins  and to keep the text only. Instead of having the font size di-
       vided by 2 (for the case of 2-up output), in some case you may  end  up
       with  almost  the same font size as in the original document (as is the
       case for a default 'article' document produced by LaTeX).

       pdfxup uses ghostscript for computing the maximal bounding box of (some
       of)  the  pages  of the document, and then uses pdflatex (with graphicx
       package) in order to produce the new document.

OPTIONS
       pdfxup accepts numerous options. The most important ones are:

       -x m, --columns m
              sets the number of columns of the output file (default 2);

       -y n, --rows n
              sets the number of lines of the output file (default 1);

       -nup mxn, --nup mxn
              sets the number of rows and columns of the output file  (default
              2x1);

       -l (0|1), --landscape, --portrait
              sets orientation of paper (of final document);

       -cf file, --config  file, --mode  file
              reads  file  (with  extension  .xup) and uses options defined in
              that file (see below for details about .xup files).  All options
              are  processed  in  the order the appear on the command-line, so
              that it is possible to modify the options set in the  configura-
              tion file (and it is even possible to include several configura-
              tion files, the later one overwriting the  options  set  by  the
              previous  ones).  Files are looked-up using kpsewhich (if avail-
              able).

       -b (le|se), --booklet (le|se)
              configure for printing as a booklet. Value 'le'  (which  is  the
              default  value when -b is used with no argument) means that two-
              sided printing is in 'long-edge' mode (you turn from one page to
              the  next along the long edge of the paper). 'se' is the 'short-
              edge' option.

       -c, --clip, -nc, --no-clip
              clip (or don't clip) pages to the computed bounding box. By  de-
              fault,  content is  clipped, to avoid overlap between neighbour-
              ing pages.  With --no-clip, anything outside  the  bounding  box
              will be displayed.

       -o file, --output file
              name of output file.

       -i     ask before overwriting output file.

       -ow    overwrite output file without asking.

       -ps s, --paper s
              sets  paper size (default a4). The name must be known by package
              geometry (more precisely, "<s>paper" should be defined  in  that
              package).

       -fw d, --framewidth d
              width  of the frame around each page (default 0.4pt). Set to 0pt
              to have no frame at all.

       -tf [0|1], --tight-frame [0|1]
              whether the frame should be tight around the page, leaving hori-
              zontal white space outside the frame, or should be wide and span
              the whole available width.

       -im d, --innermargins d
              inner margin between frame and page (default 5pt).

       -m d, --margins d
              margin of pages of the new document (default 5pt).

       -is d, --intspaces d
              space between different pages (default 1pt).

       -p list, --pages list
              only consider sublist of pages of  input  document.  List  is  a
              comma-separated list of pages or ranges pages of the form a-b; a
              can be omitted to start from first page, and b can be omitted to
              end  at  the last page. Therefore, "-p -" (which is the default)
              includes all pages. Also allows modulo, so that "-p  0%2"  would
              include only even-numbered pages.

       -bb list, --bb list
              only  consider  sublist of pages of input document for computing
              bounding box.

       -nobb list, --no-bb list
              omit list of pages of input document from computation of  bound-
              ing box.

       -g, --get-bb
              only  compute  (and  output)  bounding box. Will not produce any
              output file.

       -kbb, --keep-bb
              do not compute bounding box, preserve current margins.

       -s x y W H, --set-bb x y W H
              set the bounding box to the given values. Values are in pt;  the
              first  two  elements  correspond to the lower left corner, while
              the last two represent the width and height of the  part  to  be
              displayed.

       -w file, --watermark file
              use  file  as  background  watermark. file can be any format ac-
              cepted by pdflatex (e.g. png or pdf). If file is a multipage PDF
              file,  page  n  of the watermark file is used with page n of the
              input file, and the last page of the watermark file is  repeated
              if the input file has more pages.

       -wp p, --watermark-period p
              repeat  the  last  p pages of the watermark file instead of only
              the last one.

       -d, --debug
              debug mode: keep intermediary files.

       -col, --column-mode, --vertical
              fill in pages top-down first (instead of  the  default  left-to-
              right mode).  By default, pages are inserted from left to right,
              until the line is full; with this  option,  pages  are  inserted
              from  top  to  bottom, until the column is full. See option -bal
              below for examples of both options.

       -row, --row-mode, --horizontal
              fill in pages left to right (which is the default mode).

       -bal, --balance-last
              balance last page: when using column mode, the pages are  filled
              in from top to bottom, and the last page is no exception. Still,
              it may be prefered that the columns in  the  last  page  remains
              "balanced",  which  is what this option achieves. Symmetrically,
              in row mode, this option would balance the rows.
                               ---------                        ---------
              row, no-balance | 1  2  3 |  column, no-balance  | 1  4  7 |
              (default mode)  | 4  5  6 |                      | 2  5  8 |
                              | 7  8  9 |                      | 3  6  9 |
                               ---------                        ---------
                               ---------                        ---------
                              |10 11 12 |                      |10 13    |
                              |13 14    |                      |11 14    |
                              |         |                      |12       |
                               ---------                        ---------

                               ---------                        ---------
                 row, balance | 1  2  3 |     column, balance  | 1  4  7 |
                              | 4  5  6 |                      | 2  5  8 |
                              | 7  8  9 |                      | 3  6  9 |
                               ---------                        ---------
                               ---------                        ---------
                              |10 11    |                      |10 12 14 |
                              |12 13    |                      |11 13    |
                              |14       |                      |         |
                               ---------                        ---------

       -V [0-3], --verbose [0-3]
              select verbosity (default: 1).

       -q, --quiet
              run quietly (equiv. '-V 0').

       -v, --version
              print version number and exit.

       -h, --help
              print help message and exit.

CONFIGURATION FILES
       Configuration files (extension .xup) are bash scripts used to set  some
       variables.  If  option  "--config-file <file>" (or equivalent) is used,
       <file> is looked up with kpsewhich first, if it  contains  no  '/'.  If
       kpsewhich  does not find it, then pdfxup checks if the file exists (us-
       ing 'test -e') before sourcing it (the PATH variable will not  be  used
       to find it).

       The  script  should only set some internal variables of pdfxup, such as
       NB_ROWS, NB_COLUMNS, LANDSCAPE (to set up a predefined layout). It  can
       be  used  to set the bounding box, but it is often better to compute it
       on the first few pages of the document.   Here  are  some  examples  of
       lines that can be put in a .xup file:

       NB_COLUMNS=1
              set the number of columns to 1

       NB_ROWS=2
              set the number of rows to 2

       LANDSCAPE=0
              set portrait mode

       KEEP_ORIG_BBOX=1
              do not crop margins

       SET_BBOX="75 47 540 755"
              set bounding box: lower left=(75,47); upper right=(540,755)

       TIGHT_FRAME=1
              set tight frames around pages

       INNER_MARGINS=10pt
              set margin around each page (inside the frame) to 10pt

       INTERM_SPACES=10pt
              set space between pages to 10pt

       FRAME_WIDTH=2mm
              set frame width to 2mm

       Other  available  variables  can be found in the setdefaultvalues func-
       tion.

EXAMPLES
       # pdfxup file.pdf
              produces 2-up pdf file from file.pdf.

       # pdfxup -bb 1-4 file.pdf
              same behaviour, but computes the bounding  box  only  using  the
              first 4 pages (this saves time when processing long documents).

       # pdfxup -b -o booklet.pdf file.pdf
              same behaviour, but creates a booklet (as booklet.pdf).

       # pdfxup -kbb -x1 -y2 -l0 beamer-frames.pdf
              arranges 2 beamer frames per page (not reducing margins).

       # pdfxup --mode beamer2 beamer-frames.pdf
              arranges PDF pages according to beamer2.xup configuration file.

       # pdfxup -kbb -x2 -y2 -l beamer-frames.pdf:1-12,15-19
              arranges  4  beamer  frames per page (not reducing margins), in-
              cluding only frames 1 to 12 and 15 to 19.

SEE ALSO
       gs(1), pdflatex(1)

AUTHOR
       Nicolas Markey (pdfxup@markey.fr)

2.10                             25 april 2021                          man(1)

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