On Fri, Jan 14, 2005 at 06:03:19PM +0100, Frank Küster wrote: > Heiko Oberdiek <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > > > I would not use and I am not using pdfTeX with seminar, too many problems. > > Do you mean this in the sense that we should not even support users who > still do it, and not put anything for pdfTeX in the conffile?
I am meaning me, not you. A long time ago, my decision was, not to use or support seminar. Especially I dislike the use of \mag. It complicates the unit handling unnecessarily. > > Also the problem is not entirely clear to me, you mean the setting > > of the /Rotate entry in the page attributes? > > Well, look at the following minimal example: > > \documentclass[a4]{seminar} > > % \input seminar.bug > % \input seminar.bg2 > > \begin{document} > > > \begin{slide} > \centerline{Slide Test} > \end{slide} > \end{document} > > (commenting in the \input's does not change it). With latex-dvips-ps2pdf > you get a landscape slide that is displayed as landscape by xpdf, > acroread, etc. (I think there is still some gv bug). With the same file > and pdflatex, you get a landscape slide that is displayed on a portrait > sheet by the viewers, i.e. there's empty space at the bottom, while the > rigth third is truncated. > > > Then the token register \pdfpagesattr > > \pdfpagesattr{/Rotate 90} > > could be used for pdfTeX. > > \documentclass[a4]{seminar} > > % \input seminar.bug > % \input seminar.bg2 > > \pdfpagesattr{/Rotate 90} > > \begin{document} > > \begin{slide} > \centerline{Slide Test} > \end{slide} > \end{document} > > gives the same truncated page, but rotated to the right. If I put the > command within the slide environment, nothing changes in acroread, and > xpdf makes funny things. Here the rotated stuff is not needed, the generated orientation is the correct one. But you have to set the origin and page dimensions to *true* values: \AtBeginDocument{% \pdfhorigin=1truein \pdfvorigin=1truein \pdfpagewidth=297truemm \pdfpageheight=210truemm } \documentclass[a4]{seminar} % \input seminar.bug % \input seminar.bg2 \begin{document} \begin{slide} \centerline{Slide Test} \end{slide} \end{document} Yours sincerely Heiko <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>