Re: Re: Re: Hideous font when printing text file

2009-05-01 Thread Henk Koster
Yup, that looks like the problem. I'll be using a2ps for now. Thanks. -- Henk Koster "Behavioral axioms are right, but agents make mistakes." Attributed to L.J. Savage -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to debian-user-requ...@lists.debian.org with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact listmas.

Re: Re: Hideous font when printing text file

2009-04-29 Thread Dave Thayer
On Tue, Apr 28, 2009 at 10:18:37AM +0200, Henk Koster wrote: > Thanks for your assistance. I use lp or lpr for printing text files (as > stated in the OP), e.g. > > $ ls |lp > > to print a directory listing to the default printer (I have only one > printer). That lp is really /usr/bin/lp. I've

Re: Hideous font when printing text file

2009-04-28 Thread Mike McCarty
Henk Koster wrote: Thanks for your assistance. I use lp or lpr for printing text files (as stated in the OP), e.g. $ ls |lp to print a directory listing to the default printer (I have only one printer). That lp is really /usr/bin/lp. I've made no changes to the default Debian printing setup.

Re: Re: Hideous font when printing text file

2009-04-28 Thread Henk Koster
Thanks for your assistance. I use lp or lpr for printing text files (as stated in the OP), e.g. $ ls |lp to print a directory listing to the default printer (I have only one printer). That lp is really /usr/bin/lp. I've made no changes to the default Debian printing setup. There's no proble

Re: Hideous font when printing text file

2009-04-25 Thread Andrei Popescu
On Fri,24.Apr.09, 01:29:42, Henk Koster wrote: > Running mixed testing/Sid, and after a recent upgrade any text file > (like a directory listing) gets printed on my CUPS printer with a > hideously stretched and enlarged (Courier) font, far removed from the > default 10 chars/inch and 6 lines/

Hideous font when printing text file

2009-04-24 Thread Henk Koster
Running mixed testing/Sid, and after a recent upgrade any text file (like a directory listing) gets printed on my CUPS printer with a hideously stretched and enlarged (Courier) font, far removed from the default 10 chars/inch and 6 lines/inch. Other file types, like PDF-files produced with pdfl