CUPS-PDF 2.4.6.1
#4
Posted 20 March 2009 - 07:32 AM
To be slightly off-topic and just because you tweaked one of my pet peeves.
Paper is made from saplings and cotton, both of which are highly renewable resources. To say you are cutting back on paper to save trees is like saying you are cutting back on bread to save wheat.
Paper is made from saplings and cotton, both of which are highly renewable resources. To say you are cutting back on paper to save trees is like saying you are cutting back on bread to save wheat.
#7
Posted 20 March 2009 - 08:33 AM
Hemp both makes better paper, and is more easily renewable than trees. Which is the primary reason (among several) it was made illegal in the 1930s, at the behest of the timber industry, which didn't like the competition. Isn't government wonderful?
And thanks for the tip, Dan; I make a lot of PDFs too, and this looks to be very useful.
And thanks for the tip, Dan; I make a lot of PDFs too, and this looks to be very useful.
#8
Posted 20 March 2009 - 08:42 AM
Yes you are right but I believe the real reason hemp is not allowed is because of its strength. Cotton would end up like silk, as hemp makes better jeans, shirts anything that needs a durability component. The strands from hemp are long and strong like bamboo......
Any how we are way off topic and printing in Mac sucks sometimes. This PDF tip helps and maybe someone could modify the print panel so I can only print the selected section and hitting the keys Apple + shift P creates a pdf of either the selection or the page!!!!
Any how we are way off topic and printing in Mac sucks sometimes. This PDF tip helps and maybe someone could modify the print panel so I can only print the selected section and hitting the keys Apple + shift P creates a pdf of either the selection or the page!!!!
#11
Posted 20 March 2009 - 09:48 AM
Hey, Dan, maybe it's not the slick-as-snot approach you're looking for, but I have a tip to offer...
Using the "Keyboard & Mouse>Keyboard Shortcuts" Preference Pane, and using the "Applications Keyboard Shortcuts" section, under "All Applications", I created a shortcut for "Save as PDF..." exactly as it appears in the pulldown menu, then logged out and back in.
I use the the "Command-Option-P" keyboard combination and now only press "Command-P" wait about 1-2 seconds, and then just move to hold down the Option key while pressing the other two (Command-P) to complete my custom keyboard command, and the "Save as PDF" dialog presents itself and I'm good to go. If I want other options from the Print dialog I just deal with it. It saves me tons of mousing around every week!
All of those commands in that pull down can be assigned a shortcut, and it's systemwide!
I did the same thing with the "Window>Zoom" Command (Control-Z) and I can zoom most windowing, except for the iWork suite (go figure?) and the MS Office apps (which are just brain dead for windowing anyway).
Using the "Keyboard & Mouse>Keyboard Shortcuts" Preference Pane, and using the "Applications Keyboard Shortcuts" section, under "All Applications", I created a shortcut for "Save as PDF..." exactly as it appears in the pulldown menu, then logged out and back in.
I use the the "Command-Option-P" keyboard combination and now only press "Command-P" wait about 1-2 seconds, and then just move to hold down the Option key while pressing the other two (Command-P) to complete my custom keyboard command, and the "Save as PDF" dialog presents itself and I'm good to go. If I want other options from the Print dialog I just deal with it. It saves me tons of mousing around every week!
All of those commands in that pull down can be assigned a shortcut, and it's systemwide!
I did the same thing with the "Window>Zoom" Command (Control-Z) and I can zoom most windowing, except for the iWork suite (go figure?) and the MS Office apps (which are just brain dead for windowing anyway).
#14
Posted 20 March 2009 - 01:11 PM
bonesb said:
Hey, Dan, maybe it's not the slick-as-snot approach you're looking for, but I have a tip to offer...
Using the "Keyboard & Mouse>Keyboard Shortcuts" Preference Pane, and using the "Applications Keyboard Shortcuts" section, under "All Applications", I created a shortcut for "Save as PDF..." exactly as it appears in the pulldown menu, then logged out and back in.
I use the the "Command-Option-P" keyboard combination and now only press "Command-P" wait about 1-2 seconds, and then just move to hold down the Option key while pressing the other two (Command-P) to complete my custom keyboard command, and the "Save as PDF" dialog presents itself and I'm good to go. If I want other options from the Print dialog I just deal with it. It saves me tons of mousing around every week!
All of those commands in that pull down can be assigned a shortcut, and it's systemwide!
Using the "Keyboard & Mouse>Keyboard Shortcuts" Preference Pane, and using the "Applications Keyboard Shortcuts" section, under "All Applications", I created a shortcut for "Save as PDF..." exactly as it appears in the pulldown menu, then logged out and back in.
I use the the "Command-Option-P" keyboard combination and now only press "Command-P" wait about 1-2 seconds, and then just move to hold down the Option key while pressing the other two (Command-P) to complete my custom keyboard command, and the "Save as PDF" dialog presents itself and I'm good to go. If I want other options from the Print dialog I just deal with it. It saves me tons of mousing around every week!
All of those commands in that pull down can be assigned a shortcut, and it's systemwide!
I've tried that approach, but as Rob detailed over on OS X Hints, the problem is that when you assign keyboard shortcuts to items in the PDF pop-up menu, they don't always work. If I recall the bug correctly, you have to make sure to actually click on the menu at some point, to show it, before any shortcuts will work. (And sometimes even then it doesn't "take.")



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