From: Dave Love Date: Wed, 5 Jan 2000 23:22:55 +0000 (+0000) Subject: PostScript <- Postscript. X-Git-Tag: emacs-pretest-21.0.90~5446 X-Git-Url: http://git.eshelyaron.com/gitweb/?a=commitdiff_plain;h=e7f961bc4bd3a39a44d2d104c9a58ad90040d18a;p=emacs.git PostScript <- Postscript. --- diff --git a/man/msdog.texi b/man/msdog.texi index 8d2e48a3d5f..1e709768481 100644 --- a/man/msdog.texi +++ b/man/msdog.texi @@ -353,11 +353,11 @@ previously with @code{add-untranslated-filesystem}. @section Printing and MS-DOS Printing commands, such as @code{lpr-buffer} (@pxref{Hardcopy}) and -@code{ps-print-buffer} (@pxref{Postscript}) can work in MS-DOS and +@code{ps-print-buffer} (@pxref{PostScript}) can work in MS-DOS and MS-Windows by sending the output to one of the printer ports, if a Unix-style @code{lpr} program is unavailable. This behaviour is controlled by the same variables that control printing with @code{lpr} -on Unix (@pxref{Hardcopy}, @pxref{Postscript Variables}), but the +on Unix (@pxref{Hardcopy}, @pxref{PostScript Variables}), but the defaults for these variables on MS-DOS and MS-Windows are not the same as the defaults on Unix. @@ -423,7 +423,7 @@ when @code{lpr-command} is not @code{""}. If the variable @vindex ps-lpr-command @r{(MS-DOS)} @vindex ps-lpr-switches @r{(MS-DOS)} A parallel set of variables, @code{ps-lpr-command}, -@code{ps-lpr-switches}, and @code{ps-printer-name} (@pxref{Postscript +@code{ps-lpr-switches}, and @code{ps-printer-name} (@pxref{PostScript Variables}), defines how PostScript files should be printed. These variables are used in the same way as the corresponding variables described above for non-PostScript printing. Thus, the value of @@ -633,7 +633,7 @@ Processes}. @cindex printing under MS-DOS Printing commands, such as @code{lpr-buffer} (@pxref{Hardcopy}) and -@code{ps-print-buffer} (@pxref{Postscript}), work in MS-DOS by sending +@code{ps-print-buffer} (@pxref{PostScript}), work in MS-DOS by sending the output to one of the printer ports. @xref{MS-DOS Printing}. When you run a subprocess synchronously on MS-DOS, make sure the