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diff --git a/src/documentation/content/xdocs/1.0/output.xml b/src/documentation/content/xdocs/1.0/output.xml new file mode 100644 index 000000000..7a91992ca --- /dev/null +++ b/src/documentation/content/xdocs/1.0/output.xml @@ -0,0 +1,1268 @@ +<?xml version="1.0" standalone="no"?> +<!-- + Licensed to the Apache Software Foundation (ASF) under one or more + contributor license agreements. See the NOTICE file distributed with + this work for additional information regarding copyright ownership. + The ASF licenses this file to You under the Apache License, Version 2.0 + (the "License"); you may not use this file except in compliance with + the License. You may obtain a copy of the License at + + http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0 + + Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software + distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS, + WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied. + See the License for the specific language governing permissions and + limitations under the License. +--> +<!-- $Id$ --> +<!DOCTYPE document PUBLIC "-//APACHE//DTD Documentation V2.0//EN" "http://forrest.apache.org/dtd/document-v20.dtd"> +<!-- Output Formats: Renderers --> +<document> + <header> + <title>Apache FOP Output Formats</title> + <version>$Revision$</version> + <authors> + <person name="Keiron Liddle" email="keiron@aftexsw.com"/> + <person name="Art Welch" email=""/> + </authors> + </header> + + <body> + <p> + FOP supports multiple output formats by using a different renderer for each format. + The renderers do not all have the same set of capabilities, sometimes because of + the output format itself, sometimes because some renderers get more development + attention than others. + </p> + <section id="general"> + <title>General Information</title> + <section id="general-fonts"> + <title>Fonts</title> + <p> + Most FOP renderers use a FOP-specific system for font registration. + However, the Java2D/AWT and print renderers use the Java AWT package, which gets its + font information from the operating system registration. + This can result in several differences, including actually using different fonts, + and having different font metrics for the same font. + The net effect is that the layout of a given FO document can be quite different between + renderers that do not use the same font information. + </p> + <p> + Theoretically, there's some potential to make the output of the PDF/PS renderers match + the output of the Java2D-based renderers. If FOP used the font metrics from its own + font subsystem but still used Java2D for text painting in the Java2D-based renderers, + this could probably be achieved. However, this approach hasn't been implemented, yet. + </p> + <p> + With a work-around, it is possible to match the PDF/PS output in a Java2D-based + renderer pretty closely. The clue is to use the + <a href="intermediate.html">intermediate format</a>. The trick is to layout the + document using FOP's own font subsystem but then render the document using Java2D. + Here are the necessary steps (using the command-line): + </p> + <ol> + <li> + Produce an IF file: <code>fop -fo myfile.fo -at application/pdf myfile.at.xml</code><br/> + Specifying "application/pdf" for the "-at" parameter causes FOP to use FOP's own + font subsystem (which is used by the PDF renderer). Note that no PDF file is created + in this step. + </li> + <li>Render to a PDF file: <code>fop -atin myfile.at.xml -pdf myfile.pdf</code></li> + <li>Render to a Java2D-based renderer: + <ul> + <li><code>fop -atin myfile.at.xml -print</code></li> + <li><code>fop -atin myfile.at.xml -awt</code></li> + <li><code>fop -atin myfile.at.xml -tiff myfile.tiff</code></li> + </ul> + </li> + </ol> + </section> + <section id="general-direct-output"> + <title>Output to a Printer or Other Device</title> + <p> + The most obvious way to print your document is to use the FOP + <a href="#print">print renderer</a>, which uses the Java2D API (AWT). + However, you can also send output from the Postscript renderer directly to a Postscript + device, or output from the PCL renderer directly to a PCL device. + </p> + <p> + Here are Windows command-line examples for Postscript and PCL: + </p> + <source><![CDATA[fop ... -ps \\computername\printer]]></source> + <source><![CDATA[fop ... -pcl \\computername\printer]]></source> + <p> + Here is some Java code to accomplish the task in UNIX: + </p> + <source><![CDATA[proc = Runtime.getRuntime().exec("lp -d" + print_queue + " -o -dp -"); +out = proc.getOutputStream();]]></source> + <p> + Set the output MIME type to "application/x-pcl" (MimeConstants.MIME_PCL) and + it happily sends the PCL to the UNIX printer queue. + </p> + </section> + </section> + <section id="pdf"> + <title>PDF</title> + <p> + PDF is the best supported output format. It is also the most accurate + with text and layout. This creates a PDF document that is streamed out + as each page is rendered. This means that the internal page index + information is stored near the end of the document. + The PDF version supported is 1.4. PDF versions are forwards/backwards + compatible. + </p> + <p> + Note that FOP does not currently support "tagged PDF" or PDF/A-1a. + Support for <a href="pdfa.html">PDF/A-1b</a> and <a + href="pdfx.html">PDF/X</a> has recently been added, however. + </p> + <section id="pdf-fonts"> + <title>Fonts</title> + <p> + PDF has a set of fonts that are always available to all PDF viewers; + to quote from the PDF Specification: + + <em>"PDF prescribes a set of 14 standard fonts that can be used without prior + definition. + These include four faces each of three Latin text typefaces (Courier, + Helvetica, and Times), as well as two symbolic fonts (Symbol and ITC Zapf + Dingbats). These fonts, or suitable substitute fonts with the same metrics, are + guaranteed to be available in all PDF viewer applications."</em> + </p> + </section> + <section id="pdf-postprocess"> + <title>Post-processing</title> + <p> + FOP does not currently support several desirable PDF features: watermarks and signatures. + One workaround is to use Adobe Acrobat (the full version, not the Reader) to process + the file manually or with scripting that it supports. + </p> + <p> + Another popular post-processing tool is <a href="http://www.lowagie.com/iText">iText</a>, + which has tools for adding security features, document properties, watermarks, and many + other features to PDF files. + </p> + <warning> + Caveat: iText may swallow PDF bookmarks. But + <a href="http://issues.apache.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=37589">Jens Stavnstrup tells us</a> + that this doesn't happen if you use iText's PDFStamper. + </warning> + <p> + Here is some sample code that uses iText to encrypt a FOP-generated PDF. (Note that FOP now + supports <a href="pdfencryption.html">PDF encryption</a>. However the principles for using + iText for other PDF features are similar.) + </p> + <source><![CDATA[public static void main(String args[]) { + try { + ByteArrayOutputStream fopout = new ByteArrayOutputStream(); + FileOutputStream outfile = new FileOutputStream(args[2]); + FopFactory fopFactory = FopFactory.newInstance(); + Fop fop = fopFactory.newFop(MimeConstants.MIME_PDF, fopout); + + Transformer transformer = TransformerFactory.newInstance().newTransformer( + new StreamSource(new File(args[1]))); + transformer.transform(new StreamSource(new File(args[0])), + new SAXResult(fop.getDefaultHandler())); + PdfReader reader = new PdfReader(fopout.toByteArray()); + int n = reader.getNumberOfPages(); + Document document = new Document(reader.getPageSizeWithRotation(1)); + PdfWriter writer = PdfWriter.getInstance(document, outfile); + writer.setEncryption(PdfWriter.STRENGTH40BITS, "pdf", null, + PdfWriter.AllowCopy); + document.open(); + PdfContentByte cb = writer.getDirectContent(); + PdfImportedPage page; + int rotation; + int i = 0; + while (i < n) { + i++; + document.setPageSize(reader.getPageSizeWithRotation(i)); + document.newPage(); + page = writer.getImportedPage(reader, i); + rotation = reader.getPageRotation(i); + if (rotation == 90 || rotation == 270) { + cb.addTemplate(page, 0, -1f, 1f, 0, 0, + reader.getPageSizeWithRotation(i).height()); + } else { + cb.addTemplate(page, 1f, 0, 0, 1f, 0, 0); + } + System.out.println("Processed page " + i); + } + document.close(); + } catch( Exception e) { + e.printStackTrace(); + } +}]]></source> + <p> + Check the iText tutorial and documentation for setting access flags, password, + encryption strength and other parameters. + </p> + </section> + <section id="pdf-watermark"> + <title>Watermarks</title> + <p> + In addition to the <a href="#pdf-postprocess">PDF Post-processing</a> options, consider the following workarounds: + </p> + <ul> + <li> + Use a background image for the body region. + </li> + <li> + (submitted by Trevor Campbell) Place an image in a + region that overlaps the flowing text. For example, make + region-before large enough to contain your image. Then include a + block (if necessary, use an absolutely positioned block-container) + containing the watermark image in the static-content for the + region-before. Note that the image will be drawn on top of the + normal content. + </li> + </ul> + </section> +</section> +<section id="ps"> + <title>PostScript</title> + <p> + The PostScript renderer has been brought up to a similar quality as the + PDF renderer, but may still be missing certain features. It provides good + support for most text and layout. + Images and SVG are not fully supported, yet. Currently, the PostScript + renderer generates PostScript Level 3 with most DSC comments. Actually, + the only Level 3 features used are the FlateDecode and DCTDecode + filter (the latter is used for 1:1 embedding of JPEG images), everything + else is Level 2. + </p> + <section id="ps-configuration"> + <title>Configuration</title> + <p> + The PostScript renderer configuration currently allows the following settings: + </p> +<source><![CDATA[<renderer mime="application/postscript"> + <auto-rotate-landscape>false</auto-rotate-landscape> + <language-level>3</language-level> + <optimize-resources>false</optimize-resources> + <safe-set-page-device>false</safe-set-page-device> + <dsc-compliant>true</dsc-compliant> +</renderer>]]></source> + <p> + The default value for the "auto-rotate-landscape" setting is "false". Setting it + to "true" will automatically rotate landscape pages and will mark them as landscape. + </p> + <p> + The default value for the "language-level" setting is "3". This setting specifies + the PostScript language level which should be used by FOP. Set this to "2" + only if you don't have a Level 3 capable interpreter. + </p> + <p> + The default value for the "optimize-resources" setting is "false". Setting it + to "true" will produce the PostScript file in two steps. A temporary file will be + written first which will then be processed to add only the fonts which were really + used and images are added to the stream only once as PostScript forms. This will + reduce file size but can potentially increase the memory needed in the interpreter + to process. + </p> + <p> + The default value for the "safe-set-page-device" setting is "false". Setting it + to "true" will cause the renderer to invoke a postscript macro which guards against + the possibility of invalid/unsupported postscript key/values being issued to the + implementing postscript page device. + </p> + <p> + The default value for the "dsc-compliant" setting is "true". Setting it + to "false" will break DSC compliance by minimizing the number of setpagedevice + calls in the postscript document output. This feature may be useful when unwanted + blank pages are experienced in your postscript output. This problem is caused by + the particular postscript implementation issuing unwanted postscript subsystem + initgraphics/erasepage calls on each setpagedevice call. + </p> + </section> + <section id="ps-limitations"> + <title>Limitations</title> + <ul> + <li>Images and SVG may not be displayed correctly. SVG support is far from being complete. No image transparency is available.</li> + <li>Only Type 1 fonts are supported.</li> + <li>Multibyte characters are not supported.</li> + <li>PPD support is still missing.</li> + </ul> + </section> +</section> + <section id="pcl"> + <title>PCL</title> + <p> + This format is for the Hewlett-Packard PCL printers and other printers + supporting PCL. It should produce output as close to identical as possible + to the printed output of the PDFRenderer within the limitations of the + renderer, and output device. + </p> + <p> + The output created by the PCLRenderer is generic PCL 5, HP GL/2 and PJL. + This should allow any device fully supporting PCL 5 to be able to + print the output generated by the PCLRenderer. PJL is used to control the + print job and switch to the PCL language. PCL 5 is used for text, raster + graphics and rectangular fill graphics. HP GL/2 is used for more complex + painting operations. Certain painting operations are done off-screen and + rendered to PCL as bitmaps because of limitations in PCL 5. + </p> + <section id="pcl-references"> + <title>References</title> + <ul> + <li><a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Printer_Control_Language">WikiPedia entry on PCL</a></li> + <li><a href="http://h20000.www2.hp.com/bizsupport/TechSupport/Document.jsp?objectID=bpl04568">Technical reference documents on PCL from Hewlett-Packard</a></li> + </ul> + </section> + <section id="pcl-limitations"> + <title>Limitations</title> + <ul> + <li> + Text or graphics outside the left or top of the printable area are not + rendered properly. This is a limitation of PCL, not FOP. In general, + things that should print to the left of the printable area are shifted + to the right so that they start at the left edge of the printable area. + </li> + <li> + The Helvetica and Times fonts are not well supported among PCL printers + so Helvetica is mapped to Arial and Times is mapped to Times New. This + is done in the PCLRenderer, no changes are required in the FO's. The + metrics and appearance for Helvetica/Arial and Times/Times New are + nearly identical, so this has not been a problem so far. + </li> + <li>For the non-symbol fonts, the ISO 8859-1 symbol set is used (PCL set "0N").</li> + <li> + All fonts available to the Java2D subsystem are usable. The texts are + painted as bitmap much like the Windows PCL drivers do. + </li> + <li>Multibyte characters are not supported.</li> + <li> + At the moment, only monochrome output is supported. PCL5c color extensions + will only be implemented on demand. Color and grayscale images are converted + to monochrome bitmaps (1-bit). Dithering only occurs if the JAI image library + is available. + </li> + <li> + Images are scaled up to the next resolution level supported by PCL (75, + 100, 150, 200, 300, 600 dpi). For color and grayscale images an even + higher PCL resolution is selected to give the dithering algorithm a chance + to improve the bitmap quality. + </li> + <li> + Currently, there's no support for clipping and image transparency, largely + because PCL 5 has certain limitations. + </li> + </ul> + </section> + <section id="pcl-configuration"> + <title>Configuration</title> + <p> + The PCL renderer configuration currently allows the following settings: + </p> +<source><![CDATA[<renderer mime="application/vnd.hp-PCL"> + <rendering>quality</rendering> + <text-rendering>bitmap</text-rendering> + <disable-pjl>false</disable-pjl> +</renderer>]]></source> + <p> + The default value for the "rendering" setting is "speed" which causes borders + to be painted as plain rectangles. In this mode, no special borders (dotted, + dashed etc.) are available. If you want support for all border modes, set the + value to "quality" as indicated above. This will cause the borders to be painted + as bitmaps. + </p> + <p> + The default value for the "text-rendering" setting is "auto" which paints the + base fonts using PCL fonts. Non-base fonts are painted as bitmaps through Java2D. + If the mix of painting methods results in unwelcome output, you can set this + to "bitmap" which causes all text to be rendered as bitmaps. + </p> + <p> + The default value for the "disable-pjl" setting is "false". This means that + the PCL renderer usually generates PJL commands before and after the document + in order to switch a printer into PCL language. PJL commands can be disabled + if you set this value to "true". + </p> + <p> + You can control the output resolution for the PCL using the "target resolution" + setting on the FOUserAgent. The actual value will be rounded up to the next + supported PCL resolution. Currently, only 300 and 600 dpi are supported which + should be enough for most use cases. Note that this setting directly affects + the size of the output file and the print quality. + </p> + </section> + <section id="pcl-extensions"> + <title>Extensions</title> + <p>The PCL Renderer supports some PCL specific extensions which can be embedded + into the input FO document. To use the extensions the appropriate namespace must + be declared in the fo:root element like this:</p> + <source><![CDATA[ + <fo:root xmlns:fo="http://www.w3.org/1999/XSL/Format" + xmlns:pcl="http://xmlgraphics.apache.org/fop/extensions/pcl"> +]]></source> + <section id="pcl-page-source"> + <title>Page Source (Tray selection)</title> + <p> + The page-source extension attribute on fo:simple-page-master allows to + select the paper tray the sheet for a particular simple-page-master is + to be taken from. Example: + </p> + <source><![CDATA[ + <fo:layout-master-set> + <fo:simple-page-master master-name="simple" pcl:paper-source="2"> + ... + </fo:simple-page-master> + </fo:layout-master-set> +]]></source> + <p> + Note: the tray number is a positive integer and the value depends on + the target printer. Not all PCL printers support the same paper trays. + Usually, + "1" is the default tray, + "2" is the manual paper feed, + "3" is the manual envelope feed, + "4" is the "lower" tray and + "7" is "auto-select". + Consult the technical reference for your printer for all available values. + </p> + </section> + <section id="pcl-output-bin"> + <title>Output Bin</title> + <p> + The <code>output-bin</code> extension attribute on fo:simple-page-master allows to + select the output bin into which the printed output should be fed. Example: + </p> + <source><![CDATA[ + <fo:layout-master-set> + <fo:simple-page-master master-name="simple" pcl:output-bin="2"> + ... + </fo:simple-page-master> + </fo:layout-master-set> +]]></source> + <p> + Note: the output bin number is a positive integer and the value depends on + the target printer. Not all PCL printers support the same output bins. + Usually, + "1" is the upper output bin, + "2" is the lower (rear) output bin. + Consult the technical reference for your printer for all available values. + </p> + </section> + <section id="pcl-duplex-mode"> + <title>Page Duplex Mode</title> + <p> + The duplex-mode extension attribute on fo:simple-page-master allows to + select the duplex mode to be used for a particular simple-page-master. + Example: + </p> + <source><![CDATA[ + <fo:layout-master-set> + <fo:simple-page-master master-name="simple" pcl:duplex-mode="0"> + ... + </fo:simple-page-master> + </fo:layout-master-set> +]]></source> + <p> + Note: the duplex is a positive integer and the value depends on + the target printer. Not all PCL printers support duplexing. + Usually, + "0" is simplex, + "1" is duplex (long-edge binding), + "2" is duplex (short-edge binding). + + Consult the technical reference for your printer for all available values. + </p> + </section> + </section> + </section> + <section id="afp"> + <title>AFP</title> + <p> + The FOP AFP Renderer deals with creating documents conforming to the IBM AFP document architecture + also refered to as MO:DCA (Mixed Object Document Content Architecture). + </p> + <p> + The mapping of XSL-FO elements to the major MO:DCA structures is as follows: + </p> + <table> + <tr> + <th>XSL-FO element</th> + <th>MO:DCA-P object</th> + </tr> + <tr> + <td>fo:root</td> + <td>Document</td> + </tr> + <tr> + <td>fo:page-sequence</td> + <td>Page Group</td> + </tr> + <tr> + <td>fo:simple-page-master</td> + <td>Page</td> + </tr> + </table> + <p> + FOP creates exactly one Document per Printfile with an optional Resource Group at the + beginning. FOP does not create document indices. + </p> + <section id="afp-references"> + <title>References</title> + <ul> + <li><a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Advanced_Function_Presentation">AFP (Advanced Function Presentation)</a></li> + <li><a href="http://wiki.apache.org/xmlgraphics-fop/AFPResources">AFP Resources on the FOP WIKI</a></li> + <li><a href="http://wiki.apache.org/xmlgraphics-fop/AFPOutput">Technical notes on AFP output in FOP</a></li> + </ul> + </section> + <section id="afp-limitations"> + <title>Limitations</title> + <p>This list is most likely badly incomplete.</p> + <ul> + <li> + Clipping of text and graphics is not supported. + </li> + <li> + Only IBM outline and raster fonts and to a limited extend the original fonts built into FOP are supported. + Support for TrueType fonts may be added later. + </li> + </ul> + </section> + <section id="afp-compatibility"> + <title>Deployment in older environments</title> + <p> + There are still a big number of older (or limited) MO:DCA/IPDS environments in production + out there. AFP has grown in functionality over time and not every environment supports the + latest features. We're trying to make AFP output work in as many environments as possible. + However, to make AFP output work on older environments it is recommended to set to + configuration to 1 bit per pixel (see below on how to do this). In this case, all images + are converted to bi-level images using IOCA function set 10 (FS10) and are enclosed in + page-segments since some implementation cannot deal with IOCA objects directly. + If a higher number of bits per pixel is configured, FOP has to switch to at least FS11 + which may not work everywhere. + </p> + </section> + <section id="afp-configuration"> + <title>Configuration</title> + <section id="afp-font-config"> + <title>Fonts</title> + <p>The AFP Renderer requires special configuration particularly related to fonts. + AFP Render configuration is done through the normal FOP configuration file. The MIME type + for the AFP Renderer is application/x-afp which means the AFP Renderer section in the FOP configuration file + looks like:</p> + <source><![CDATA[<renderer mime="application/x-afp"> + <!-- AFP Renderer --> + ... +</renderer>]]></source> + <p>There are 4 font configuration variants supported:</p> + <ol> + <li>IBM Raster fonts</li> + <li>IBM Outline fonts</li> + <li>IBM CID-keyed (Type 0) fonts</li> + <li>FOP built-in Base14 fonts</li> + </ol> + <p>A typical raster font configuration looks like:</p> +<source><![CDATA[ <!-- This is an example of mapping actual IBM raster fonts / code pages to a FOP font --> + <font> + <!-- The afp-font element defines the IBM code page, the matching Java encoding and the + base URI for the font --> + <afp-font type="raster" codepage="T1V10500" encoding="Cp500" base-uri="fonts/ibm/"> + <!-- For a raster font a separate element for each font size is required providing + the font size and the corresponding IBM Character set name --> + <afp-raster-font size="7" characterset="C0N20070"/> + <afp-raster-font size="8" characterset="C0N20080"/> + <afp-raster-font size="10" characterset="C0N20000"/> + <afp-raster-font size="11" characterset="C0N200A0"/> + <afp-raster-font size="12" characterset="C0N200B0"/> + <afp-raster-font size="14" characterset="C0N200D0"/> + <afp-raster-font size="16" characterset="C0N200F0"/> + <afp-raster-font size="18" characterset="C0N200H0"/> + <afp-raster-font size="20" characterset="C0N200J0"/> + <afp-raster-font size="24" characterset="C0N200N0"/> + <afp-raster-font size="30" characterset="C0N200T0"/> + <afp-raster-font size="36" characterset="C0N200Z0"/> + </afp-font> + <!-- These are the usual FOP font triplets as they apply to this font --> + <font-triplet name="serif" style="normal" weight="normal"/> + <font-triplet name="Times" style="normal" weight="normal"/> + <font-triplet name="Times-Roman" style="normal" weight="normal"/> + <font-triplet name="TimesNewRoman" style="normal" weight="normal"/> + </font>]]></source> + <p>An outline font configuration is simpler as the individual font size entries are not required. + However, the characterset definition is now required within the afp-font element.</p> +<source><![CDATA[ <font> + <afp-font type="outline" codepage="T1V10500" encoding="Cp500" characterset="CZH200 " + base-uri="file:/fonts/ibm" /> + <font-triplet name="sans-serif" style="normal" weight="normal"/> + <font-triplet name="Helvetica" style="normal" weight="normal"/> + <font-triplet name="any" style="normal" weight="normal"/> + </font> +]]></source> + <p> + If "base-uri" is missing or a relative URI, the fonts are resolved relative to + the font base URI specified in the configuration (or on the FopFactory). + </p> + <note> + Previously, the location of the font files was given by the "path" attribute. This is still + supported for the time being, but you should move to using the more flexible "base-uri" + attribute so you can profit from the power of URI resolvers. + </note> + <p>A CID-keyed font (Type 0, double-byte outline font) configuration is much the same as an outline font. + However, the characterset definition is now required within the afp-font element.</p> +<source><![CDATA[ <font> + <afp-font type="CIDKeyed" characterset="CZJHMNU" + codepage="T1120000" encoding="UnicodeBigUnmarked" + base-uri="file:/fonts/ibm" /> + <font-triplet name="J-Heisei Mincho" style="normal" weight="normal" /> + </font> +]]></source> + <p> +Note that the value of the encoding attribute in the example is the double-byte encoding 'UnicodeBigUnmarked' (UTF-16BE). + </p> + <p>Experimentation has shown that the font metrics for the FOP built-in Base14 fonts are actually + very similar to some of the IBM outline and raster fonts. In cases were the IBM font files are not + available the base-uri attribute in the afp-font element can be replaced by a base14-font attribute + giving the name of the matching Base14 font. In this case the AFP Renderer will take the + font metrics from the built-in font.</p> +<source><![CDATA[ <!-- The following are examples of defining outline fonts based on FOP built-in + font metrics for the Adobe Base14 fonts --> + <!-- sans-serif fonts based on Helvetica --> + <font> + <afp-font type="outline" codepage="T1V10500" encoding="Cp500" characterset="CZH200 " + base14-font="Helvetica" /> + <font-triplet name="sans-serif" style="normal" weight="normal"/> + <font-triplet name="Helvetica" style="normal" weight="normal"/> + <font-triplet name="any" style="normal" weight="normal"/> + </font> + <font> + <afp-font type="outline" codepage="T1V10500" encoding="Cp500" characterset="CZH300 " + base14-font="HelveticaOblique" /> + <font-triplet name="sans-serif" style="italic" weight="normal"/> + <font-triplet name="Helvetica" style="italic" weight="normal"/> + <font-triplet name="any" style="italic" weight="normal"/> + </font> + <font> + <afp-font type="outline" codepage="T1V10500" encoding="Cp500" characterset="CZH400 " + base14-font="HelveticaBold" /> + <font-triplet name="sans-serif" style="normal" weight="bold"/> + <font-triplet name="Helvetica" style="normal" weight="bold"/> + <font-triplet name="any" style="normal" weight="bold"/> + </font> + <font> + <afp-font type="outline" codepage="T1V10500" encoding="Cp500" characterset="CZH500 " + base14-font="HelveticaBoldOblique" /> + <font-triplet name="sans-serif" style="italic" weight="bold"/> + <font-triplet name="Helvetica" style="italic" weight="bold"/> + <font-triplet name="any" style="italic" weight="bold"/> + </font> + + <!-- serif fonts based on Times Roman --> + <font> + <afp-font type="outline" codepage="T1V10500" encoding="Cp500" characterset="CZN200 " + base14-font="TimesRoman" /> + <font-triplet name="serif" style="normal" weight="normal"/> + <font-triplet name="Times" style="normal" weight="normal"/> + <font-triplet name="Times-Roman" style="normal" weight="normal"/> + </font> + + <!-- The following are examples of defining raster fonts based on FOP built-in + font metrics for the Adobe Base14 fonts --> + <!-- monospaced fonts based on Courier --> + <font> + <afp-font type="raster" codepage="T1V10500" encoding="Cp500"> + <afp-raster-font size="7" characterset="C0420070" base14-font="Courier"/> + <afp-raster-font size="8" characterset="C0420080" base14-font="Courier"/> + <afp-raster-font size="10" characterset="C0420000" base14-font="Courier"/> + <afp-raster-font size="12" characterset="C04200B0" base14-font="Courier"/> + <afp-raster-font size="14" characterset="C04200D0" base14-font="Courier"/> + <afp-raster-font size="20" characterset="C04200J0" base14-font="Courier"/> + </afp-font> + <font-triplet name="monospace" style="normal" weight="normal"/> + <font-triplet name="Courier" style="normal" weight="normal"/> + </font> + <font> + <afp-font type="raster" codepage="T1V10500" encoding="Cp500"> + <afp-raster-font size="7" characterset="C0440070" base14-font="CourierBold"/> + <afp-raster-font size="8" characterset="C0440080" base14-font="CourierBold"/> + <afp-raster-font size="10" characterset="C0440000" base14-font="CourierBold"/> + <afp-raster-font size="12" characterset="C04400B0" base14-font="CourierBold"/> + <afp-raster-font size="14" characterset="C04400D0" base14-font="CourierBold"/> + <afp-raster-font size="20" characterset="C04400J0" base14-font="CourierBold"/> + </afp-font> + <font-triplet name="monospace" style="normal" weight="bold"/> + <font-triplet name="Courier" style="normal" weight="bold"/> + </font>]]></source> + <p> + By default, all manually configured fonts are embedded, unless they are matched in the + <a href="fonts.html#embedding"><code>referenced-fonts</code> section of the configuration file</a>. + However, the default fonts shown above will not be embedded. + </p> + </section> + <section id="afp-renderer-resolution-config"> + <title>Output Resolution</title> + <p>By default the AFP Renderer creates output with a resolution of 240 dpi. + This can be overridden by the <renderer-resolution/> configuration element. Example:</p> + <source><![CDATA[ + <renderer-resolution>240</renderer-resolution>]]></source> + </section> + <section id="afp-image-config"> + <title>Images</title> + <p>By default the AFP Renderer converts all images to 8 bit grey level. + This can be overridden by the <images/> configuration element. Example:</p> + <source><![CDATA[ + <images mode="color" /> +]]></source> + <p>This will put images as RGB images into the AFP output stream. The default setting is:</p> + <source><![CDATA[ + <images mode="b+w" bits-per-pixel="8" native="true"/> +]]></source> + <p>Only the values "color" and "b+w" are allowed for the mode attribute.</p> + <p>The bits-per-pixel attribute is ignored if mode is "color". For "b+w" mode is must be 1, 4, or 8.</p> + <source><![CDATA[ + <images native="true"/> +]]></source> + <p>When the native attribute is specified and set to "true", all image resources will be natively injected + into the datastream using an object container rather than being converted into an IOCA FS45 image. + Support for native image formats (e.g. JPEG, TIFF, GIF) is not always available on printer implementations + so by default this configuration option is set to "false".</p> + <p> + Setting <code>cmyk="true"</code> on the <code>images</code> element will enable CMYK + colors. This will only have an effect if the color mode is set to "color". Example: + </p> + <source><![CDATA[ + <images mode="color" cmyk="true"/>]]></source> + <p> + When the color mode is set to 1 bit (bi-level), the "dithering-quality" attribute can + be used to select the level of quality to use when converting images to bi-level images. + Valid values for this attribute are floating point numbers from 0.0 (fastest) to + 1.0 (best), or special values: "minimum" (=0.0), "maximum" (1.0), + "medium" (0.5, the default). For the higher settings to work as expected, JAI needs to + be present in the classpath. If JAI is present, 0.0 results in a minimal darkness-level + switching between white and black. 0.5 does bayer-based dithering and 1.0 will use + error-diffusion dithering. The higher the value, the higher the quality and the slower + the processing of the images. + </p> + <source><![CDATA[ + <images mode="b+w" bits-per-pixel="1" dithering-quality="maximum"/>]]></source> + </section> + <section id="afp-shading-config"> + <title>Shading</title> + <p> + By default, filled rectangles are painted using their given color using a PTOCA I-axis rule + (DIR). But not all environments handle these colors correctly. That's why a setting is + supported that paints the rectangles using an ordered dither pattern (bi-level) with + an inline IOCA FS10 image that is used together with the "replicate and trim" mapping. + The optional "shading" element can be used to control the shading mode. Its default value + is "color". To enable the dithered mode, use "dithered". Example: + </p> + <source><![CDATA[ + <shading>dithered</shading> +]]></source> + </section> + <section id="afp-resource-group-file"> + <title>Resource Group File</title> + <p>By default the AFP Renderer will place all data resource objects such as images within + the document of the main output datastream. An external resource group file where document resources + may be specified with the <resource-group-file/> configuration element. Example:</p> + <source><![CDATA[ + <resource-group-file>external_resources.afp</resource-group-file> +]]></source> + <note>Be careful when using this option not to overwrite existing resource files from previous rendering runs.</note> + </section> + <section id="afp-resource-level-defaults"> + <title>Resource Level Defaults</title> + <p> + By default, bitmap image objects (or page segments derived from them) are put in the + print-file-level resource group and GOCA graphics are inlined for compatibility with + the AFP Workbench tool. + </p> + <p> + It is possible to override these defaults, either per image (see the + <link href="#afp-foreign-attributes-resource">afp:resource-level</link> + extension attribute below) or by specifying different defaults in the configuration: + </p> + <source><![CDATA[ +<default-resource-levels goca="print-file" bitmap="inline"/>]]></source> + <p> + "goca" refers to GOCA graphics and "bitmap" refers to IOCA images. The possible values + for the attributes are "inline" and "print-file". In the future, + additional possibilities may be added. + </p> + </section> + </section> + <section id="afp-extensions"> + <title>Extensions</title> + <p>The AFP Renderer supports some AFP specific extensions which can be embedded into the input + fo document. To use the extensions the appropriate namespace must be declared in the fo:root element like this:</p> + <source><![CDATA[ + <fo:root xmlns:fo="http://www.w3.org/1999/XSL/Format" + xmlns:afp="http://xmlgraphics.apache.org/fop/extensions/afp"> +]]></source> + <section id="afp-page-overlay"> + <title>Page Overlay (IPO) Extension</title> + <p>The include-page-overlay extension element allows to define on a per simple-page-master basis a page overlay resource. Example:</p> + <source><![CDATA[ + <fo:layout-master-set> + <fo:simple-page-master master-name="simple"> + <afp:include-page-overlay name="O1SAMP1 " x="20mm" y="30mm" /> + ... + </fo:simple-page-master> + </fo:layout-master-set> +]]></source> + <p>The mandatory name attribute must refer to an 8 character (space padded) resource name that + must be known in the AFP processing environment. Optional x and y attributes can be specified + to place the Overlay at an offset from the top left of the page.</p> + </section> + <section id="afp-page-segment"> + <title>Page Segment (IPS) Extension</title> + <p>The include-page-segment extension element allows to define resource substitution for fo:external-graphics elements. + Example:</p> + <source><![CDATA[ + <fo:root xmlns:fo="http://www.w3.org/1999/XSL/Format" + xmlns:afp="http://xmlgraphics.apache.org/fop/extensions/afp"> + <fo:layout-master-set> + <fo:simple-page-master master-name="simple"> + <afp:include-page-segment name="S1ISLOGO" src="../../resources/images/bgimg300dpi.jpg" /> + <fo:region-body/> + </fo:simple-page-master> + </fo:layout-master-set> +]]></source> + <p>The include-page-segment extension element can only occur within a simple-page-master. + Multiple include-page-segment extension elements within a simple-page-master are allowed. + The mandatory name attribute must refer to an 8 character + (space padded) resource name that must be known in the AFP processing environment. + The value of the mandatory src attribute is compared against the value of the src attribute in + fo:external-graphic elements and if it is identical (string matching is used) in the generated + AFP the external graphic is replaced by a reference to the given resource. + </p> + <p> + The effect here is that whenever FOP encounters the URI specified in the extension, + it will effectively generate code to include the page segment with the given name + instead of embedding the image referenced by the URI. The URI is still required as + the underlying image serves as a provider for the intrinsic size of the image + (At the moment, FOP is unable to extract the intrinsic size of the page segment from + an AFP resource file). For the image to appear in an AFP viewer or to be printed, the + AFP resource must be available on the target device. FOP does not embed the page + segment in the generated file. Please also note that page segments cannot be scaled. + They are always rendered in their intrinsic size. + </p> + </section> + <section id="afp-tag-logical-element"> + <title>Tag Logical Element (TLE) Extension</title> + <p>The tag-logical-element extension element allows to injects TLEs into the AFP output stream. Example:</p> + <source><![CDATA[ + <fo:root xmlns:fo="http://www.w3.org/1999/XSL/Format" + xmlns:afp="http://xmlgraphics.apache.org/fop/extensions/afp"> + <fo:layout-master-set> + <fo:simple-page-master master-name="simple"> + <afp:tag-logical-element name="The TLE Name" value="The TLE Value" /> + <fo:region-body/> + </fo:simple-page-master> + </fo:layout-master-set> + [..] + <fo:page-sequence master-reference="simple"> + <afp:tag-logical-element name="foo" value="bar"/> + <fo:flow flow-name="xsl-region-body"> + [..] +]]></source> + <p> + The tag-logical-element extension element can appear within a simple-page-master + (page level) or it can appear as child of page-sequence (page group level). + Multiple tag-logical-element extension elements within a simple-page-master or + page-sequence are allowed. The name and value attributes are mandatory. + </p> + </section> + <section id="afp-no-operation"> + <title>No Operation (NOP) Extension</title> + <p>The no-operation extension provides the ability to carry up to 32K of comments or any other type + of unarchitected data into the AFP output stream. Example:</p> + <source><![CDATA[ + <fo:root xmlns:fo="http://www.w3.org/1999/XSL/Format" + xmlns:afp="http://xmlgraphics.apache.org/fop/extensions/afp"> + <fo:layout-master-set> + <fo:simple-page-master master-name="simple"> + <afp:no-operation name="My NOP">insert up to 32k of character data here!</afp:no-operation> + </fo:simple-page-master> + </fo:layout-master-set> +]]></source> + <p>The no-operation extension element can only occur within a simple-page-master. + Multiple no-operation extension elements within a simple-page-master are allowed. + The name attribute is mandatory. + </p> + </section> + <section id="afp-invoke-medium-map"> + <title>Invoke Medium Map (IMM) Extension</title> + <p> + The invoke-medium-map extension allows to generate IMM fields (Invoke Medium Map) in the + generated AFP output. Example: + </p> + <source><![CDATA[ + <fo:root xmlns:fo="http://www.w3.org/1999/XSL/Format" + xmlns:afp="http://xmlgraphics.apache.org/fop/extensions/afp"> + [..] + <fo:page-sequence master-reference="normal"> + <afp:invoke-medium-map name="MYMAP"/> + <fo:flow flow-name="xsl-region-body"> + [..] +]]></source> + <p> + The invoke-medium-map element is allowed as child of fo:page-sequence (page group + level) or fo:simple-page-master. It is NOT supported on document level (fo:root), yet. + FOP also doesn't support specifying medium maps inside XML (using BMM/EMM). It can + only reference an existing medium map by name. The medium map has to be constructed + through different means and available on the target platform. + </p> + </section> + <section id="afp-form-maps"> + <title>Form Maps/Defs</title> + <p> + Apache FOP supports embedding an external form map resource in the + generated AFP output. This is done using the <code>afp:include-form-map</code> + extension. An example: + </p> + <source><![CDATA[ +<fo:root xmlns:fo="http://www.w3.org/1999/XSL/Format" + xmlns:afp="http://xmlgraphics.apache.org/fop/extensions/afp"> + [..] + <fo:declarations> + <afp:include-form-map name="F1SAMP1" src="file:f1samp1.fde"/> + </fo:declarations> +]]></source> + <p> + The <code>afp:include-form-map</code> is to be placed as a direct child of + <code>fo:declarations</code>. The <code>name</code> is an AFP resource name + (max. 8 characters) and the <code>src</code> attribute is the URI identifying the + external form map resource. When such a form map is embedded, you can use the + <code>afp:invoke-medium-map</code> extension (described above) to invoke any medium + map included in the form map. + </p> + <note> + Apache FOP doesn't support a way to define a form map or medium map using XML means + inside an XSL-FO document. You will have to build the form map with some third-party + tool. + </note> + </section> + </section> + <section id="afp-foreign-attributes"> + <title>Foreign Attributes</title> + <section id="afp-foreign-attributes-resource"> + <title>Resource</title> + <p>The resource foreign attributes provides the ability to name and control where data object resources + (e.g. images/scalable vector graphics) will reside in the AFP output. + The afp foreign attributes are only used in conjuntion with <fo:external-graphic/> and <instream-foreign-object/>. + Example:</p> + <source><![CDATA[ + <fo:root xmlns:fo="http://www.w3.org/1999/XSL/Format" + xmlns:afp="http://xmlgraphics.apache.org/fop/extensions/afp"> + ... + <fo:block> + <fo:external-graphic width="2.0cm" content-width="2.0cm" height="1.8cm" content-height="1.8cm" + src="examples/fo/graphics/xml_feather.gif" + afp:resource-name="feather" afp:resource-level="external" afp:resource-group-file="resources.afp"/> + </fo:block> + <fo:block> + <fo:instream-foreign-object height="758.047pt" content-height="758.047pt" width="576.96pt" content-width="576.96pt" + afp:resource-name"circles" afp:resource-level="inline"> + <svg xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2000/svg" width="12cm" height="12cm"> + <g style="fill-opacity:0.7; stroke:black; stroke-width:0.1cm;"> + <circle cx="6cm" cy="2cm" r="100" style="fill:red;" transform="translate(0,50)" /> + <circle cx="6cm" cy="2cm" r="100" style="fill:blue;" transform="translate(70,150)" /> + <circle cx="6cm" cy="2cm" r="100" style="fill:green;" transform="translate(-70,150)"/> + </g> + </svg> + </fo:instream-foreign-object> + </fo:block> +]]></source> + <p>The resource-level attribute where the resource object will reside in the AFP output datastream. + The possible values for this are "inline", "print-file" and "external". + When "external" is used a resource-group-file attribute must also be specified. + Please refer to the <link href="#afp-resource-level-defaults">Resource Level Defaults</link> + above to see what is used if the resource-level attribute is not specified. + </p> + <p></p> + </section> + </section> + </section> +<section id="rtf"> + <title>RTF</title> + <p> + JFOR, an open source XSL-FO to RTF converter has been integrated into Apache FOP. + This will create an RTF (rich text format) document that will + attempt to contain as much information from the XSL-FO document as + possible. It should be noted that is not possible (due to RTF's limitations) to map all + XSL-FO features to RTF. For complex documents, the RTF output will never reach the feature + level from PDF, for example. Thus, using RTF output is only recommended for simple documents + such as letters. + </p> + <p> + The RTF output follows Microsoft's RTF specifications + and produces best results on Microsoft Word. + </p> + <note>RTF output is currently unmaintained and lacks many features compared to other output + formats. Using other editable formats like Open Document Format, instead of producing XSL-FO + then RTF through FOP, might give better results.</note> + <p> + These are some known restrictions compared to other supported output formats (not a complete list): + </p> + <ul> + <li> + Not supported/implemented: + <ul> + <li>break-before/after (supported by the RTF library but not tied into the RTFHandler)</li> + <li>fo:page-number-citation-last</li> + <li>keeps (supported by the RTF library but not tied into the RTFHandler)</li> + <li>region-start/end (RTF limitation)</li> + <li>multiple columns</li> + </ul> + </li> + <li>Only a single page-master is supported</li> + <li>Not all variations of fo:leader are supported (RTF limitation)</li> + <li>percentages are not supported everywhere</li> + </ul> +</section> +<section id="xml"> + <title>XML (Area Tree XML)</title> + <p> + This is primarily for testing and verification. The XML created is simply + a representation of the internal area tree put into XML. We use that to verify + the functionality of FOP's layout engine. + </p> + <p> + The other use case of the Area Tree XML is as FOP's "intermediate format". More information + on that can be found on the page dedicated to the <a href="intermediate.html">Intermediate Format</a>. + </p> +</section> +<section id="awt"> + <title>Java2D/AWT</title> + <p> + The Java2DRenderer provides the basic functionality for all + Java2D-based output formats (AWT viewer, direct print, PNG, TIFF). + </p> + <p> + The AWT viewer shows a window with the pages displayed inside a + Java graphic. It displays one page at a time. + The fonts used for the formatting and viewing depend on the fonts + available to your JRE. + </p> +</section> +<section id="print"> + <title>Print</title> + <p> + It is possible to directly print the document from the command line. + This is done with the same code that renders to the Java2D/AWT renderer. + </p> + <section id="print-issues"> + <title>Known issues</title> + <p> + If you run into the problem that the printed output is incomplete on Windows: + this often happens to users printing to a PCL printer. + There seems to be an incompatibility between Java and certain PCL printer drivers + on Windows. Since most network-enabled laser printers support PostScript, try + switching to the PostScript printer driver for that printer model. + </p> + </section> +</section> +<section id="bitmap"> + <title>Bitmap (TIFF/PNG)</title> + <p> + It is possible to directly create bitmap images from the individual + pages generated by the layout engine. + This is done with the same code that renders to the Java2D/AWT renderer. + </p> + <p> + Currently, two output formats are supported: PNG and TIFF. TIFF produces + one file with multiple pages, while PNG output produces one file per + page. Note: FOP can only produce multiple files (with PNG output) if + you can set a <code>java.io.File</code> indicating the primary PNG file + using the <code>FOUserAgent.setOutputFile(File)</code> method. + </p> + <p> + The quality of the bitmap depends on the target resolution setting + on the FOUserAgent and on further settings described below. + </p> + <section id="bitmap-configuration"> + <title>Configuration</title> + <p> + The TIFF and PNG renderer configuration currently allows the following settings: + </p> +<source><![CDATA[<renderer mime="image/png"> + <color-mode>rgba</color-mode> + <transparent-page-background>true</transparent-page-background> + <background-color>white</background-color> + <anti-aliasing>true</anti-aliasing> + <rendering>quality</rendering> + <fonts><!-- described elsewhere --></fonts> +</renderer>]]></source> + <p> + The default value for the <code>"color-mode"</code> setting is <code>"rgba"</code> which + is equivalent to a 24bit RGB image with an 8bit alpha channel for transparency. + Valid values are: + </p> + <ul> + <li><code>rgba</code>: RGB with alpha channel (24bit + 8bit = 32bit)</li> + <li><code>rgb</code>: RGB (24bit)</li> + <li><code>gray</code>: gray (8bit)</li> + <li><code>bi-level</code> (or <code>binary</code>): bi-level (1bit)</li> + </ul> + <p> + Please note that there is currently no dithering or error diffusion available for bi-level + bitmap output. + </p> + <p> + The default value for the <code>"transparent-page-background"</code> setting is + <code>"false"</code> which paints an opaque, white background for the whole image. + If you set this to <code>"true"</code>, + no such background will be painted and you will get a transparent image if + an alpha channel is available in the output format. + </p> + <p> + The default value for the <code>"background-color"</code> setting is <code>"white"</code>. + The color specifies in which color the page background is painted. It will only be + painted if <code>"transparent-page-background"</code> is not set to <code>"true"</code>. + All XSL-FO colors (including color functions) can be used. + </p> + <p> + The default value for the <code>"anti-aliasing"</code> setting is <code>"true"</code>. + You can set this value to <code>"false"</code> to disable anti-aliasing and + thus improve rendering speeds a bit at the loss of some image quality. + </p> + <p> + The default value for the <code>"rendering"</code> setting is <code>"true"</code>. + You can set this value to <code>"false"</code> to improve rendering speeds a bit + at the loss of some image quality. If this setting has an actual effect depends + on the JVM's Java2D backend. + </p> + </section> + <section id="tiff-configuration"> + <title>TIFF-specific Configuration</title> + <p> + In addition to the above values the TIFF renderer configuration allows some additional + settings: + </p> +<source><![CDATA[<renderer mime="image/tiff"> + <transparent-page-background>true</transparent-page-background> + <compression>CCITT T.6</compression> + <fonts><!-- described elsewhere --></fonts> +</renderer>]]></source> + <p> + The default value for the "compression" setting is "PackBits" which + which is a widely supported RLE compression scheme for TIFF. The set of compression + names to be used here matches the set that the Image I/O API uses. Note that + not all compression schemes may be available during runtime. This depends on the + actual codecs being available. Here is a list of possible values: + </p> + <ul> + <li><code>NONE</code> (no compression)</li> + <li><code>PackBits</code> (RLE, run-length encoding)</li> + <li><code>JPEG</code></li> + <li><code>Deflate</code></li> + <li><code>LZW</code></li> + <li><code>ZLib</code></li> + <li><code>CCITT T.4</code> (Fax Group 3)</li> + <li><code>CCITT T.6</code> (Fax Group 4)</li> + </ul> + <p> + This setting may override any setting made using the <code>"color-mode"</code>. For example, if + <code>"CCITT T.6"</code> is selected, the color mode is automatically forced to <code>"bi-level"</code> because + this compression format only supports bi-level images. + </p> + <note> + If you want to use CCITT compression, please make sure you've got + <a href="http://java.sun.com/products/java-media/jai/current.html"> + Java Advanced Imaging Image I/O Tools + </a> + in your classpath. The Sun JRE doesn't come with a TIFF codec built in, so it has to be + added separately. The internal TIFF codec from XML Graphics Commons only supports PackBits, + Deflate and JPEG compression for writing. + </note> + </section> + <section id="bitmap-rendering-options"> + <title>Runtime Rendering Options</title> + <p> + The IF-based bitmap output implementations support a rendering option with the key + "target-bitmap-size" (value: java.awt.Dimension) that allows to force the pages to + be proportionally fit into a bitmap of a given size. This can be used to produce + thumbnails or little preview images of the individual pages. An example: + </p> + <source><![CDATA[userAgent.getRenderingOptions().put( + "target-bitmap-size", new Dimension(320, 200));]]></source> + </section> +</section> +<section id="txt"> + <title>TXT</title> + <p> + The text renderer produces plain ASCII text output + that attempts to match the output of the PDFRenderer as closely as + possible. This was originally developed to accommodate an archive system + that could only accept plain text files, and is primarily useful for getting + a quick-and-dirty view of the document text. The renderer is very limited, + so do not be surprised if it gives unsatisfactory results. + </p> + <p> + The Text renderer works with a fixed size page buffer. The size of this + buffer is controlled with the textCPI and textLPI public variables. + The textCPI is the effective horizontal characters per inch to use. + The textLPI is the vertical lines per inch to use. From these values + and the page width and height the size of the buffer is calculated. + The formatting objects to be rendered are then mapped to this grid. + Graphic elements (lines, borders, etc) are assigned a lower priority + than text, so text will overwrite any graphic element representations. + </p> + <p> + Because FOP lays the text onto a grid during layout, there are frequently + extra or missing spaces between characters and lines, which is generally + unsatisfactory. + Users have reported that the optimal settings to avoid such spacing problems are: + </p> + <ul> + <li>font-family="Courier"</li> + <li>font-size="7.3pt"</li> + <li>line-height="10.5pt"</li> + </ul> +</section> +<section id="sandbox"> + <title>Output Formats in the Sandbox</title> + <p> + Due to the state of certain renderers we moved some of them to a "sandbox" area until + they are ready for more serious use. The renderers and FOEventHandlers in the sandbox + can be found under src/sandbox and are compiled into build/fop-sandbox.jar during the + main build. The output formats in the sandbox are marked as such below. + </p> + <section id="mif"> + <title>MIF</title> + <warning>The MIF handler is in the sandbox and not yet functional in FOP Trunk!!! Please help us ressurrect this feature.</warning> + <p> + This format is the Maker Interchange Format which is used by + Adobe Framemaker. + </p> + </section> + <section id="svg"> + <title>SVG</title> + <warning>The SVG renderer is in the sandbox and may not work as expected in FOP Trunk!!! Please help us improve this feature.</warning> + <p> + This format creates an SVG document that has links between the pages. + This is primarily for slides and creating svg images of pages. + Large documents will create SVG files that are far too large for + an SVG viewer to handle. Since FO documents usually have text the + SVG document will have a large number of text elements. + The font information for the text is obtained from the JVM in the + same way as for the AWT viewer. If the SVG is viewed on a + system where the fonts are different, such as another platform, + then the page may look wrong. + </p> + </section> +</section> +<section id="wishlist"> + <title>Wish list</title> + <p> + Apache FOP is easily extensible and allows you to add new output formats to enhance FOP's functionality. There's a number of output formats + which are on our wish list. We're looking for volunteers to help us implement them. + </p> + <ul> + <li> + <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/OpenDocument">ODF (Open Document Format)</a>: + The standardized successor to OpenOffice's file format. + </li> + </ul> +</section> + + </body> +</document> + + + |