Printoxx User Guide v.2.0
Printoxx
is a free open source Linux program for arranging images and text on a
layout sheet, which may be printed or saved as an image.
License and Warranty
Printoxx
is licensed under the GNU General Public License V2 (Free Software
Foundation). Printoxx is not warranted for any purpose, but if you find
a
bug, I will try to fix it.
Origin and Contact
Printoxx originates
from the author's web site at http://kornelix.squarespace.com/printoxx
Other web sites may
offer it for download. Modifications may have been made.
If you have questions,
suggestions, or a bug to report, contact kornelix@yahoo.de
Using
printoxx
Start printoxx
by clicking the desktop launcher or with the command printoxx.
The window will show a blank print layout. Use the [setup] button
to select paper format, orientation,
and printer. The blank print layout
will
change to match the printer setup.

Use the button [+image] to choose images files to place on
the layout. In the file selection dialog, click an image file,
then click somewhere on the layout. The image is depositied on the
layout. Drag the image to the desired position. Drag any corner of the
image to make it bigger or smaller. To rotate the image,
use the [rotate] button. To add a simple frame around the image, use
the [frame] button. Repeat clicking on files and depositing on the
layout until done. Move the images around to make the final
arrangement. Files may also be added using drag and drop from Nautilus.

Use the button [+text] to add blocks of text to the layout. Enter
text, then click on an empty spot on the layout. The text is deposited
on the
layout. Drag the text into final position. Drag from either end of the
text to
change its size. Move the text and images around and change their sizes
as desired. If "transparent" is selected when the text is deposited,
the text background will be transparent (for writing on top of an
image). Blocks of text may also be dragged onto the layout from
applications that support this functionality (gedit, evince). Text may
also be rotated.

Use the [print] button
to print the completed layout. Use the [save]
button to save the layout as a JPEG image file, which you
can print later or with another program.
Thumbnail
Index
The
button [index] shows a thumbnail index window with images in the
current directory. You can click on a thumbnail image and then click on
the layout window to add the image to the layout. The
navigation buttons in the thumbnail window can be used to move
around in your image library.

Further
Tips
1. Images may overlap:
those added later will cover those added earlier. Clicking on an
image that is partly covered will bring it to the top.
2. Text strings are actually images of text, and are handled the
same as images.
3. An image or text can
be deleted by right-clicking on it.
4. The [rotate] button applies to the last image or text
inserted, clicked, or moved.
5. For the CUPS printing system (the usual case with Linux), the print
command $
lp will print JPEG images directly, and printoxx relies on this
capability. I
don't know about other printing systems. If printing does not
work, save the layout with the [save] button and print the
resulting
JPEG file with some other program, e.g. gimp or gthumb.
6. The dialogs for
adding images and text may be open at the same time, so you can
alternate between adding images and adding text without closing either
dialog.
7. My
testing has been limited to Ubuntu with CUPS and an HP
printer. Paper formats US letter, A4, A5, and A6 seem to work OK, but
formats smaller than A6 revert to A4. This may be a
limitation of my printer.
Translations
See the text file TRANSLATIONS ( /usr/local/share/doc/printoxx/ ) for
guidance on how to modify an existing translation or make one for
another language.