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--survey=SURVEY
Only load the sub-survey SURVEY
-e, --elevation
select elevation
-p, --plan
select plan view
-b, --bearing=BEARING
set bearing
-t, --tilt=TILT
set tilt
-s, --scale=SCALE
set scale
-n, --station-names
display station names
-c, --crosses
display crosses at stations
-B, --no-border
turn off the solid border around the edge of the survey.
Printing to dot-matrix and inkjet printers can be significantly faster without
this border as the printhead usually doesn't need to move all the way to the
edge of the paper.
-C, --no-cutlines
If a printout takes more than one page, alignment ticks are
printed where the page corners need to be joined. By default dash lines are
also drawn along internal edges to facilitate trimming down the page with
scissors. If you have a guillotine, the alignment ticks are sufficient for
trimming the page and this option allows you to turn off the dashed lines.
-l, --no-legs
turn off display of survey legs
-S, --surface
turn on display of surface survey legs. By default only
underground survey legs are shown.
-k, --skip-blanks
don't output blank pages With this option pages which are blank
(apart from alignment marks and borders) will not be printed.
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-o, --output=OUTPUT
set output file
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--calibrate
print out calibration page
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When you run the printer driver you will be asked if you want a
plan or elevation (enter
For a plan enter bearing up the page, in degrees, 0 indicating North
at the top of the page (the default).
For an elevation enter the angle of view (i.e. the compass bearing
from which the scene is viewed), and angle of tilt, where 0 is
horizontal, - is looking down from above, and + is looking up from
below, so -90 is the same as plan view.
For an extended elevation, no viewing angles are needed.
You'll be told the scale needed to fit the plot on one page, and
be asked what scale you want to use. The you're told how many
pages this will take (and the arrangement of those pages (e.g. 6 pages
(2x3)) and have the opportunity to print, quit, or change the scale (so
you can repeat this process until you have a scale and number of pages
you are happy with).
You can then print all the pages, a range of pages, or any arbitrary
list of pages and ranges (handy for when your printer mangles a page).
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The configuration file
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