• <ins id="pjuwb"></ins>
    <blockquote id="pjuwb"><pre id="pjuwb"></pre></blockquote>
    <noscript id="pjuwb"></noscript>
          <sup id="pjuwb"><pre id="pjuwb"></pre></sup>
            <dd id="pjuwb"></dd>
            <abbr id="pjuwb"></abbr>

            Thronds

            一問你會什么 二問你做出過什么 三問你為了什么

              C++博客 :: 首頁 :: 新隨筆 :: 聯系 :: 聚合  :: 管理 ::
              36 隨筆 :: 0 文章 :: 56 評論 :: 0 Trackbacks

            PDF's progenitor PostScript is a page description language that was invented in 1982, also by Adobe. It is an interpreted language with postfix (RPN) notation and is thus very flexible. In contrast, PDF is a file format describing the position and nature of text and pictorial content (in raster or vector format), which makes it easier to parse and process. To learn more about the relationship of PostScript and PDF, see .

            Adobe Reader

            Adobe's own Adobe Reader was the first program written to display PDF files. It's a sibling to Adobe Acrobat, a commercial program that handles the creation and modification of PDF files.

            Available since version 3 for Linux, Adobe Reader is the viewer that supports the format best. For example, it is the only Linux program that handles form fields (although you cannot save their content). Version 6 of the software did not feature a Linux port, inciting some disgruntled Linux users to scoff at the "Portable" portion of "PDF." In version 7, Adobe resumed development of the Linux port and changed the GUI toolkit for Adobe Reader from Motif to Gtk+ 2. Since version 6, Adobe Reader has also supported JavaScript, thus diminishing the gap with PostScript.

            The installation file of 7.0.8, the current version, is a whopping 47MB, and it requires you to have the Gtk+ 2 libraries on your system (which need another 20MB). Adobe Reader's plugin architecture enables you to have special add-ons from Adobe and third parties, and it offers features out of the box that most or all other readers do not have, including support for digital signatures and a function that reads the textual content to you.

            Adobe Reader is your only choice if you want to view PDFs in a Netscape, Mozilla, Firefox, or Opera browser window, since it comes with a Netscape 4-compatible plugin. But it is the heaviest among the programs featured in this comparison, and the lack of speed with which the browser plugin starts the application can impair your Web browsing experience. However, once started, Adobe Reader renders pages quickly. It doesn't cache page thumbnails, though, so when a thumbnail is occluded by other windows and then exposed again, it needs to be regenerated. Note that Adobe Reader's features might also be detrimental to your security.

            Xpdf

            The Xpdf package was the first third-party alternative to Adobe Reader for Linux systems. It appeared about three years after Reader. Xpdf's interface might be described as spartan, and it still relies on the Motif toolkit to render its appearance. It renders pages exceptionally fast, and allows you to zoom, rotate, and search documents. Printing an arbitrary range of pages is also supported, albeit only by piping PostScript to a program or file. Since it is designed to be lightweight, Xpdf is a good tool to use to quickly skim through a PDF file, or read through a file with only a few pages. Xpdf is the only viewer among this group that does not support page thumbnails, but it will display a textual outline if the document has one.

            Xpdf's code was taken as the basis for the rendering engines of Evince, ePDFView, and KPDF, as we shall discuss in a moment. Since it wasn't written with code reuse in mind, the integration of the rendering engine into other programs was done by simply copying code. The maintenance problems resulting from this finally led to the separation and relocation of Xpdf's rendering engine into the Poppler library.

            Evince

            Evince is a GNOME program designed to provide a consistent interface for interaction with multiple document formats. It currently supports PDF, PostScript, DjVu, TIFF, and DVI.

            If you took Xpdf, made it use the GNOME libraries for its interface, removed the buttons to navigate in 10-page increments, and added better print support, you'd have Evince. As a side effect, probably due to the usage of Gtk+, Evince takes a lot longer than Xpdf to render pages.

            If you like the PDF part of Evince, but do not wish to install the GNOME libraries, ePDFView might be for you. However, in Evince, the pages of a document with some formulas and simple vector graphics in it display almost instantly, whereas ePDFView can take as long as a few seconds per page to process them.

            KPDF

            The PDF viewer of the KDE project, KPDF, is the strongest competitor of Adobe Reader. It starts up faster, renders at least equally fast, and supports most of the features of Adobe Reader. It employs thumbnail caching, so rendering is only done once.

            KPDF can be used as a standalone application, but it also runs as a Konqueror plugin. When viewing documents with the plugin, the Konqueror and KPDF interface elements are merged, as opposed to the Adobe Reader plugin in other browsers, where interface elements are duplicated, missing, or inoperative.

            KPDF's text-to-speech engine and user-defined color adaptation enhance accessibility, and the "filter as you type" thumbnail search makes selecting relevant pages quick and easy. If your hands need rest and you don't want to listen to a computer voice, you may also use automatic scrolling mode to read your document. Since KPDF is a KDE application, it uses the excellent printing interface of the KDE desktop.

            The KDE project has plans for providing a consistent interface to the popular document formats, called okular, but, unlike GNOME's similar Evince, it isn't ready for production use yet.

            Foxit Reader

            A pdf reader used to support Windows only. Foxit Reader now supports Linux! It comes with only one executable file. It has been tested on Fedora 4 and SuSE Linux 10.0. It is provided by Foxit Software Company free for non-commercial use.

            Recommendations

            If you have a choice, I recommend using a combination of Xpdf and KPDF to view PDF files. I'd rather copy and paste a URL leading to a PDF document into Konqueror and use the KPDF browser plugin than wait for the Acrobat Reader plugin to stuff its megabytes into my memory. Of course, you can also just instruct your browser to open PDF files with your favorite viewer, thus removing the dependency on plugins. Okular looks promising for people who don't like the "keep it plain" philosophy of the GNOME project that shows in Evince. Also, check out DjVu if your content is mainly in raster format (this is especially true for scanned documents and photographs).

            [1]http://www.linux-ren.org/modules/newbb/viewtopic.php?topic_id=2285

            posted on 2008-12-29 23:26 thronds 閱讀(4195) 評論(1)  編輯 收藏 引用 所屬分類: Linux桌面技術

            評論

            # re: Linux下的PDF閱讀器概覽 2009-01-02 13:08 gama
            現在用KPDF  回復  更多評論
              

            久久精品国产99国产电影网 | av无码久久久久久不卡网站| 精品久久久久香蕉网| 无码人妻久久一区二区三区免费| 91精品国产色综久久| 日韩精品久久无码人妻中文字幕 | 九九99精品久久久久久| 久久WWW免费人成—看片| 久久精品人人做人人爽97| 欧美久久亚洲精品| 精品国产福利久久久| 九九久久精品无码专区| 97香蕉久久夜色精品国产| 欧美麻豆久久久久久中文| 久久无码人妻一区二区三区| 国产精品va久久久久久久| 久久精品国产亚洲AV香蕉| 久久精品二区| 亚洲国产一成久久精品国产成人综合| 久久久久久狠狠丁香| 精品久久久久久久无码| 久久综合色老色| 久久亚洲精品国产精品| 国产精品激情综合久久| 国产成人精品免费久久久久| 久久久久波多野结衣高潮| 亚洲va久久久噜噜噜久久狠狠 | 久久99久久99精品免视看动漫| 亚洲精品97久久中文字幕无码| 国产A级毛片久久久精品毛片| …久久精品99久久香蕉国产| 久久国产精品一国产精品金尊| 久久久久久免费视频| 日日狠狠久久偷偷色综合96蜜桃| 久久国产视频网| 精品久久久久久无码中文野结衣| 国产精品一久久香蕉国产线看观看| 国产成年无码久久久免费| 久久99热国产这有精品| 久久777国产线看观看精品| 99久久精品国产免看国产一区|