Harlequin RIP OEM Manual 8.3 Release Navigator 9 User
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Navigator RIP
User Manual
Version 9
November 2011
for Windows
Copyright and Trademarks
Harlequin PLUS Server RIP
June 2011
Document issue: 106
Copyright © 2011 Global Graphics Software Ltd. All rights reserved.
Certificate of Computer Registration of Computer Software. Registration No. 2006SR05517
No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise, without the prior written permission of Global Graphics Software
Ltd.
The information in this publication is provided for information only and is subject to change without notice. Global Graphics
Software Ltd and its affiliates assume no responsibility or liability for any loss or damage that may arise from the use of any
information in this publication. The software described in this book is furnished under license and may only be used or copied in accordance with the terms of that license.
Harlequin is a registered trademark of Global Graphics Software Ltd.
The Global Graphics Software logo, the Harlequin at Heart Logo, Cortex, Harlequin RIP, Harlequin ColorPro, EasyTrap,
FireWorks, FlatOut, Harlequin Color Management System (HCMS), Harlequin Color Production Solutions (HCPS),
Harlequin Color Proofing (HCP), Harlequin Error Diffusion Screening Plugin 1-bit (HEDS1), Harlequin Error Diffusion
Screening Plugin 2-bit (HEDS2), Harlequin Full Color System (HFCS), Harlequin ICC Profile Processor (HIPP), Harlequin
Standard Color System (HSCS), Harlequin Chain Screening (HCS), Harlequin Display List Technology (HDLT), Harlequin
Dispersed Screening (HDS), Harlequin Micro Screening (HMS), Harlequin Precision Screening (HPS), HQcrypt, Harlequin
Screening Library (HSL), ProofReady, Scalable Open Architecture (SOAR), SetGold, SetGoldPro, TrapMaster, TrapWorks,
TrapPro, TrapProLite, Harlequin RIP Eclipse Release and Harlequin RIP Genesis Release are all trademarks of Global
Graphics Software Ltd.
Protected by U.S. Patents 5,579,457; 5,808,622; 5,784,049; 5,862,253; 6,343,145; 6,330,072; 6,483,524; 6,380,951;
6,755,498; 6,624,908; 6,809,839.
Other U.S. Patents Pending
Protected by European Patents 0 803 160; 0 772 934; 0 896 771; 672 29 760.8-08.
Portions licensed under U.S. Patent No. 5,212,546; 4,941,038.
TrueType is a registered trademark of Apple Computer, Inc.
The ECI and FOGRA ICC color profiles supplied with this Harlequin RIP are distributed with the kind permission of the ECI
(European Color Initiative) and FOGRA respectively, and of Heidelberger Druckmaschinen AG (HEIDELBERG).
The IFRA ICC profiles supplied with this Global Graphics Software are distributed with the kind permission of IFRA and of
GretagMacbeth.
International Cooperation for Integration of Processes in Prepress, Press and Postpress, CIP4, Job Definition Format, JDF
and the CIP4 logo are trademarks of CIP4.
Adobe, Adobe Photoshop, Adobe Type Manager, Acrobat, Display PostScript, Adobe Illustrator, PostScript, Distiller and
PostScript 3 are either registered trademarks or trademarks of Adobe Systems Incorporated in the United States and/or other
countries which may be registered in certain jurisdictions.
Global Graphics Software Ltd is a licensee of Pantone, Inc. PANTONE Colors generated by ScriptWorks are four-color process simulations and may not match PANTONE-identified solid color standards. Consult current PANTONE Color Publications for accurate color. PANTONE , Hexachrome , and PANTONE CALIBRATED™ are trademarks of Pantone, Inc. ©
Pantone, Inc., 1991.
®
®
®
Other brand or product names are the registered trademarks or trademarks of their respective holders.
Navigator RIP v9.0: November 2011
User Manual
iii
US Government Use
Harlequin RIP software is a computer software program developed at private expense and is subject to the following Restricted Rights Legend: “Use, duplication, or disclosure by the United States Government is subject to restrictions as set forth in (i) FAR 52.227-14 Alt III or (ii) FAR 52.227-19, as applicable. Use by
agencies of the Department of Defense (DOD) is subject to Global Graphics Software’s customary commercial license as contained in the accompanying
license agreement, in accordance with DFAR 227.7202-1(a). For purposes of the FAR, the Software shall be deemed to be ‘unpublished’ and licensed with
disclosure prohibitions, rights reserved under the copyright laws of the United States.” Global Graphics Software Incorporated, 31 Nagog Park, Suite 315,
Acton MA 01720.
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User Manual
Navigator RIP v9.0: November 2011
Preface 1
Introduction to the Navigator RIP 7
1.1
1.2
1.3
What is the Navigator RIP? 7
Why use the Navigator RIP? 8
The Navigator RIP in depth 9
Running the Navigator RIP 25
2.1
2.2
2.3
2.4
2.5
2.6
Machine requirements 25
Installing printer interface cards 29
Navigator RIP folder structure 29
Starting up the Navigator RIP 33
Menus affected by optional features 39
Stopping the Navigator RIP 41
Getting Started with the Navigator RIP 43
3.1
3.2
3.3
3.4
A simple Navigator RIP session 43
A more complex use of the Navigator RIP 52
Using the Navigator RIP with a spool folder 54
Monitoring the Navigator RIP 55
Navigator RIP Output Methods 57
4.1
4.2
4.3
4.4
4.5
Historical overview 57
Page buffering modes 57
The throughput system 59
Advanced details of page buffering modes 70
Page buffering modes: a summary 73
Configuring Output Formats 75
5.1
5.2
5.3
5.4
5.5
5.6
5.7
5.8
5.9
5.10
5.11
5.12
5.13
5.14
Creating and managing Page Setups 75
Page Setup Manager dialog box 76
Edit Page Setup dialog box 77
Selecting different devices 80
Sending output to the screen 82
Output to Preview 86
Output to None 87
Output to TIFF 87
Output to PDF Raster 100
Sending output to a printer 105
ProofReady plugins 106
Multiple device output plugins 107
Output plugin dialog boxes 110
Separations, Screening and Color 110
5.15
5.16
5.17
5.18
5.19
5.20
5.21
5.22
5.23
5.24
5.25
5.26
5.27
5.28
Advanced Media Saving 112
Media and time saving using optimization 119
Default page size 120
Margins 120
Printing effects 121
Control strip 122
Scaling the image 132
Features 133
Cassette management 135
Page Setup Options 135
Page Setup Option Extras 140
PDF Options 143
Calibration 143
XPS Options 145
Screening 147
6.1
6.2
6.3
6.4
6.5
6.6
6.7
6.8
6.9
6.10
6.11
6.12
Managing separations styles 147
Separations Manager dialog box 147
Edit Style dialog box 149
Halftoning 149
Screen angles 154
Dot shapes 156
Halftone frequency 159
Screening options and number of gray levels 159
Job settings and Navigator RIP settings 163
Harlequin Precision Screening 164
Screening Library 170
Automatic detection of color separations 176
Configuring the RIP 177
7.1
7.2
7.3
7.4
Configure RIP dialog box 178
How the Navigator RIP controls files 178
Control of page buffering modes 179
Job timeout 182
7.5
7.6
7.7
7.8
7.9
7.10
7.11
7.12
7.13
Threads and parallel processing 182
Printer buffer size 184
Extras 185
Specifying prep files 186
Navigator RIP memory allocation 186
Minimum free disk space 188
Disable sounds 188
Resetting the Navigator RIP to default values
Choosing the user interface language 188
188
Configuring Input 191
8.1
8.2
8.3
8.4
8.5
8.6
8.7
8.8
8.9
8.10
8.11
8.12
8.13
8.14
8.15
8.16
8.17
8.18
8.19
8.20
8.21
Input management 192
Managing input plugins 193
Using the AppleTalk input plugin 196
Using the NT Pipe input 197
Using the Spool Folder input folder 200
Using the Socket input plugin 205
Using the Asynchronous Socket plugin 210
Using the Asynchronous Socket Quit plugin 211
Using the Serial input plugin 211
Using more than one method 216
Using the Print File command 216
Printing PostScript language files 217
Printing PDF files 218
Printing XPS Documents 230
Printing HD Photo images 231
Printing JPEG and JFIF files 231
Printing GIF files 232
Printing TIFF/IT files 232
Printing TIFF 6.0 files 235
Printing page buffer files 237
Entering PostScript language code by hand 239
Media Management 241
9.1
9.2
9.3
9.4
Why manage your media? 241
Advancing and cutting media interactively 243
Advancing and cutting media automatically 245
Monitoring media 249
Simple Imposition 259
10.1
10.2
What is Simple imposition? 259
Input file formats 259
10.3
10.4
10.5
10.6
How to activate Simple imposition 260
The Imposition Manager 260
Configuring Simple imposition 261
Example impositions 276
Fonts 287
11.1
11.2
11.3
11.4
11.5
11.6
11.7
11.8
11.9
11.10
11.11
11.12
11.13
Supplied fonts 287
Types of font 288
The DLD1 format 289
Installing fonts in the Navigator RIP 289
Pre-loading fonts 292
Producing a list of installed fonts 292
Proofing fonts 292
Removing fonts 294
Composite fonts (Type 0) 295
Font substitution 295
The HqnFontSetStubs start up files 296
Font backup 297
Font Emulation 297
Calibration 301
12.1
12.2
12.3
12.4
12.5
12.6
12.7
12.8
12.9
12.10
12.11
12.12
Why calibration is needed 301
Calibration and linearization 303
Calibration in the Navigator RIP 303
Example procedure 305
Editing calibration sets 313
Consistency of calibration 316
Tone curves 317
Press calibration 318
Using a combination of calibration sets 320
Print Calibration dialog box 321
Calibration Manager dialog box 323
Edit Calibration dialog box 327
Color Separation 335
13.1
13.2
13.3
13.4
13.5
13.6
13.7
13.8
13.9
13.10
13.11
Introduction 335
What color separations are 338
Producing color images from separations 341
How color separations are produced 342
Creating and managing separations 344
Separations Manager dialog box 344
Edit Style dialog box 347
Color Setup 354
Color separation angles in job 364
Trapping features 365
Pages in the Output Controller 366
Appendix A
Troubleshooting
369
Appendix B
Jobs Containing Color Management Data
385
Appendix C
Using Genlin
389
Glossary
397
Preface
The Navigator RIP is an interpreter and renderer for multiple page description languages. This manual
is a complete guide to using the Navigator RIP, and provides technical details when necessary. For
details of how to install the RIP, see the separate Installation Guide.
This manual is intended for anyone using or evaluating Navigator RIP for PC platforms running
Microsoft Windows Server 2003, Windows Server 2008, Windows Server 2008 (R2), Windows XP,
Windows Vista and Windows 7. The guide covers the features of the Navigator RIP in a structured
way, giving examples that show you how to perform a wide variety of useful tasks in the RIP. For
more details about the other versions of RIPs available, see Chapter 1, Introduction to the Navigator
RIP.
For information about Navigator Server, Clients, output device interfaces and other related products,
see our online library of documentation at http://www.xitron.com/support/technical-documents/.
Contents of this manual
This manual discusses basic concepts at an early stage, leaving more complex issues for the later
chapters. In addition, each chapter starts with a basic description of the relevant features before
describing in detail the more technical issues involved.
Changes to Navigator RIP version 9 include:
Leasing and installment plan.
Try Before You Buy upgrades.
Demonstration dongle expiry.
Negative ROAM option.
Push Interface for calibration.
Remove Enfocus Status check support.
Add support for Windows Server 2008 (R2).
Changes to Navigator RIP version 8.3 include:
Support for Windows 7 32-bit and 64-bit.
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Support for Windows 2000 dropped.
NT Print plugin not supplied or supported.
AppleTalk plugin not supplied for Windows Vista or Windows 7 because the AppleTalk protocol is not supported on those operating systems.
Addition of the Detect input separations by screen angle check box. See Input Separation
Detection angles in Job options in Color Setup dialog box on page 358.
Changes to Navigator RIP version 8.2 include:
PDF/X versions have been updated. See Printing PDF files on page 218.
PDF v1.7 ExtensionLevel: 3 support. See Printing PDF version 1.7 on page 221.
Changes to Navigator RIP version 8.1 include:
The Configure RIP Options dialog has changed. See Section 7.1, Configure RIP dialog box and
Section 7.3, Control of page buffering modes.
Information on multi-threading see Section 7.5.1, Multi-threading and Section 7.5.1.1, Memory
per renderer thread.
Updates to PDF Raster output. See Section 5.9, Output to PDF Raster.
The NT Print plugin is installed by the separate Plugins installer.
Changes to Navigator RIP version 8.0 include:
Information on Multi-threading. See Section 7.5, Threads and parallel processing.
Support for the XPS Document format. See Section 5.28, XPS Options.
Support for PDF 1.7. See Section 8.13, Printing PDF files.
Addition of the PDF raster output plugin. See Output to PDF Raster on page 100.
The JDF Enabler chapter has been removed. All material relating to the JDF Enabler can be
found in the JDF Enabler User Guide.
The first three chapters contain information about what the Navigator RIP does, and how to get it up
and running on your machine.
Chapter 1, Introduction to the Navigator RIP, gives a description of what the RIP does and the
kind of tasks for which you can use it. This chapter also gives a broad overview of the different
versions of RIP that are available.
Chapter 2, Running the Navigator RIP, describes your machine requirements, and how to start
up the Navigator RIP once it is installed.
Chapter 3, Getting Started with the Navigator RIP, describes the most fundamental elements of
the system. It shows you how to do useful work without learning a large number of new skills.
The next four chapters form a more comprehensive account of the software.
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Chapter 4, Navigator RIP Output Methods, introduces the different ways in which the RIP can
operate, and how you can get the best performance out of the software for the jobs you are running. The chapter moves from general principles to more specific examples of the best way to
use the RIP.
Chapter 5, Configuring Output Formats, describes the flexibility the Navigator RIP provides
for configuring the appearance of any printed page. The tools described in this chapter will be
used on a regular basis, and are important for anyone who will make extensive use of the
product.
Chapter 6, Screening, explains the control the Navigator RIP gives you over screening techniques. This chapter includes a complete description of using Harlequin Precision Screening.
Chapter 7, Configuring the RIP, shows you how you can configure the Navigator RIP to give
the best performance in your environment. You will probably want to experiment with the
options described in this chapter, but once you are satisfied that the RIP is running as you want
it, you will not need to alter them on a regular basis.
The later chapters of the manual deal with specific facilities that the Navigator RIP offers, and may be
used as reference.
Chapter 8, Configuring Input, describes the different ways in which you can send postscript
language code and other forms of job as input to the Navigator RIP, either working on a standalone machine, or as part of a network.
Chapter 9, Media Management, gives you complete details of the media management facilities
available in the Navigator RIP.
Chapter 10, Simple Imposition, provides details on how to use the imposition features of the
Navigator RIP.
Chapter 11, Fonts, describes the use that the Navigator RIP makes of fonts, the different font
formats that are available, and the special built-in facilities that the RIP has to make handling
fonts easy and more efficient.
Chapter 12, Calibration, discusses the ways in which the Navigator RIP can help you ensure
accurate calibration of your output.
Chapter 13, Color Separation, describes the facilities the Navigator RIP provides for controlling the printing of individual colorants in both composite and separated output.
Appendix A, Troubleshooting, provides solutions to common problems that occur when running the Navigator RIP.
Appendix B, Jobs Containing Color Management Data describes how jobs and images with
attached color management data interact with related settings in the Navigator RIP.
Appendix C, Using Genlin describes a utility program providing semi-automatic measurement
of calibration targets generated by the Navigator RIP.
Lastly, the Glossary explains terminology used throughout the manual.
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Assumptions
The Navigator RIP runs in the Microsoft Windows Server 2003, Windows Server 2008, Windows
Server 2008 (R2), Windows XP, Windows Vista and Windows 7 environments. It is important that you
are familiar with the appropriate operating system, at least to the level of using the file Explorer and a
simple text editor or word processor such as Notepad or WordPad. If you are not, please refer to the
Microsoft Help or manuals.
In complex installations, you may wish to send jobs between PCs, Macintosh computers, and computers running the UNIX operating system. This manual describes the details special to the Navigator
RIP, but not the fundamentals of networking connections and services. You are likely to require assistance from technical support staff for initial configuration and occasional maintenance of such installations.
Conventions
This manual uses some conventions to make it clear where you give keyboard commands or choose
from the menus and dialog boxes, as described in the following sections.
The keyboard
You can execute many of the commands available in the Navigator RIP either by using the mouse or
by using a keyboard shortcut. This is a combination or sequence of key presses that executes a command without you having to choose a menu option with the mouse. Keyboard shortcuts for individual
commands are discussed, in context, throughout the manual.
Shift
The Shift key is often used when selecting a group of objects from a list. For example, when selecting
a group of files to print. It is also used in keyboard shortcuts and in some mouse actions.
Ctrl
The Control key is used in keyboard shortcuts and in some mouse actions. For example, you can often
hold down Control while pressing another key or a mouse button. Whenever this manual describes
one of these actions, the text shows which key or mouse button to use: for example, when you can use
the Control key and the letter key K in combination, the text shows Ctrl+K.
The Control key is also used when selecting several objects from a list that do not form a contiguous
block. For example, you can use this key when selecting a number of files to print.
Some keyboard shortcuts are specific to a particular window and only operate when that window is
active. When using a windowing system, ensure that the relevant window is active before using one of
these keyboard shortcuts.
Fonts and formats
The following fonts and styles are used throughout this documentation.
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1. Paragraphs that are numbered and use this font contain instructions which you should follow in
the shown order.
Text written in this sans-serif bold face represents a menu title, a menu item, or a control item in a RIP
dialog box. Text including an angle bracket ( > ) indicates both a menu and the option in that menu.
For example: “choose the Navigator RIP > Start Inputs option” is a shorthand method of referring
to the Start Inputs menu option in the Navigator RIP menu.
Text written in this typewriter face represents a piece of PostScript language code, a file name, or text
displayed by the Navigator RIP.
If a term is written in italic, it is the first mention of an important concept. This concept is explained in
the text immediately following, in the glossary, or both.
Note: Text indicated by starting with a bold word in the left margin is important and should be read
carefully. A Note, like this one, is often a suggestion that may save you work, improve performance,
or improve the quality of output.
Warning: Like a Note, a Warning is important and often indicates the need for care to avoid loss of
files or settings.
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Introduction to the Navigator RIP
This chapter provides an introduction to the capabilities of the Navigator RIP.
What is the Navigator RIP? on page 7 defines the Navigator RIP.
Why use the Navigator RIP? on page 8 describes the advantages of using the Navigator RIP.
The Navigator RIP in depth on page 9 describes various features of the Navigator RIP.
1.1 What is the Navigator RIP?
The Navigator RIP is an application that takes a document or job describing images or pages and produces output from that job on an output device which can be a printer, imagesetter, computer screen,
or a file on disk. The term output device is used throughout this manual, except where the nature of the
device is important.
In general, a software application or hardware device that performs this task is known as a Raster
Image Processor (RIP) or, where the PostScript language is involved, a PostScript language compatible interpreter.
®
The Navigator RIP is a software RIP management system. It contains both a software RIP and a collection of supporting functions that help the RIP perform its task efficiently. For example, the RIP
accepts jobs from various sources, handles previewing and output of processed pages, and performs
the associated file handling.
1.1.1 Input and output formats
The Navigator RIP accepts jobs and produces output in several formats, with the exact options
depending on your configuration of the RIP.
The range of input formats includes: PostScript language and Encapsulated PostScript (EPS) files,
Portable Document Format (PDF) files, XML Paper Specification (XPS) files, (16-bit) TIFF 6.0 baseline files, and JPEG and JFIF files. The Navigator RIP supports modern versions of these files including PostScript LanguageLevel 3, PDF versions up to and including 1.7, and derived standards such as
PDF/X. The RIP also has controls for special handling of older versions of these files if necessary.
The Navigator RIP can produce output in a variety of formats, to suit various physical output devices
and file formats. The ability to produce TIFF 6.0 files is a standard feature but it is easy to add output
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Introduction to the Navigator RIP
options for other formats such as TIFF/IT-P1 files and CIP3 PPF files. Similarly, there are options for
output to many proofing printers and final output devices.
1.1.2 Versions of the Navigator RIP
The Navigator RIP is available in different configurations and is able to operate on different computer
platforms. The configuration that is best for you depends very much on your individual needs.
In particular, a version of the Navigator RIP with the Output Controller user interface is available for
computers using Intel or compatible processors and running, Windows Server 2003, Windows Server
2008, Windows Server 2008 (R2), Windows Vista and Windows 7. The Navigator RIP may be used
on both single and multiple processor machines running the Windows Server 2003, Windows Server
2008, Windows Server 2008 (R2),Windows Vista or Windows 7 operating systems.
This manual describes the version of the Navigator RIP for Windows Server 2003, Windows Server
2008, Windows Server 2008 (R2), Windows XP, Windows Vista and Windows 7.
The Navigator RIP is appropriate for a wide range of output devices including high-resolution imagesetters, lower-resolution plain-paper setters, and medium to high-resolution printers and plotters. It
supports the special features of these devices, and maximizes their overall productivity.
If workflow features and client control from Macintosh OSX or Windows Server 2003, Vista, Server
2008, and 7 are desired please look at the Navigator Server product.
1.2 Why use the Navigator RIP?
The Navigator RIP has proven itself to be a fast, versatile, and powerful interpreter and renderer for
multiple page description languages. There are many reasons for choosing it above other similar interpreters, the most important of which are discussed here.
The Navigator RIP is effective, compatible, and robust; and shows real benefits in everyday use.
The Navigator RIP is effective because it processes jobs quickly, is able to process jobs of virtually any size, and can re-output selected pages or a complete job without re-interpretation.
The Navigator RIP is compatible because it is kept up to date with the PostScript language,
PDF, XPS, and font specifications; image file formats; and relevant standards from independent bodies.
Note: The Navigator RIP is able to use proprietary extensions internally for quality of output,
speed, and efficiency without losing compatibility.
8
The Navigator RIP is also compatible because it supports several networking protocols for use
in many kinds of networks, whether or not all the computers are of the same type.
Robustness comes from experience with many real jobs. You can configure the Navigator RIP
to override poor settings in incoming jobs (and avoid office printer quality screening on expensive media); use its ability to detect poorly labeled color separations, and so on.
The Navigator RIP is flexible enough to support many workflows, including: composite or preseparated color; the PostScript language, PDF, XPS or TIFF/IT-P1. Some of these input formats require the Navigator RIP options.
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1.3
The Navigator RIP in depth
A system using the Navigator RIP is easy to extend and to upgrade when necessary because the Navigator RIP is a software-based RIP.
You can add options, such as advanced screening, color management, and trapping. In many
cases you can do this by entering passwords and in other cases with software-only procedures.
You can add more output options with software plugins to support imagesetters, platesetters,
proofing and display printers, and workflow integration.
A PostScript language programmer can add simple fragments of PostScript language code to
provide features such as marking pages with draft or similar overprint and color bars.
It is possible to upgrade hardware and software independently. The Navigator RIP is very similar on all platforms so there is little or no need for retraining if you need to add another type of
computer.
When you upgrade the Navigator RIP you can transfer your existing settings to the new version
of the RIP and most optional output plugins.
The Navigator RIP supports simple imposition of books, page padding, and creep.
The Navigator RIP in depth on page 9 discusses many of these features in more depth.
1.3 The Navigator RIP in depth
Why use the Navigator RIP? on page 8 described some of the advantages of using the Navigator RIP.
This section describes the features that contribute to those advantages.
Characteristics of a software RIP. See page 10.
File format and version support. See page 10.
Extended color capabilities. See page 12.
Screening options. See page 16.
ColorPro. See page 17.
Graphics formats. See page 18.
Input and output methods. See page 18.
Complex jobs. See page 20.
Throughput control. See page 20.
Previewing. See page 21.
Page buffer compression. See page 21.
Fonts and font handling, including composite fonts and font emulation. See page 21.
Convenience features. See page 22.
TrapPro. See page 40.
Simple Imposition. See page 259.
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Introduction to the Navigator RIP
1.3.1 Software RIPs compared to embedded RIPs
Many interpreters and renderers for page description languages are based on hardware rather than
software. That is, most printers come supplied with a RIP that runs on its own special hardware.
Sometimes a RIP may run on only one type of printer.
The Navigator RIP contains a software RIP, carefully written to support a number of computing platforms and output systems.
There are a number of advantages to using a software RIP:
If you have a hardware RIP and wish to take advantage of new hardware, you must either pay
for an upgrade of the old hardware or stop using it. With a software RIP such as the Navigator
RIP, you can use your old hardware for other purposes you still have a usable computer. Thus,
taking advantage of new technology in the hardware industry is much more cost effective if
you have a software RIP.
You can easily take advantage of new features if you have a software RIP. If new features are
added to a hardware RIP, the only way to take advantage of those features is to buy the new
version of the hardware, or to have a firmware upgrade. Both of these options incur considerable time and expense. Doing the same thing for a software RIP is much simpler and cheaper‚
improved versions of the Navigator RIP can be run on the same hardware as older versions,
and can be sent to you on disk.
When you buy a hardware RIP, you buy a dedicated machine which is specialized for performing one task: interpreting the page description language. With a software RIP, the non-dedicated hardware you buy is a computer, which can be used for many purposes other than
running the Navigator RIP.
It is much more expensive to customize a hardware RIP to individual requirements than it is to
customize a software RIP.
1.3.2 File format and version support
The Navigator RIP supports several file formats and maintains this support across the widely-used
versions of these formats, as well as the latest versions.
The input file formats that the Navigator RIP supports are:
PostScript LanguageLevel 3, Level 2, and Level 1.
PDF versions up to and including PDF 1.7 files.
XPS version 1.0 files.
10
PDF/X-1a:2001, PDF/X-1a:2003, PDF/X-3:2002, PDF/X-3:2003, PDF/X-4, PDF/X-4p,
PDF/X-5g, PDF/X-5gp.
JPEG and JFIF.
TIFF 6.0 and optionally TIFF/IT-P1.
GIF.
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The Navigator RIP in depth
See Page Setup Options on page 135 and Chapter 8, Configuring Input for more details.
The reason for supporting older versions of files and applications is that almost all page descriptions
are created automatically by applications. Those applications can only use the features of the page
description language as they existed at the time of writing the application, and those features are subject to change.
For example, the Navigator RIP is a PostScript LanguageLevel 3-compatible RIP management system but still supports features of PostScript Level 2 and earlier. The RIP also recognizes uses of PostScript language code specific to common image creation and page layout applications.
®
The PostScript language was first created and used in the mid-1980s and since that time it has undergone many improvements and changes. Throughout this period, people have been trying to create
PostScript language page descriptions that, above all, work despite any bugs in the interpreters which
may have existed at the time.
To cope with this situation, the Navigator RIP is compatible not only with the PostScript language
jobs of today, but with the jobs of yesterday. There are two aspects to dealing with older jobs: dealing
efficiently with features that are now better supported by more modern versions of the page description language; dealing with work-around methods for bugs in older versions of the page description
language. The Navigator RIP does both.
It might not be immediately obvious why it is necessary to deal with bugs and work-around methods,
but consider this example.
What happens if a bug is fixed in a widely-used PDL interpreter and renderer? Newer RIPs and applications no longer have to cope with that bug, but problems arise if you wish to interpret old page
descriptions (generated with an application written before the bug was fixed) with your new RIP. The
old page descriptions take the bug into account, but the new RIP does not, so the hard copy produced
with your new RIP is wrong. If your RIP cannot accommodate this, as the Navigator RIP can, your old
files (and indeed your application if you still use it) are useless.
1.3.2.1 Additional information
The Navigator RIP can also enable substitution of high resolution images for PDF and PostScript language jobs, using an in-RIP implementation of the Open Prepress Interface (OPI), versions 1.3 and
2.0, and Desktop Color Separation (DCS), versions 1.0 and 2.0. See Features on page 133 for details.
The Navigator RIP can be configured to support special features color management, font substitution,
duotones, and vignettes of jobs produced by several image creation and page layout applications.
These applications include:
Adobe Photoshop
Adobe Illustrator
QuarkXPress
¬
¬
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See Page Setup Option Extras on page 140 for more details.
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1.3.3 Extended color capabilities
The Navigator RIP supports the use of color capabilities introduced with PostScript LanguageLevel 3.
This support includes use of N-color or HiFi color systems using varying number of colorants,
whether those colorants mimic CMYK systems (photo-ink systems) or use obviously different colorants.
The RIP provides separations management, preview, screening, calibration, and plugin support for the
popular N-color systems.
The RIP also has the ability to calibrate and screen spot colors separately from process colors. This
feature greatly simplifies the management of spot colors in the RIP.
1.3.3.1 /DeviceN and N-color
The /DeviceN color space allows better control of PostScript language code in environments where the
number of separations is no longer dominated by the CMYK, RGB, and monochrome color models. N
represents the number of process color separations. Using the /DeviceN color space, CMYK corresponds to N=4, RGB to N=3, and monochrome to N=1. This color space allows the Navigator RIP to
access separations where N=2 (duotones) or greater than 4 (N-color).
The /DeviceN color space provides the functionality to support HiFi color or N-color systems where
colorants in addition to CMYK enhance the attainable gamut of an output process. It also provides
solutions for minimizing the number of spot colors required by an output device.
The Navigator RIP uses this color space to extend separations management, Roam, and plugin capabilities. Depending on your specific device and workflow, additional plugin development may be
required to make use of the expanded number of color channels.
1.3.3.2 Duotones, tritones, and quadtones
Some applications (for example, Photoshop versions 2.5 and later) convert duotones involving spot
colors to CMYK colors when producing composite PostScript language jobs. While the composite
output is correct, when such jobs are submitted to a RIP that uses in-RIP separation, the duotones are
drawn on the process color separations and not on spot color separations as expected.
Photoshop has the ability to produce spot color separations when in-RIP separation is selected for a
LanguageLevel 3 RIP. This eliminates the problem just described for output generated by
Photoshop 5.0 when sent to any LanguageLevel 3 RIP.
In addition to producing correct output from Photoshop 5.0 jobs, the Navigator RIP correctly handles
jobs from Photoshop versions 2.5 through 4 as well. The Navigator RIP detects this construct in Photoshop jobs and correctly diverts the duotone to spot color separations. Note that you must configure
the Navigator RIP to generate these spot color separations for this to work.
For more information see Adobe Photoshop features on page 140.
1.3.3.3 Patterns and Smooth Shades
LanguageLevel 3 implements features that improve the quality of PostScript language fills. In addition, it allows shades to be output smoothly at the resolution of the output device target. The RIP
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extends this capability by allowing for vignette replacement, in which existing vignettes in PostScript
language and PDF jobs are replaced.
This functionality greatly improves the quality of gradients and shades on output.
1.3.3.4 Images
The Navigator RIP supports type 3 and 4 image dictionaries (for uses such as masks). This allows an
application to produce masks using multiple images in a more efficient fashion. This mask technique
also improves performance by eliminating the need for a detailed PostScript language clipping path.
This feature is best suited to lower-resolution output devices and workflows.
1.3.3.5 settrapparams
LanguageLevel 3 includes a software interface that allows the description of trap settings within a
PostScript language file.
The Navigator RIP incorporates the settrapprams interface and uses this for setting trapping parameters. The developers have extended settrapparams to include those trapping parameters that are not covered by the 3010 specification.
1.3.3.6 Type16 halftones
The Navigator RIP supports type 16 halftones, which can contain more than 256 shades of gray. Navigator has always supported an arbitrary number of gray levels, even in the PostScript language
Level 1 compatible RIPs. In the Navigator RIP, this support for more shades of gray is also accessible
using the LanguageLevel 3 constructs.
1.3.3.7 Idiom recognition
The Navigator RIP uses idiom recognition to detect PostScript language procedures and replace procedures that are bound when defined. This extends to procedures some of the benefits that Navigator’s
shadowop operator provides for operator redefinition. Once the PostScript language code is intercepted, the Navigator RIP replaces it with optimized code.
This operator has many potential uses that include detecting level 2 code in a PostScript language file
and replacing it with LanguageLevel 3 code.
1.3.3.8 Type 32 fonts
The RIP recognizes and supports Type 32 fonts.
1.3.3.9 Other operators
The RIP supports the LanguageLevel 3 operators that are defined in the 3010 LanguageLevel 3 specification. The Navigator RIP accepts PostScript language output from applications using these
LanguageLevel 3 operators.
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1.3.3.10 File filters
The Navigator RIP supports the required file filter additions documented in the 3010
LanguageLevel 3 specification.
1.3.4 Color, screening, and Roam functionality
The RIP contains several capabilities relating to color, screening, and roam. Where appropriate, Navigator enables the end-user to control the underlying functionality from the user interface.
Not all of the functionality is applicable to all output devices or workflows. You will find some features more relevant than others for particular output devices and workflow instances.
1.3.4.1 Color API
The Navigator RIP contains a programming interface (API) that allows you to set the options for the
color management modules from PostScript language code. This provides control over all color
options, including the installation of ICC profiles, without a user interface.
1.3.4.2 Spot color screening and calibration
The Navigator RIP has the capability to calibrate and screen spot colors as well as process colors. This
feature greatly simplifies the management of spot colors in the Navigator RIP.
1.3.4.3 UseCIEColor
This operator improves color control in the PostScript language code by allowing device-dependent
input data to be translated to a device-independent CIE color space. The input colors are mapped to
the device-independent color space using an input profile. The colors may then be transformed ready
for printing on another output device.
Navigator has provided this functionality for some time through the color management modules the
latest being ColorPro. You can choose to use the color management specified in the job by UseCIEColor, or to override this and instead use the more detailed controls provided with ColorPro.
1.3.4.4 Embedded ICC profiles
When ColorPro is enabled, the Navigator RIP can detect and use ICC profiles embedded in Photoshop
EPS, TIFF, JPEG or HD Photo images. See the ColorPro User Guide for details.
1.3.4.5 Colorimetric roam
Provided a system is using an sRGB display (monitor and display card) and the monitor is properly
calibrated, Roam approximates colorimetric output on the display.
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1.3.5 Memory management
There is a continuous program for improving the performance of the Navigator RIP memory management. This not only provides the groundwork for future memory features and enhancements, but also
allows for a level of dynamic memory management within the Navigator RIP.
There are GUI controls for setting memory. As in the past, it is possible to specify the memory used by
the Navigator RIP, but there is a significant difference.
With this implementation, the specified memory is not held exclusively for the Navigator RIP.
Instead, the Navigator RIP takes only the amount of memory it requires at the time. This
amount rises while processing a job but once the job is processed the memory is returned to the
system. This allows the Navigator RIP to co-exist better on a system with the operating system
and other applications.
The implementation also makes it possible to specify a reserve amount of memory, available for shortterm use by the Navigator RIP. For example, the Navigator RIP may use this reserve in time-critical
operations, where the alternative would be to use disk storage, as long as the reserve is large enough to
keep the operation in memory.
1.3.5.1 Garbage collection
Garbage collection is performed when memory is low and reclaims the memory occupied by composite objects that are no longer accessible to the PostScript language program.
This helps some jobs that allocate a lot of memory, but not all. Some jobs that could not partial paint
will now need significantly less memory than before.
When garbage collection starts, a message is displayed on the console window.
Garbage collection is controlled using the PostScript Language operator vmreclaim.
For more information on garbage collection, see section 3.7.4 of the The PostScript Language Reference (3rd Edition).
1.3.6 FlatOut
The Navigator RIP releases are capable of stitching single-page PGB (Page Buffer) files into a predefined flat. This feature enables the development of page-based workflows around the Navigator
RIP.
Three components are required to produce a stitched flat:
1. A background PGB (Page Buffer) file. You can create a background in a page layout application
and then convert the PostScript language code to a PGB using the Navigator RIP. This flat background contains a slot for each page. This background may contain sluglines, crop marks, and
so on.
2. Single-page PGB file(s). For example, to produce an eight-page flat, eight single-page PGB
files must be generated.
3. A flat description file. This file describes the location of the background and single-page PGB
files on disk. The flat description file also indicates the positioning of pages on the flat.
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The flat description file is presented as an input to the Navigator RIP and the PGB files are stitched
into a single flat for output to the specified output device.
For additional information on how to generate a flat description and more on PGB stitching, please
refer to the FlatOut User Guide.
1.3.7 Screening options
The Navigator RIP has several screening features and options, designed to produce high quality output
on devices ranging from imagesetters to inkjet proofing printers. There is generalized screening support for color systems that go beyond straightforward CMYK process colors, but you need an output
plugin and device able to support these color systems.
The Navigator RIP is able to create extra gray levels (with HPS) and to control the number of extra
levels, even with PostScript language Level 1 jobs. This feature helps to eliminate stepping in
vignettes and to avoid posterization, while enabling you to set a limit on the number of levels that is
appropriate to the required image quality. The RIP also supports more than 256 shades of gray when
they are specified using PostScript LanguageLevel 3 constructs.
1.3.7.1 Harlequin Precision Screening
For very high quality output, Harlequin Precision Screening (HPS) has been produced. This is a proprietary feature that eliminates objectionable moirЩ patterning when producing color separations.
Once correctly set up, and with sufficient memory available, the Navigator RIP can produce output
with HPS at speeds comparable to those obtained when using traditional lower-quality rational tangent
screening.
HPS has been designed for automatic operation, without the need to refer to complex tables of magic
numbers, and you can choose to override any bad settings in the job. This is especially useful for print
bureaus, who often receive PostScript language code that is not set up for high quality screening.
Some RIPs have restricted dongles that do not allow HPS. In such cases, HPS can be activated with a
password in the Configure RIP Extras dialog box.
1.3.7.2 Navigator Screening Library
Global Graphics has developed a number of special screening strategies for very high quality press
work, particularly when printing in color. They are included in the RIP’s Screening Library and
require separate passwords to become enabled.
The screening library includes Harlequin Dispersed Screening (HDS), Global Graphic’s patented Frequency Modulation (FM) screening technology. Moire patterning is impossible with HDS, and it gives
finer detail for a given device resolution. Also included are Harlequin Chain Screening (HCS), which
is particularly good at creating smooth flat tints and at holding detail in continuous tone regions, and
Harlequin Micro Screening (HMS) which allows a greater range of tones to be used even at high
screen rulings.
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1.3.7.3 Screening for extended color systems
Several color systems require more than the four screens used for CMYK work. The Navigator RIP
contains screens suitable for use with HiFi color systems such as the PANTONE Hexachrome Color
Selector system or the various photo-ink technologies using different densities (light and dark versions) of one or more colorants.
®
1.3.8 ColorPro
It is possible to add and use the advanced color management facilities provided by ColorPro which as
an optional extra provided with the Navigator RIP and requires a password for it to be enabled
ColorPro together with SetGoldPro profile making software is Global Graphics color science solution
for ensuring color quality and accuracy for proofing and emulation. ColorPro provides the largest realizable color gamuts for the final print market and allows greater accuracy than would be possible
using standard profiles.
ColorPro embraces open systems, industry standards and device-independent color science, and is
able to make full use of them. If you have ICC profiles with which you already achieve good results
you can use these profiles with ColorPro. You should however be aware that ColorPro contains color
science that is optimized for the Navigator RIP and is easily utilized with the introduction of SetGoldPro.
ColorPro allows you to specify different gamut-mapping algorithms in the reproduction of a page. For
example, you can simultaneously specify Absolute colorimetric to reproduce some elements of the
page and yet specify Perceptual to reproduce the photographs. The end result is that, on a single page,
the color for photographs are each calculated without affecting other elements on the page.
ColorPro allows processing of colors in page data using ICC profiles produced by OEMs, third
parties, or end-users using third party characterization and profiling tools. ICC profiles specify a translation between two color spaces. Each profile is prepared for a specific set of imaging conditions. One
device may have more than one profile. The profiles may correspond to running the device with
different combinations of resolutions, inks, and paper.
New profiles can be easily added to ColorPro, and previously installed profiles can be selected
without the need to reinstall each time a profile is used.
An option to uninstall ICC profiles is also provided.
In addition, ColorPro allows the use of profiles prepared in the Navigator RIP format. Global Graphics supplies a number of profiles for commonly used systems.
When ColorPro is enabled, the Navigator RIP can detect and use any ICC profiles that Photoshop has
embedded in EPS, TIFF, JPEG or HD Photo images.
This manual describes the Navigator RIP without ColorPro, but mentions areas where ColorPro would
modify your use of the Navigator RIP. The extra facilities are described in the separate manual ColorPro User Guide.
For information on color facilities provided in the Navigator RIP as standard see Color Setup on page
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1.3.9 Graphics formats
The Navigator RIP can produce halftone output, 8-bit grayscale output, 8- and 10-bit run-length
encoded (RLE) output, and color contone (continuous tone) output in N-color, CMYK and RGB formats. This allows the RIP to be used for driving contone color printers as well as imagesetters.
This output is passed to an output plugin (described in Input and output methods on page 18), and
from there to the output device controlled by that plugin. Output devices are often physical printers
producing images on paper or film; but devices can also be files on disk, storing the images in a specific graphics format.
An output plugin that creates disk files provides a simple method of translating from the input format
to another graphics format. Using such an output plugin extends your ability to transfer graphics
defined in the PostScript language or PDF to other software applications or systems. For example, you
can produce a graphics image without dependencies on external fonts or color management. Also, you
may wish to send a page description to someone who does not have access to PostScript language
tools but who can use files in the Tagged Image File Format (TIFF). TIFF is a commonly-used graphics format and a TIFF output device is supplied with the RIP.
1.3.10 Input and output methods
The Navigator RIP performs most of its input and output using plugins, small auxiliary programs that
the RIP loads when it starts up.
You can install new plugins into an existing installation of the Navigator RIP to add new input and
output capabilities. Several optional plugins are supplied with an installer program, and it is always
better to use an installer if it exists, but the basic operation is file copying.
1.3.10.1 Output plugins
The RIP sends all output to printers and other output devices through output plugins, thereby allowing
the quick and straightforward addition of support for new output devices.
Typical output plugins support single output devices or families of similar devices and may be supplied with special screens, calibration and color management, and other features appropriate to the
device, such as control of exposure or cutting media.
Optional output plugins support file formats useful in workflow systems, advertising distribution, and
setting up printing presses. These formats include TIFF/IT-P1 and the CIP3 Print Production Format
(PPF).
1.3.10.2 Input plugins
Input plugins provide communication between the Navigator RIP and other systems, primarily as
sources of input.
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The standard input plugins provided with the Navigator RIP include:
AppleTalk (Legacy)
An AppleTalk network connects together a mixture of Apple and other computers and printers
in order to share disk resources and printing services. AppleTalk runs on LocalTalk and Ethernet
and is a widely supported network protocol.
AppleTalk networks often include multiple printers, and are available to Mac OS X users
through the Print Center. Because the Navigator RIP behaves as any other printer on AppleTalk,
you can send print jobs to the RIP running on a machine connected to the AppleTalk network, in
the same way as any other printer. (The Navigator RIP can emulate several, differently configured, printers if you wish.)
Note: The AppleTalk plugin is not installed on Windows Vista or Windows 7 where this protocol is not supported.
Spool Folder
This plugin allows you to set up the Navigator RIP so that it continually scans or polls a folder
on a central server for input files. When these files appear and are complete, the RIP processes
them. The spool folder uses the network file access provided by your machine, for example,
Network File System (NFS) on machines running the UNIX operating system. You can use
multiple configurations (as described in Multiple inputs on page 19), allowing you to have several scanned folders, each with a different associated Page Setup.See the Spool Folder Input
Plugin manual for further information.
NT Pipe
This provides a named pipe allowing high speed communication with an application such as an
Open Prepress Interface (OPI) server.
Serial Port
With this plugin, PCs and other computers can be connected using their serial ports and communicate with one another. The data transfer speed, however, is very slow. This plugin supports the
Adobe Serial Lines Protocol.
Sockets
With this plugin, the Navigator RIP can accept input from a network socket client program,
which may be part of a larger workflow system. This plugin supports TCP/IP and UNIX socket
protocols.
1.3.10.3 Multiple inputs
For some input types, it is possible to have available several configurations or Page Setups (where
parameters such as resolution, output device, rotation, and negation are given specific values). Using
AppleTalk, several different virtual printers can be made available on the network using a single running copy of the Navigator RIP, each printer with a different Page Setup. When using the Spool folder
plugin, several spool folders can be made available, each with an associated Page Setup.
You can enable multiple types of input allowing, for example, AppleTalk and Spool folder inputs to
operate at the same time.
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1.3.11 Complex jobs
Given enough memory and disk space, the Navigator RIP can interpret arbitrarily complex jobs. The
same is not true for many other high resolution RIPs.
This is achieved with a feature called partial page buffering (or painting partial pages in some messages). Essentially, if a particular job is so large that it cannot all be fitted into memory at once, the
RIP interprets only as much of the page description as does fit into memory, and places the interpreted
image in a partial page buffer. Having dealt with part of the image, the RIP gains enough free memory
to deal with the next part the effect being that the page description is divided into manageable sections, which are interpreted one at a time. Disk space is used to hold what has been interpreted so far
until the whole image has been processed, and printing can commence.
1.3.12 Throughput control
In almost all circumstances, it is desirable to produce page images as quickly as possible while maintaining high quality. All Navigator RIPs are written with this aim in mind and can benefit from operating with fast hardware. Beyond this, and especially when using high resolution imagesetters, special
techniques can help maximize the rate of producing useful output. The Navigator RIP can use these
techniques, collectively called throughput control, when either of the multiple page buffering modes is
selected. See Page buffering modes on page 57 for more details of multiple and single page buffering
modes.
The Navigator RIP increases job throughput in two ways.
Firstly, the RIP differs from other RIPs in the way bitmaps are produced and sent to an output device.
A traditional RIP must interpret a page and send the bitmap directly to the output device before continuing with the next page. Because of this, if you have to change cassettes or some fault occurs with
the output device, the current page cannot be output until the fault is cleared; productive work stops
until the situation is resolved.
The Navigator RIP can be operated in this way if desired, but it offers a powerful alternative that overcomes these limitations by saving bitmaps on disk in the form of page buffers, before bitmaps go from
the disk to the output device. Many page buffers can be stored on disk (as many as will fit into the
available disk space), and the RIP can continue to produce and save page buffers, even if the device is
not ready to output. If a printer jam occurs in an overnight job, the RIP is still able to process the job
and the page buffers are ready for output the next day. In a high volume environment, this ability can
be invaluable.
Even when there are no problems with the output device, you can still save time if you need to produce more than one copy, you do not need to reinterpret the page description, because the bitmaps are
still retained on disk. This means, for example, that if a page gets damaged in the developer or there is
a problem with ink delivery then it is easy to print another copy.
Secondly, the Navigator RIP increases job throughput by allowing job interpretation and output to
occur simultaneously. While some pages of a job are being interpreted, other pages, which have
already been interpreted, can be sent to the output device. This can greatly increase throughput when
outputting several pages in succession. With a fast computer, it is possible to drive the imagesetter
continuously for several pages. Even with fast output devices, time can be used effectively, because
the RIP can be interpreting data while the output device starts up.
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1.3.13 Previewing
The Navigator RIP allows you to preview pages, at their output resolution on screen to check them for
mistakes before they are output, at their full output resolution. You can preview halftone, contone and
grayscale images using the full color capabilities of the display system.
You can request a reduced view of the entire page in a separate window. This provides a better idea of
what the whole page looks like, and also acts as a navigation aid to help you to display any part of the
page at full resolution, to check fine detail.
The remaining functionality depends on the page buffering mode. (See Page buffering modes on page
57 for more information.)
Using either of the multiple page buffer modes, you can view several separations or pages, overlaid or
separately. This allows a good check of the page, including checking image positioning, trapping, and
so on. You can view separations in their natural colors, thus obtaining a realistic impression of final
output, or in false colors, to highlight differences between similar separations or composite pages.
In either of the single page buffer modes, you can view only individual separations or a composite
image, and only in the natural colors.
1.3.14 Page buffer compression
When producing jobs at high resolutions or on large format devices, large amounts of disk space are
often required if page buffers are used. The RIP makes the most of the available disk space by compressing page buffers as they are created and placed on disk, and then uncompressing them as they are
read from disk and printed or displayed.
Compression saves a great deal of disk space and often means that large jobs can be printed without
stopping the imagesetter, because compressed data can be read from disk more quickly. Stopping an
imagesetter part way through a job can lead to a loss in output quality, so this facility can be of great
benefit. (See the description of data underrun on page 71, which explains one problem that page
buffer compression can help avoid.)
Page buffer compression always produces buffers of the same size as or smaller than the original. For
color pages, it typically achieves a compression ratio of 3:1, and for newspaper pages a typical ratio of
10:1. That is, the compressed page buffer could be less than a third of the size of an uncompressed one
for color pages, and a tenth of the size for newspaper pages. For color images, this can mean reducing
disk requirements from 150 MB to only 50 MB.
Page buffer compression in the RIP is a completely lossless procedure. The quality of your output is
fully preserved when compressing and then uncompressing the page buffers. For details of the amount
of disk space you need to reserve for page buffers, see Ability to RIP a job on page 27.
Files greater than 2 GB can be read and written. The most likely use of this is the ability to generate
page buffers greater than 2 GB.
1.3.15 Fonts and font handling
To print text, the relevant fonts must be installed in a RIP before interpreting a job, or the fonts must
be supplied with that job.
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If the interpreter sees that a Times-Roman font is needed for a particular job, it must know what a
Times-Roman font is. The Navigator RIP comes ready-supplied with the 35 standard fonts found on
most PostScript language printers and several additional fonts. (For more information see Supplied
fonts on page 287.) Thousands of other fonts are commercially available, as is software to help you
design your own fonts from scratch. The RIP can load any PostScript language font into the RIP for
use in interpretation (unless the font is encrypted using some proprietary encryption mechanism).
The Navigator RIP enables you to download, list, and proof fonts easily and quickly. You have complete control over which fonts are loaded when the RIP is run, and can remove any unwanted fonts at
any time.
The Navigator RIP can convert any Type 1 PostScript language font into its own format, DLD1.
DLD1 fonts consume much less memory and disk space than normal Type 1 descriptions, and so
reduce processing time but with no change in output quality.
The 35 standard hinted fonts are provided with the Navigator RIP in DLD1 format. Font hinting is
essential when previewing images or printing at low resolution, where it greatly improves the quality
of the output.
1.3.15.1 Composite fonts
The Navigator RIP supports composite fonts, in both Original Composite Format (OCF) and Character Identifier (CID) formats, which allow you to use large or complex fonts such as those for Chinese,
Japanese, or Korean characters. Composite fonts support large character sets and are especially important in the Far East.
There are several features to allow easy composite font installation without requiring complex structuring of the fonts. Also, because of the high value of such complex fonts, the Navigator RIP provides
a way of encrypting fonts, so that they can only be used with a particular copy of the RIP.
1.3.16 Convenience features
The Navigator RIP provides some useful facilities for monitoring media on cassette-loaded devices
such as imagesetters and for using or testing fragments of PostScript language code. These fragments,
page features, can do such things as labelling output.
Most of these facilities require little or no knowledge of the PostScript language.
1.3.16.1 Media management
Output devices vary greatly in the type of output media they can use and the amount of manual intervention required. Some devices use a single source of roll-fed or sheet-fed material and the output is
ready to use, while other devices can accept media from a variety of sources or require processing of
the output. Equally, different users make very different demands on their imagesetters with respect to
film and paper handling.
The Navigator RIP includes a sophisticated media manager.
For example, you can keep track of the media left on the rolls of up to sixteen input cassettes; a variety
of materials and media widths can be set, and the system allows you specify automatic media cutting
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at predetermined places, such as after a particular number of pages or before the take-up cassette gets
too full.
In addition, the Navigator RIP warns you when a cassette is nearly empty, and allows you to define
how much space should be left between pages, between jobs, and between film cuts. It will even save
media by automatically rotating pages to use the minimum amount of film.
1.3.16.2 Page features
Sometimes you may want to apply a special effect to your jobs. For example, you may want to have
the word Draft overprinted on every page. Because these can be one-off needs you may want to produce a special copy of a document while it is at draft stage it is preferable not to alter the job if at all
possible.
The Navigator RIP provides this facility by allowing you to specify a fragment of PostScript language
code, independent of your main job, to be processed in conjunction with it. A fragment such as this is
known as a page feature.
A page feature carries out some process on your job, leaving the original untouched. Often, the effect
of the process is to produce a desired printed effects but some page features produce no printed output
because their purpose is to report some properties of the job.
A number of page features are provided with the Navigator RIP for immediate use or as examples.
You can choose any of those for immediate use from a menu in a dialog box. See Features on page 133
for details.
As with plugins, you can add new page features by placing them in a particular folder.
1.3.16.3 Interactive sessions
The Navigator RIP has a feature known as the executive, which allows you to run an interactive PostScript language session. This means that you can type fragments of PostScript language code and have
them interpreted immediately. This can be very useful when debugging and testing small parts of jobs.
The executive feature is available in the Navigator RIP on all supported platforms.
1.3.16.4 Page imposition
Page imposition is the process of laying out several pages of a document on one large sheet of paper or
film. Using a combination of PostScript language operators and an extension to the language, it is possible to take several pages and produce output on a large sheet of paper, each page being printed in an
orientation and position determined by you.
Page imposition can be useful both for saving media pages can be orientated so as to use the optimum
amount of paper and for printing pre-imposed sheets of paper, for instance when printing a book
where certain pages are made out of the same piece of paper. Some understanding of the PostScript
language is useful here, but the Navigator RIP is supplied with several imposition templates which can
be used immediately.
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Introduction to the Navigator RIP
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Running the Navigator RIP
This chapter is a short guide to getting the Navigator RIP running on your machine. It does not contain
complete installation details because these differ between different combinations of computer, operating system, and output device.
This chapter provides details for the following:
Machine requirements, described in Machine requirements on page 25.
Connecting your machine to an output device, described in Installing printer interface cards on
page 29.
The files and folders used by the RIP, described in Navigator RIP folder structure on page 29.
Starting up the Navigator RIP and an introduction to the standard menus and dialog boxes,
described in Starting up the Navigator RIP on page 33.
Some menus that appear only when options are enabled, described in Menus affected by
optional features on page 39.
Stopping the Navigator RIP, described in Stopping the Navigator RIP on page 41.
2.1 Machine requirements
This section covers the hardware requirements that you need to run the Navigator RIP. Do not worry if
you are not familiar with the RIP technical terms used in this section. As you work through the manual, all of these terms will be explained. The Glossary on page 397 explains many of these terms.
Hint: Follow the basics of this section on first reading to get a working installation of the RIP. When
you are more familiar with the RIP, use this section for reference, so that you can improve the RIPs
performance in your environment.
2.1.1 Performance
For a given processor type and speed, the most important things affecting the performance of the Navigator RIP are the built-in or physical memory (RAM) and the speed and size of disks.
It is recommended that you use a 450 MHZ or faster Pentium based PC running Windows Server
2003, Windows Server 2008, Windows Server 2008 (R2), Windows XP, Windows Vista, or Windows
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Running the Navigator RIP
7 with 256 MB or more of random access memory (RAM) for the RIP and a minimum of 4 GB of free
disk space.
Note: Please check the Install guide for the latest specification information.
In addition the following points should be considered:
There must be sufficient space to hold page buffers on disk.
There must be sufficient virtual memory available for the job. This is especially important
when using composite fonts.
For some output devices, a disk with a certain minimum performance may be required.
Important: The general rule is that the more memory, the better the performance. Note especially that
if you use the following features, we recommend that you add extra RAM:
Add an additional 8 MB RAM for each composite PostScript language font used in a single
job.
Add an additional 12 MB RAM for when using Harlequin Precision Screening (HPS).
Add an additional 256 MB RAM when using TrapPro.
Add an additional 32 MB RAM for EDS Screening in the output plugin.
When using ColorPro, add extra RAM. The required amount can vary according to the functions you use.
There are some instances when the RIP cannot paint partial page buffers to disk: for example,
when recombining preseparated jobs or using TrapPro. In such cases, the RIP will need extra
memory and must have enough memory to complete the job. See Navigator RIP memory allocation on page 186, the TrapPro User Manual for further details.
For large format devices, more memory may be required.
In general, if a job uses more than one of these features, add together the extra memory required by
each feature. For example, if a job uses composite fonts and you are using HPS add together the extra
amounts of RAM. You will also need enough extra RAM to accommodate any printer and network
buffers you want to set up.
For more details, see Chapter 6, Screening, Chapter 7, Configuring the RIP, and Chapter 11, Fonts.
Note: This manual uses conventions of font and style to describe special key combinations and to
highlight the titles of programs, options in menus and dialog boxes, and text that we suggest you type.
For details, see the Conventions on page 4 in the Preface.
Windows Server 2003, Windows Server 2008, Windows Server 2008 (R2), Windows XP, Windows
Vista and Windows 7 use disk space as virtual memory.
For Windows Server 2003, Windows Server 2008, Windows Server 2008 (R2), Windows XP, Windows Vista and Windows 7, the defaults suggested when you install Windows are satisfactory for use
with the Navigator RIP. If you later install more disk space or memory, you should update the virtual
memory setting. To do this, open the System control panel and display the Performance tab. In the
Virtual Memory section, click the Change button and use the recommended figures.
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Machine requirements
In summary, as well as the memory and disk allocations discussed here, the performance of the RIP
also depends on the following:
The speed of the processor.
The amount of additional RAM on your machine. (Additional RAM is RAM above the basic
requirement.)
The disk speed of your machine.
The interface used to send data to the output device, especially if it is a high-performance
device.
Performance issues are described throughout this manual, but see especially Chapter 7, Configuring
the RIP, and Appendix A, Troubleshooting, for details about optimizing the performance of your
hardware.
For further details on machine specifications you should consult the relevant installation guide.
2.1.2 Ability to RIP a job
Depending on what page buffer mode you choose, the Navigator RIP will usually create one or more
page buffers on disk when you process any job (see Chapter 4, Navigator RIP Output Methods, for
full details). This allows the RIP to print any job on a machine of any performance, no matter how
complex the job is. The only requirement for your machine (apart from a minimum requirement of
RAM) is that it must have sufficient free disk space to hold these page buffers.
By default, the Navigator RIP compresses page buffers as it creates them: the compression is always
lossless and does not affect the output quality in any way. This compression can reduce the disk space
required to anything from half to a tenth of the uncompressed file, or even less. However, you do not
have to compress page buffers if you do not wish to. See Chapter 7, Configuring the RIP, for full
details.
Note: Crop marks can greatly increase the actual size of the page (by adding largely blank surrounds
to the image) and hence create a need for more disk space. If you ask the Navigator RIP to compress
page buffers as they are created, the extra space required by crop marks compresses well, as does the
other blank space between text and images.
Typical free disk requirements, for both compressed (C) and uncompressed (U) page buffers, are
shown in the following table, giving details for output at different resolutions and for different page
sizes. These figures are for halftone page buffers holding a monochrome page or one separation of a
separated page. All figures are given in MB.
US Letter
Resolution
A4
Tabloid
A3
Broadsheet
U
C
U
C
U
C
U
C
U
C
300 dpi
1.00
0.20
1.00
0.20
2.00
0.40
2.10
0.41
4.60
0.93
400 dpi
1.70
0.36
1.80
0.37
3.60
0.71
3.70
0.74
8.20
1.60
600 dpi
4.00
0.80
4.10
0.83
8.00
1.60
8.30
1.70
19.00
3.70
800 dpi
7.10
1.40
7.40
1.50
14.00
2.90
15.00
3.00
33.00
6.60
Table 2.1 Typical free disk requirements for page buffers
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US Letter
Resolution
A4
Tabloid
U
C
U
C
900 dpi
9.00
1.80
9.30
1.90
18.00
U
1200 dpi
16.00
3.20
17.00
3.40
1524 dpi
26.00
5.20
27.00
5.40
2400 dpi
64.00
12.80
68.00
3048 dpi
104.00
20.80
108.00
A3
C
U
3.60
19.00
32.00
6.40
34.00
52.00
10.40
54.00
13.60
128.00
25.60
136.00
21.60
208.00
41.60
216.00
Broadsheet
C
3.70
U
C
42.00
8.30
7.20
74.00
14.80
10.80
120.00
24.00
27.20
296.00
59.20
43.20
480.00
96.00
Table 2.1 Typical free disk requirements for page buffers (Continued)
Contone page buffers or composite color page buffers are bigger than monochrome page buffers when
uncompressed, by a combined factor taking account of the number of bits used per color and the number of colors in the page buffer. For example, when uncompressed, a four-color page using 8 bits per
color (256 tonal values) would use 32 times more memory than the figures given here. It is harder to
predict the relative sizes of compressed page buffers because the contents of the page have a large
effect. For example, the compression ratio achievable for a page filled with an unchanging background tint is likely to be better for a contone page buffer than for a halftone page buffer.
In addition, you must ensure you have enough disk space to hold workspace for processing the
scanned images on any one page of your job. For example, when printing the Seybold Musicians test
job (a full-color scanned image), 8 MB of extra disk workspace will sometimes be required in addition
to the figures shown above. (Whenever possible, the RIP uses RAM in preference to disk space.)
If you have spare memory after allocating memory for the considerations described in Performance on
page 25 and in the separate Navigator RIP Installation Guide, you may be able to use this surplus to
create a RAM disk in which to place page buffers. To be useful, the RAM disk must be at least large
enough to hold a single page buffer, and if you want to use throughput (using either of the multiple
page buffer modes), it should ideally be large enough to hold at least two page buffers.
For 2540 dpi color work, a RAM disk of around 100 MB is desirable. For 1016 dpi monochrome output, a RAM disk of around 30 MB may be enough.
2.1.3 Driving a printer effectively
The machine requirements discussed so far have concerned the production of a page buffer. Meeting
these requirements is sufficient for you to view the page buffer on screen or for the Navigator RIP to
convert it into a file in a useful graphics format.
When you want to convert the page buffer to an image on physical media, you must transfer the data
to an output device. This transfer is another factor determining overall performance and often imposes
other requirements on the computer system running the RIP.
Many output devices need data to reach them at a sustained high speed; in general, this speed becomes
higher and harder to achieve as the resolution of the device increases. Table 2.2, page 29, shows examples of required data transfer rates (in kilobytes per second) for typical output devices supported by
the various versions of the Navigator RIP.
With simple jobs, these data rates can be achieved without using a page buffer on disk. However, with
complex jobs, a page buffer may be required, which means that the disk on your computer must be
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Rate
(KB/s)
Resolution
(dpi)
Installing printer interface cards
Output device
200
300
Large format inkjet printer
2000
300
Dye-sublimation printer
750
2400
Slow imagesetter
1500
1270
Fast imagesetter
8000
4000
Large format drum recorder
Table 2.2 Required data rates for typical output devices
fast enough to supply data at these rates. If the disk is too slow and your printer is not capable of stop
/ starting without abandoning the page, it is not possible to output the whole page. If your printer can
stop / start in the middle of a page, then achieving the required data rate is less important, but the quality of the output may still be affected, depending on the device.
When you look at the data rates in this table, note the following:
The disk speed of your machine must be slightly faster than the data rate of the output device in
order to drive it successfully the extra speed allows for the overhead of transferring the output
to the printer. For example, a machine with a disk speed of 1.3 MB/s may be required to drive a
slow imagesetter at 750 KB/s.
To smooth out peaks and troughs of disk performance and other system and RIP functions, the
RIP uses a printer buffer in memory. Typically, you should make this buffer large enough to
hold between 5 and 10 seconds of output to the device: for example, 7.5 MB for a device that
outputs at 750 KB/second. You can set the size of the printer buffer in the Configure RIP
dialog box: see Chapter 7, Configuring the RIP.
We strongly recommend that you use compressed page buffers. If this is done, the RIP can achieve
higher data rates because less data has to be read from disk. Compressing page buffers also lets you
run the RIP on a slower disk than would be required were page buffers not compressed. There are very
few situations where it is not desirable to compress page buffers.
2.2 Installing printer interface cards
If you want to produce output on a printer or imagesetter, there must be a suitable way of connecting
the output device to the computer running the Navigator RIP. Many low or medium resolution devices
can connect to standard communications ports or printer ports on your computer. Using a high resolution or high speed output device may mean that you must install a special printer interface card in the
computer.
There should be installation instructions supplied with any interface card and there are some general
guidelines in the separate Navigator RIP Installation Guide for each platform.
2.3 Navigator RIP folder structure
The folder in which the Navigator RIP is installed contains the Navigator RIP application itself, and a
folder called SW, as well as other support files. The SW folder contains the files that the RIP needs in
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order to run, such as device driver files, PostScript language header files, and fonts. You can install
new device drivers, features, and so on in many cases by placing the relevant folders or files directly
into the appropriate folder, but it is safer to use a supplied installation program if there is one.
Warning: Do not delete any files from the SW folder, except in the limited cases where this manual or
Xitron support staff advise you to do so.
Note: Installing the Navigator RIP creates some of the following items immediately: other items are
created later, as required by later reconfiguration of the RIP or the use of particular options such as
screening features or spooled input.
The SW folder contains the following items:
The caldata folder, which is created when you first use the Output > Print Calibration menu
option to print a calibration target, and is updated as you print more targets. This folder holds
files and folders describing the printed targets. If you use the Genlin program to measure a
printed target, it generates a file of results in this folder.
The categories folder contains the categories resource.
The charstrings folder contains the file StandardCharStrings, which contains the standard nameto-character mappings used by most fonts. Other mapping files may also be stored here.
The CIDFont folder contains fonts defined in the CID (character identifier) format.
The CMap folder contains information for use with CID fonts.
The colorrenderings folder contains color rendering resources.
The colorspaces folder contains resources for the color spaces defined in the Navigator RIP.
The Complete folder is provided as a default location for the spool folder input to place files
that it has successfully processed.
The Config folder contains all the configuration files for the Navigator RIP. These include files
detailing such things as the current Page Setup and Configure RIP settings, as well as folders
for information including the configuration for available devices, default color profiles, and
target definitions.
In the Config folder, the Factory Settings subfolder contains the default configuration for the Navigator RIP when it is shipped. This is essentially a copy of the Config folder itself.
In the Config folder, the Page Setups subfolder contains all the Page Setups you have saved
within the Navigator RIP.
30
The Crdgen folder contains the color rendering dictionary (CRD) generator plugin executables.
You can only manipulate CRDs in the RIP with the ColorPro option enabled.
The Devices folder contains all the output plugin files (possibly within subfolders) for the various output devices.
The encodings folder contains the font encodings for the fonts installed in the RIP.
The Error folder is provided as a default location for the spool folder input to place files that it
cannot process.
The Extensions folder can contain folders or files used to implement extensions to the RIP.
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Navigator RIP folder structure
The FlatPgbDir folder provides space for the page buffer files used by FlatOut. See the FlatOut
User Guide for details.
The fonts folder contains fonts used by the RIP (including the fonts installed with the RIP).
The FontSet folder is used for PostScript LanguageLevel 3 font sets, often used with CFF fonts.
It may be empty.
The forms folder contains resources for bitmap forms.
The halftones folder contains halftone resources.
Note: The comments in these halftone resources files show how you can define custom dot
shapes in capable graphics and layout applications, and have these dot shapes linked to screens
in the generated PostScript language files.
The icccrd folder contains the color rendering dictionaries (CRDs) produced from ICC profiles.
The IdiomSet folder contains idiom set resources. Each idiom set in this folder is loaded when
the RIP starts.
The Inputs folder contains all input plugin files (Spool, and any others).
The Messages folder has been moved to the same level as the SW folder and contains localized
message files. The appropriate file is selected the first time the RIP is started
The MediaSavingDir contains page buffers that are marked for media saving. From Eclipse
Release SP1 the MediaSavingDir is located as a subfolder to the PageBuffers folder.
The NamedColor folder is the location of files defining a resource type /NamedColor, which
stores color values referred to by name. It is accessed by the Install ICC Profile dialog box
present when using ColorPro, as well as by the RIP.
The NamedColorOrder folder contains files defining the orders in which resources of type
/NamedColor, are searched when the RIP is looking for the definition of a named color.
The Page Features folder contains all the PostScript language header files that are available in
the Enable Feature drop-down list of the Edit Page Setup dialog box. This menu is generated
dynamically from the files available in this folder. If a feature is turned on in the relevant Page
Setup, the appropriate file is run at the beginning of the job. Additional example page features
are available in the folder called Examples within this folder. The example files supplied with
the RIP show you how to do such things as produce draft copies, perform page imposition,
resubmit page buffers, and use image replacement with DCS files. You can add your own files
if you wish.
The PageBuffers folder provides space for rendered pages that are written to disk. From Eclipse
Release SP1 the MediaSavingDir is located as a subfolder to the PageBuffers folder.
The Passwords folder may be empty but is available for files used to install passwords for
optional parts of the Navigator RIP. The RIP installs all new passwords automatically, as it
starts. Files with extension .pwd are files to be used by the RIP, files with numeric extensions
(.001, .002, and so on) have been installed, and files with extension .pwx are files that the Navigator RIP has failed to install.
The patterns folder contains resources for PostScript language patterns.
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The PrepFiles folder contains all the prep files used by the Navigator RIP.
The procsets folder contains various patches to the PostScript language, as well as other functionality that is not built directly into the RIP. Patches for specific applications are held here, as
well as calibration test jobs.
The ReproductionCriteria folder is the location of files defining a resource type /ReproductionCriteria. This is used to link color rendering dictionaries (CRDs) to the criteria which created
them. This allows the RIP to test whether a CRD needs to be regenerated or whether one
already exists.
The Screenin folder contains screening plugins for use by the RIP. In many installations, there
are no screening plugins.
The Screens folder is used when halftone screens are cached (saved to disk for later use). There
is a subfolder here for each dot shape cache known to the Navigator RIP, either as supplied or
as created during use.
The Separation Features folder performs a similar task to Page Features but applies only when
separating jobs in the Navigator RIP.
The Spool folder is a default location used by the Spool folder input plugin for receiving jobs.
The Sys folder includes HqnStart, the startup file, and Bootlist, a list of files to be executed upon
booting (starting) the Navigator RIP. This folder also contains HqnProduct, which contains PostScript language startup code specific to that product, and HqnOEM, which may contain additional startup PostScript language startup code created by Xitron. The folder may also contain
extra start boot code files related to Navigator Server.
The targeteps folder contains any EPS files that are incorporated in custom calibration targets
(and potentially other targets). This folder is referred to from target definitions while interpreting a target file, especially in response to the Print Calibration dialog box.
The tmp folder is used as a location for temporary files.
The TrapParams folder is used for PostScript LanguageLevel 3 trapping parameters. It may be
empty.
The Usr folder contains several files needed by the Navigator RIP.
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The Utilities folder contains files, each of which can perform a useful function when run as a
job (using the Print File menu option):
BackupConfiguration.ps
This file enables you to make a backup file containing all your configuration settings for an
installation of the Navigator RIP.
BackupFonts.ps
This file enables you to make a backup file containing all your fonts, both the standard set
and any additional fonts that you have installed.
You can store such a backup file elsewhere for security and, for example, use it as a simple way
to restore a complex configuration if you need to reinstall the same version of the Navigator
RIP. (You can restore backed-up fonts to a newer version of the RIP but you can only restore
configuration settings to the same version of the RIP.)
Note: The BackupFonts.ps and BackupConfiguration.ps files should only be used via the Print
option on the File menu. Attempting to use these files from a socket input may cause the RIP to
crash.
The WorkSpace folder provides space for any temporary workspace files created by the RIP.
The LOGFILE file contains a record of all transactions with the Navigator RIP monitor. This
file can be saved and its size restricted. For more information see Monitoring the Navigator
RIP on page 55.
The files FILERED.PS and FILEMAP.DAT (replacing FILEMAP.PS, which is still present for
short-term compatibility) contain important information for use in file name mapping. The RIP
manages these files automatically: you must not change these files manually.
File name mapping is necessary because PostScript language file names can be very long, can
contain characters that have special meanings for file systems on the computer running the Navigator RIP, and are case sensitive. For each PostScript language file name that could be a problem, the RIP creates a unique and acceptable file name in the file system and records both file
names together as a mapping in FILEMAP.DAT.
You may find it useful to inspect FILEMAP.DAT, if you need to associate a particular file name
with the other name in its mapping. For example, this is a typical mapping (between Press and
PRESS):
(Press)(PRESS)M
Note: The file names are all uppercase, exactly as shown in this manual. It is possible for
Explorer in Microsoft Windows to display these names with only a leading capital letter.
The version file contains text describing the version of the Navigator RIP, for use by some RIP
utilities. Do not edit or remove it.
2.4 Starting up the Navigator RIP
To start up the Navigator RIP application, choose the Navigator RIP entry from the Start menu, or double-click the Navigator RIP icon in the install folder:
.exe
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An initial dialog box is always displayed while the program starts up. Some extra things happen in
special circumstances:
When you are starting up the RIP for the first time after installation, you see a dialog box
asking you to choose the language to be used in dialog boxes, menus, and messages. The
dialog box shows you which languages are available. (A language is available if the entries
after its name are all Present or Yes.) If you are in doubt, choose English (United States) initially;
you can switch to another language later, using the Navigator RIP > Language menu option, as
described in Choosing the user interface language on page 188. Select your chosen language
and click OK.
When you have installed a plugin or other option, that option may require enabling with a password. The RIP can read the password from a file if the installation process for the plugin supplied one. If the RIP reads a password file, it displays a dialog box with a message similar to
this but with differences to the italic text.
Imported password file Passwords/1234-56-variable-string.pwd
Click OK to dismiss this dialog box.
If you have chosen to reset the Navigator RIP to its factory settings, you see a series of dialog
boxes asking you which settings you wish to reset. See Resetting the Navigator RIP to default
values on page 188 for details of how to do this.
When the RIP has finished loading, a window containing the following menu items appears:
Figure 2.1 The Navigator RIP menus
Some windows appear, as described in Chapter 3, Getting Started with the Navigator RIP. That chapter describes some basic procedures that you can use to familiarize yourself with the Navigator RIP.
The remainder of this chapter introduces the menus, tool bar, and status bar; and describes how to stop
the RIP.
For information on how to quit the RIP see Quitting the Navigator RIP on page 41.
2.4.1 The headless RIP
The Navigator RIP can be run in headless mode. This means that the RIP is run as normal but without
any graphical user interface. In this mode all interaction with the RIP is done using PostScript language files.
Before using headless mode you should at least have configured an AppleTalk input (if supported) or
a Spool folder. You can shut down the headless RIP by submitting a suitable PostScript language file.
See Quitting the headless RIP on page 41 for more information.
To start the RIP in headless mode navigate to the installation directory and use:
.exe -headless
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Alternatively, if you wish to start the RIP in headless mode every time you start the RIP, open the file:
/SW/Config/UIPreferences
Change the line:
/Headless false
to:
/Headless true
Save the UIPreferences file and then start the RIP in the normal way.
If you have configured the UIPreferences file to start the RIP in headless mode you can start the RIP in
GUI mode by navigating to the installation directory and using:
.exe -gui
To stop a RIP running in headless mode see Quitting the headless RIP on page 41.
When run as a headless RIP the page buffering mode is automatically changed to Single (if required).
See Page buffering modes on page 57 for more information.
From the Navigator RIP v7.1 the page buffering mode can be changed from Single (if required) to one
of the other available throughput modes. This can only be done using a PostScript Language file or via
SOAR.
2.4.2 The menus
There are several menus:
The Navigator RIP menu contains commands for configuring and operating the RIP, as well as
for producing output.
The Edit menu contains the common window-based edit facilities of Cut, Copy, Paste, and
Clear.
The next menu changes name to indicate which device it is controlling. This menu contains
commands for controlling output and cutting the media being used on any printers connected to
the computer. Because the displayed name can change, this documentation refers to it as the
Device menu. (Figure 2.1, page 34, shows Preview in this position.)
The device does not necessarily have to be a physical output device connected to your machine.
The RIP is equally capable of saving an image to a file in a particular format, such as TIFF. You
can find out more about these options in Selecting different devices on page 80.
The Color menu contains commands for starting the Separations Manager and for color management. The color management commands depend on optional parts of the Navigator RIP. See
ColorPro menus on page 40.
The Output menu contains commands for controlling calibration, media management, and output.
The Fonts menu contains commands for installing, deleting, and proofing fonts within the RIP.
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When required, the RIP can display other menus to the right of the permanent menus mentioned so far. For example, the Print File menu appears when you have used the Print File command to print a file, and contains commands allowing you to control printing of that file.
All standard commands in these menus are described in later chapters of this book together with the
situations and operations that require you to use them. See Menus affected by optional features on
page 39 for details of menus affected by optional features in the Navigator RIP.
2.4.3 The tool bar
All versions of the Navigator RIP have a tool bar containing icon buttons and a status area. The buttons provide rapid access to frequently used menu options and dialog boxes, as described in Tool bar
buttons on page 37. The status area shows what the RIP is doing, as described in Status area on page
38.
The tool bar is part of the main window.
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2.4.3.1 Tool bar buttons
These tool bar buttons have the following uses:
Print File
Displays the Print File dialog box, where you can choose a
file to print. This is equivalent to the Navigator RIP
> Print File command.
Print Calibration
Displays the Print Calibration dialog box, where you can
print various patterns of calibration target for use in calibrating output devices, including printing presses. This is
equivalent to the Output > Print Calibration command.
Start Inputs
Starts any enabled inputs. This is equivalent to the Navigator RIP > Start Inputs command when the inputs are
stopped.
Stop Inputs
Stops any enabled inputs. This is equivalent to the Navigator RIP > Start Inputs command when the inputs are
enabled.
Page Setup Manager
Displays the Page Setup Manager dialog box, where you
can create and edit Page Setups. This is equivalent to the
Navigator RIP > Page Setup Manager command.
Device Manager
Displays the Device Manager dialog box, where you can
instantiate (create) and configure devices driven from a
multiple device driver. This is equivalent to the Navigator
RIP > Device Manager command.
Separations Manager
Displays the Separations Manager dialog box, where you
can create and edit separation styles for the selected
device. This is equivalent to the Color > Separations
Manager command.
Color Setup Manager
Displays the Color Setup Manager dialog box, which
allows you to create and edit color setups with or without
color management depending on whether the passwordenabled ColorPro option is activated. See the Color Setup
on page 354 and ColorPro User Guide for details. This is
equivalent to the Color > Color Setup Manager command.
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TrapPro Manager
Displays the TrapPro Manager dialog box, which allows
you to create and edit trapping setups. TrapPro is a layered
option and requires a password for it to be activated. See
the TrapPro User Guide for full details. This is equivalent
to the Output > TrapPro Manager command.
Calibration Manager
Displays the Calibration (Dot Gain) Manager dialog box,
where you can create and edit calibration sets. This is
equivalent to the Output > Calibration Manager command.
Cassette Manager
Displays the Cassette Manager dialog box, where you can
create cassettes and edit their information. This is equivalent to the Output > Cassette Manager command.
Imposition Manager
This option displays the Imposition Manager dialog box,
which allows you to create and edit Simple imposition setups. Pre-configured imposition schemes are provided as
standard. Editing existing and creating new setups is a layered option and requires a password for it to be activated.
See Chapter 10, Simple Imposition for full details. This is
equivalent to the Output > Imposition Manager command.
Input Controller
Displays the Input Controller dialog box. Also, this button
hides the controller if it is already displayed. This is
equivalent to the Navigator RIP > Input Controller command.
Media Manager
Displays the Media Manager dialog box, where you can
set up automatic media management. This is equivalent to
the Output > Media Manager command.
Note: The Device Manager, Separations Manager, Color Setup Manager, Calibration Manager, and Cassette Manager buttons are also available from the Edit Page Setup dialog box.
2.4.3.2 Status area
The status area has three sub-areas: one shows what the input system and interpreter are doing, one
shows what the output system is doing, and a final one shows the most recently used output device.
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Figure 2.2 shows some typical contents of the status area.
1
2
3
4
Figure 2.2 The status area of the tool bar
The meanings of these example status bars are:
1 Idle
The RIP is not looking for jobs on its inputs.
2 Scanning
The RIP is looking for input but none is arriving.
3 Interpreting
The RIP is interpreting a job.
4 Printing
The RIP is sending a job to an output device.
In all these examples, the output device is the Preview device. The text can change to show other types
of output, including output to graphics files and real printers and imagesetters.
This completes a brief description of the controls and status indicators in the Navigator RIP. If you
want to try using the RIP, see Chapter 3, Getting Started with the Navigator RIP on page page 43. If
you want to stop the RIP, see Stopping the Navigator RIP on page 41.
2.5 Menus affected by optional features
A number of commands and options in dialog boxes appear only if your copy of the Navigator RIP
has been supplied with certain optional features and these are enabled.
The major features that have this effect are:
ColorPro. See ColorPro menus on page 40.
The Screening Library. The visible changes are limited to new dot shapes in the screening part
of the Edit Style dialog box, as described in Chapter 6, Screening.
TrapPro. See TrapPro on page 40.
Media Saving. See Advanced Media Saving on page 112.
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Simple Imposition Manager. See The Imposition Manager on page 260.
2.5.1 ColorPro menus
ColorPro is a color management system that can work as an integrated part of the Navigator RIP. If
relevant options within ColorPro are present and enabled, the following commands appear. See the
separate manual entitled ColorPro User Guide for full details.
In the Color menu:
Color Rendering Intent Manager
This command allows you to create and edit custom color reproduction strategies in ColorPro. It appears only when the ColorPro option is enabled.
Color Setup Manager
A standard set of options is available with the Color Setup Manager without
ColorPro including Black generation and Undercolor Removal (UCR) control and color management override options. When ColorPro is activated an
extended set of options is available. You can create and edit color setups
including the selection of input and output profiles, rendering intents and
press emulation.
Install ICC Profile
This command supports the use of industry-standard color profile files which
enable portable definitions of the characteristics of printers, printing processes, presses, scanners, and other equipment. It appears when ColorPro is
enabled.
Uninstall ICC Profile
This command uninstalls ICC profiles and appears when ColorPro is enabled.
2.5.2 TrapPro
TrapPro is an option for the Navigator RIP that can be set up to perform trapping. If TrapPro is present
and enabled, the following command appears in the Output menu. See the separate TrapPro User
Manual for full details.
TrapPro Manager
This command displays a dialog box where you can inspect and create different sets of rules for
trapping. These rules become available in the Trapping section of the Page Setup dialog box.
See Trapping features on page 365 for details.
Ink Set Manager
This command displays a dialog box where you can configure various types of ink including
normal, opaque and transparent.
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2.5.3 Media Saving
Media Saving is a layered option for the Navigator RIP which is enabled using a password. If Media
Saving is present and enabled, the Media Saving option appears in the Output menu.
Media Saving
This option displays a dialog box where you can view the various flats being created and view,
roam or delete the various pages used to make up the flats. See Section 5.15, Advanced Media
Saving for details.
2.6 Stopping the Navigator RIP
You can stop the RIP whenever you wish but you should keep it running as much as possible whenever you expect jobs to be input. There are very few cases where you must stop the RIP: for example,
you must stop the RIP when you shut down the computer running the RIP or when you update your
copy of the RIP.
The state of the RIP when you stop it is also the state that the RIP assumes when you next start it. For
example, if you quit the RIP when inputs are active then the RIP restarts with the same inputs enabled.
2.6.1 Quitting the Navigator RIP
If you are the only user of the RIP, all you must do is ensure that no jobs are in progress and choose the
Quit command in the Navigator RIP menu. Take more care if there are other users, as described here.
If the RIP is providing a network service, warn the other users that there will be an interruption of service.
Disable output, by selecting the check box labeled Disable output in the Output Controller, if you are
operating in either of the multiple modes. This shuts down the output cleanly, by allowing the current
job to complete but not starting any other jobs. (When you restart the RIP, output is re-enabled automatically, though you will have to answer a question if there are any jobs waiting to be output in the
Active Queue.)
Wait for any active jobs to complete.
Leave the RIP settings in their usual state, unless you know that you will be making significant
changes to the RIP, the computer, the network, or connected output devices.
If you leave settings unchanged, you need only restart the RIP to have it start responding to all
its previous inputs.
If you are making changes, you may prefer to disable inputs from other computers until you
have restarted the RIP and proved that there are no resultant problems.
From the Navigator RIP menu, choose Quit (or press Ctrl+Q) to exit the RIP.
2.6.2 Quitting the headless RIP
To quit the headless RIP a file containing the following PostScript Language code can be placed into a
spool folder:
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$printerdict /superstop /superstop put
systemdict /quit get exec
Note: If a file containing this code is placed into a spool folder to quit the RIP, the file will not be automatically moved from that folder when the file is run. Therefore, you should ensure that the file is
moved before attempting to re-start the RIP.
Alternatively, on Windows use Ctrl Alt Delete and end the Navigator RIP process.
2.6.3 Stopping the computer
If you are also stopping the computer, exit any other applications and follow the usual procedure
described in the manual for your computer or operating system.
Once you have followed the procedure, wait until you see a message saying that you can remove
power. Switch off the computer.
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RIP
Chapter gave a broad overview of the kinds of tasks the Navigator RIP can perform. In this chapter
you will learn how to process simple jobs, and how to switch between different configurations.
3.1 A simple Navigator RIP session
Once the Navigator RIP is installed and running on your machine, you can start to use it. Starting up
the Navigator RIP on page 33 describes how to start the RIP and gives an overview of the menus and
tool bar.
It is a good idea to start with a short test job and to view it on screen so that you avoid wasting materials. (Even when you are familiar with the RIP you should consider using such an on-screen test when
processing a new kind of job for the first time.)
Note: This manual uses some conventions of font and style to describe special key combinations and
to highlight the titles of programs and dialog boxes, options in menus and dialog boxes, and text that
we suggest you type. For details, see Conventions on page 4 in the Preface.
3.1.1 Creating a Page Setup
First, you need to create a convenient Page Setup, a collection of settings that the RIP uses to process
the jobs submitted to it:
1. Choose the Page Setup Manager option from the Navigator RIP menu. If you cannot choose this
option, stop inputs to the RIP. To do this, click the tool bar button that shows a red arrow and
traffic light, or choose the Navigator RIP > Start Inputs menu option.
2. In the Page Setup Manager, as shown in Figure 3.1, select a Page Setup. Default Page Setup is a
safe choice: select it and click Edit to display the Edit Page Setup dialog box. If you want to
create a new Page Setup, the easiest way is to copy the Default Page Setup. Select Default Page
Setup and click Copy to display the New Page Setup dialog box.
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Figure 3.1 Page Setup Manager dialog box
3. In the Edit Page Setup dialog box, shown in Figure 3.2, set the Device to None and the Vertical
and Horizontal resolutions to something small, say 72 dpi. If you change the Device, you must
choose a separations style listed in the Style drop-down list and, for some devices, a cassette
name from the Cassette drop-down list.
For the purposes of this example, you can select any option from these lists. For more information about the options in this dialog box, see Edit Page Setup dialog box on page 77.
The None device does not produce any printed output, but does perform all the necessary processing for the job, including producing page buffers as defined on page page 404 in the Glossary. This device can be used for testing and timing jobs, and is especially useful for previewing
the job on screen.
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Figure 3.2 New Page Setup dialog box
4. Click OK. (Click Save As if you are working in the New Page Setup dialog box, and save the
Page Setup as Default Page Setup; this changes the original Page Setup but it is convenient for
use this name during this session.)
5. Click OK again to close the Page Setup Manager dialog box.
The Output Controller/Monitor window must be displayed for you to see the processed output for the
None device. If you cannot see this window: first choose the Configure RIP option from the Navigator
RIP menu and check that the option shown against Page buffering is Multiple (Parallel); then display the
Output menu and look at (but do not choose) the option Output Controller.
If there is a check mark next to the menu option, the RIP is displaying the window but it may be hidden behind another window. The Output > Output Controller menu option can be used to toggle
between opening and closing the Output Controller/Monitor. Each time that you open the Output Controller/Monitor it opens in front of all other RIP windows.
Note: The Output Controller is only available in either of the multiple page buffer modes. You can
also view a page in one of the single modes by setting the output device to Preview instead of None. In
the following description we assume that you are working in Multiple (Parallel) mode. If you are using
one of the single modes, see Sending output to the screen on page 82 for more details about previewing pages.
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For the example job described next, make sure that you have deselected the Disable output check box
in the Output Controller/Monitor. This box is selected by default, so that you can hold pages for onscreen viewing before sending the pages to real output devices.
3.1.2 Creating a simple job
You also need to set up a sample job. Usually, jobs are files created by another application, but you
can create a simple job within the RIP, as follows:
1. From the Fonts menu, choose Proof Fonts. A window appears with a list of the available fonts,
which the Navigator RIP can use with any of its possible output devices. (See Figure 3.3.)
Figure 3.3 Proof Highlighted Fonts dialog box
2. Select between one and six fonts. To select a range of fonts, click on the first font of that range
and then hold down the Shift key when you click to select the last font.
3. From the Page Setup drop-down list, select Default Page Setup.
4. Click the Proof button. Several things happen on screen, with some items appearing and quickly
disappearing again:
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A Print File menu appears alongside the other RIP menu titles. This menu disappears when
the job is complete.
The status area on the right of the tool bar in the Navigator RIP window shows an animated
picture of a hand writing a page. None appears in the status area on the right. (When you
use other output devices, you see other animations and names.)
Text reporting the progress of the job appears in the scrolling text area of the Navigator
RIP window as the RIP starts the job and reads the necessary fonts.
At least one progress dial window also appears and shows what is happening. For example,
the Read Dial shows how much of the job the RIP has read and disappears when the RIP
has processed the complete job. With a small job like this proof and a fast computer, the
Read Dial may not appear; Figure 3.4 shows the dial. Other dials can appear, depending on
the size of the job and the settings in your copy of the RIP.
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Figure 3.4 Read Dial
Notice what happens in the Output Controller/Monitor window. A job called 1. fontlist appears in the
list on the left, the Active Queue. After a few moments its name moves into the box at upper center of
the window, to show that the RIP is processing it, and then to the Held Queue on the right. (The job is
called 1. fontlist, to show that it is the first page of the fontlist job. This job is probably only one page
long, unless you chose several fonts.)
3.1.3 Previewing the image on screen
This job has now been processed by the Navigator RIP and sent to an output device. The output device
you chose was None, a dummy device provided for test runs like this one and for previewing, so no
physical printing has happened. However, you can look at an on-screen view of the page you have
created:
1. Select the job in the Held Queue (by clicking), and then click the Roam button. A Roam window
appears. Note that you can preview any page in the Output Controller.
The Roam window displays samples of the fonts you selected. (See Figure 3.5.) This window also displays the title of the page, 1.fontlist, the color of the page, and the resolution.
For most sizes of page, there are also horizontal and vertical scroll bars at the edges of the Roam window. (The scroll bars appear only when the window is too small to display the whole page at one
time.) When there are scroll bars, you can use them to move your view to different parts of the page
image. Alternatively, you can drag the page image around by holding down the left mouse button
when the cursor is over the image and moving the mouse. For more information about navigating in
the Roam window, see Roam and Preview windows on page 84.
Figure 3.5 Roam window
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Note: When viewing a higher resolution image, the Roam > Reduced Roam menu option is probably
available. It allows you to see more of the image in one view.
When you have finished inspecting the page preview, close the window. To do this, choose the Close
option in the window control menu. Alternatively, you can use the standard methods for your operating system.
Note: You must close the Roam window (and the Reduced Roam window if you opened it) before you
can roam another page.
3.1.3.1 Other pages in the job
If there are other pages in the job, the RIP has probably processed them in the time you spent inspecting the first page: if so, there are appropriate messages in the Navigator RIP window and new entries
in the Held Queue on the right of the Output Controller/Monitor. Any following pages are called
2. fontlist, 3. fontlist, and so on. You can:
View one of the processed pages by selecting it and clicking the Roam button.
Stop processing any remaining pages by using the Kill Current Job option in the Print File
menu. Any pages already processed stay in the Held Queue until deleted.
3.1.3.2 Killing jobs and error messages
After killing a job and depending on what stage the job had reached, you may see a PostScript language error message in the Navigator RIP window. Error messages look similar to the following:
%%[Error: interrupt; OffendingCommand: interrupt; File: %disk0%tmp/fontlist]%%
Job Not Completed: fontlist
Such error messages are harmless if you stopped the job: they simply report that the job stopped
before it was complete.
In other circumstances, an error message alerts you to a possible problem with a job. The details of the
message may help a PostScript language programmer or your support organization to diagnose the
cause of that problem.
3.1.4 Outputting to a real device
Your installation of the Navigator RIP has probably been set up to be able to talk to a real printer or
imagesetter and, if this is so, you can try sending some output to it. (If you do not have a suitable physical output device, try using None again but vary the screen resolution to a value in the range 300
through 600 dpi, so that you can see more detail. Run another job proofing fonts, then move to the
next section, Sending a job to the Navigator RIP on page 50.)
To send output to a physical device:
1. First display the Navigator RIP menu and choose the Page Setup Manager option (which this
manual often describes as choosing the Navigator RIP > Page Setup Manager option).
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2. In the Page Setup Manager dialog box, select Default Page Setup and click Copy to display the
New Page Setup dialog box. The New Page Setup dialog box is very similar to the Edit Page
Setup dialog box, shown in Figure 3.2 on page page 45.
3. Select your preferred physical device from the Device drop-down list.
Note: If the device is not listed in the Device drop-down list, you may need to configure it using
the Device Manager, available from the button next to the Device list and described in Chapter 5,
Configuring Output Formats. It is probably easier to use the None device to do another screen
preview.
4. Assuming that you have successfully chosen a physical device, set the resolution and any other
required options in this New Page Setup dialog box. Note that if you change the Device, you
have to choose a separations style from the Style drop-down list and, for some devices, a cassette
name from the Cassette drop-down list.
5. Click Save As; the RIP displays the Save Setup dialog box. In the Save As text field type a name:
Default to Printer is suitably descriptive, so type that name then click Save.
Note: The Navigator RIP limits all user created names or file names to 31 bytes. This is equivalent to 31 characters when using standard ASCII text, and 15 characters when using double-byte
character sets, such as Kanji.
6. Click OK to close the Page Setup Manager.
7. Choose Media Manager from the Output menu and select the Disable media management box.
(You need to configure the media management before using it - that topic is covered in Chapter
9, Media Management.)
8. Now create a new sample job as before, by choosing the Fonts > Proof Fonts command and
choosing some fonts from the Proof Highlighted Fonts dialog box.
9. From the Page Setup list, select Default to Printer and click Proof.
The RIP displays the same indicators of activity: text in the Navigator RIP window, an animated picture, and one or more progress dials. Another fontlist job appears in the Active Queue and a large, empty
rectangle appears just above the center of the Output Controller/Monitor and starts to fill with gray.
This rectangle is known as the progress box. Note that in either of the single modes, the progress box
appears in a separate window.
This time, when the job is being processed, watch the two gray bars that successively fill the progress
box, a light gray and a dark gray spreading from the top. The light gray bar represents the amount of
data the RIP has processed; the dark gray bar represents the amount that has been sent to the output
device (printer).
Note: The bottom edge of the light gray bar should always be ahead of (below) the dark gray. If the
dark gray catches up, the page may not be output properly, it depends how the printer reacts to having
to wait for data. In this case the RIP printer buffer has probably been set too small, and you should
increase its size. You can do this in the Configure RIP dialog box available from the Navigator RIP >
Configure RIP menu command. Typical sizes are in the range 4 MB through to 12 MB.
When the dark gray has reached the bottom of the progress box, the RIP has finished the job and the
progress box clears. If the job was processed successfully, you can now pick it up from your output
device. If the job does not output, or stops and starts while outputting, you may need to reconfigure the
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RIP or the host machine. (To help you identify a problem, the text window in the Navigator RIP window displays and records any error messages.)
The Output Controller/Monitor provides another two useful facilities:
If you want to reprint a page once it is in the Held Queue, you can do so easily: just drag it with
the mouse back into the Active Queue. Try that with the top fontlist job now: it is sent again to
the same device, which should be None. If you did the same to the other fontlist job (which was
sent to your imagesetter or printer), the RIP would produce another hard copy.
It is very quick to output a page like this again, because it has already been processed once; the
RIP stores the raster data, and just sends this data again to the relevant output device. By
default, the RIP deletes processed jobs from the Held Queue only when it is necessary to free up
disk space for new jobs.
If you select a job and click on the Info button (or just double-click on the job), the RIP brings
up the Throughput Info dialog box, which contains the settings for that particular job. You can
change some of these settings before reprinting the job.
Note: If you are roaming a page, there are fewer available options in the Output Controller. For example, you must close the Roam window (and the Reduced Roam window if you opened it) before you
can roam another page.
3.1.5 Sending a job to the Navigator RIP
You have seen how the Navigator RIP processes a simple job, created within the RIP. Now it is time to
see how to send a real job.
If you want to print a file, you can do so directly by choosing Print File from the Navigator RIP menu
and specifying that file. Try printing a file now, if you have a small file available: for example, a PostScript language file. The RIP interprets the file and sends it to the printer or on-screen preview,
according to the Page Setup that you choose in the Print File dialog box.
Using the Print File command on page 216 describes this method and the following sections describe
other types of files that the Navigator RIP can print.
Usually, however, you will want to let the RIP accept input directly from other applications. We shall
see how to do this using AppleTalk (if supported), and publish a printer visible to Macintosh computers on your network. For more details on supplying jobs to the RIP, see Chapter 8, Configuring Input.
3.1.5.1 Publishing a setup with AppleTalk
Note: The AppleTalk plugin is not installed on Windows Vista or Windows 7 where this protocol it is
not supported.
Note: AppleTalk is no longer supported in the Windows operating system. You can use 3rd party
Appletalk installations if you must. If AppleTalk is not already enabled or you do not have a suitable
Macintosh computer, you can create the Page Setup described here but use a spool folder input as
described in Using the Navigator RIP with a spool folder on page 54.
First, if you are outputting to an imagesetter and want to produce color separations, you should turn on
HPS, Global Graphics proprietary high-quality screening system. To do this:
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1. In the Page Setup Manager select the Page Setup that uses this output device we suggested
Default to Printer and click Edit.
2. Click the Separations Manager button (next to the Style list) in the Edit Page Setup dialog box to
open the Separations Manager.
3. In the Separations Manager select an appropriate style from the list, for example CMYK
Separations (Halftone), and click Edit to open the Edit Style dialog box.
4. In the Edit Style dialog box, select the check box marked Use Harlequin Precision Screening this
enables a high-quality screening method (HPS). Click OK to save your change and close the
Edit Style dialog box, and then click Select to close the Separations Manager. The name of the
style that you just edited appears in the Style list.
5. Click OK twice more to exit the Edit Page Setup and Page Setup Manager dialog boxes.
Because this may be the first time you have used this screening method, HPS has to cache (save)
information on disk; this may take a few minutes. This happens with each new resolution, dot shape,
and screen frequency you use: the RIP displays a suitable progress dial as it caches each screen. For
more information about the options in the Edit Page Setup dialog box, see Edit Page Setup dialog box
on page 78.
To publish a printer on the network:
1. Choose Input Controller from the Navigator RIP menu (or bring that window to the front if there
is already a check mark against that menu option).
2. When the Input Controller dialog box appears, click New to display the Input Channel Edit
dialog box.
3. In the Input Channel Edit dialog box, choose a Name for the printer you are about to publish, say
Brill-O-Print, and type it in. Select AppleTalk from the Type menu list and select Default to Printer
from the Page Setup menu list. Make sure that the Enabled box is selected and click OK.
Note: The RIP may fail to publish an AppleTalk input. If so the relevant entry in the Status column of
the Input Controller dialog box shows Stopped.
You can leave the Input Controller dialog box displayed or close it. See if there is a check mark in
front of the Start Inputs option in the Navigator RIP menu; if there is no check mark, choose this menu
option. You will see a progress dial appear as the new setup is published.
Now go to a Macintosh computer elsewhere on your network, and try to print a document. Among the
available printers shown by the Chooser, you should now see Brill-O-Print. If you send a job to this
printer, the RIP again displays the progress box filling with light and dark gray bars to show the job
being processed in the usual way. The progress box is part of the Output Controller in either of the
multiple modes, or a separate window in either of the single modes.
To disable a single AppleTalk input or other input temporarily, select it in the Input Controller and
click Off. To remove an input permanently from the Input Controller, select the entry and click Delete.
See Using the AppleTalk input plugin on page 196 for more information.
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3.2 A more complex use of the Navigator RIP
You have seen how the Edit Page Setup dialog box lets you choose the output device and a variety of
effects that control the appearance of the pages you display.
Many publishing environments deal with more than one kind of document. For example, suppose that
you need to print a product manual in draft and final versions: draft documents need not be printed at
a high resolution, but final versions should exploit the full printing quality of the output device.
The Navigator RIP processes documents according to page setups. Each Page Setup specifies a complete page format in terms of the orientation, resolution, size, and so on; and provides a way to recall
that page format, easily and exactly. For full details, see Chapter 5, Configuring Output Formats.
3.2.1 Saving a Page Setup
To make and save a new Page Setup:
1. Stop inputs to the Navigator RIP if necessary. In the Navigator RIP menu, make sure that there is
no check mark in front of the Start Inputs option. Choose the Start Inputs option if there is a
check mark: this stops inputs. Alternatively, click the Stop Inputs button in the tool bar.
2. Choose Page Setup Manager from the Navigator RIP menu or click the Page Setup Manager button
in the tool bar. The Page Setup Manager dialog box appears, where you have two choices. If
there is already a similar Page Setup, select it and click Copy to display the Edit Page Setup
dialog box. (If there is no similar Page Setup, click New to display the very similar New Page
Setup dialog box.)
3. Edit the settings in the New Page Setup dialog box to give the configuration you want. Click
Save As.
4. The Save Setup dialog box appears, and you can specify a name for your new Page Setup in the
Save As text field. (See Figure 3.6.) Click Save to save the setup and return to the Page Setup
Manager dialog box.
You can verify that the setup was saved under this name by looking at the entries in the Page
Setup Manager dialog box. Whenever you want to output a job manually you can use this setup
by selecting its name in the Page Setup menu in the relevant dialog box: for example: the Print
File or Proof Highlighted Fonts dialog box. You can also configure the RIP to make named Page
Setups available to jobs submitted by other users and applications, as described next.
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A more complex use of the Navigator RIP
Note: You can reorder the entries in the Page Setup Manager dialog box by selecting one or
more entries and dragging with the mouse. The order in the Page Setup Manager is the order of
appearance in menus where you choose a Page Setup typically when configuring a managed
input (described in Managing input plugins on page 193) or interactively printing a file
(described in Using the Print File command on page 216).
Figure 3.6 Save Setup dialog box
3.2.2 Associating a Page Setup with an input
Creating and saving Page Setups also allows you to make a published printer use a specific Page
Setup: this allows all users of the RIP to choose a suitable Page Setup for a particular job by choosing
the associated printer. Try the following to see how this works with just two published printers on the
network:
1. Display the Page Setup Manager. Copy the Page Setup Default to Printer‚ select it and click Copy.
In the New Page Setup dialog box, make no changes, just click Save As. Give this Page Setup the
name Pos.
2. In the Page Setup Manager, select Pos and click Copy to make a copy and start editing that copy.
In the Effects section of the New Page Setup dialog box, select the Negative check box and click
Save As.
3. Save the new Page Setup with the name Neg. Click OK to close the Page Setup Manager.
4. Display the Input Controller and create two new AppleTalk devices, as before, called Pos-OPrint and Neg-O-Print. While using the Input Channel Edit dialog box, select the Page Setup Pos
for Pos-O-Print and Neg for Neg-O-Print.
Once you have enabled the new inputs, and used Navigator RIP > Start Inputs, the RIP publishes the
two new printers on the network. Sending a job to Pos-O-Print causes it to be output as normal, while
jobs sent to Neg-O-Print are output in negative.
You can publish several more inputs to the Navigator RIP, each with different Page Setups. As well as
changing the Negative setting, you can change the output device, output resolution, rotation, screening
strategies, and many other settings.
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3.3 Using the Navigator RIP with a spool folder
Using a Spool Folder input, you can configure the Navigator RIP to print files placed into a common
folder, usually one accessible from other computers on your network. This means that various users or
applications can write files into a spool folder. The RIP repeatedly checks this folder, and when it
finds a new file, it processes the file. The RIP deletes each file from the spool folder after printing it
but, using the Spool Folder Configuration options, you can instruct the RIP to save the file in another
folder after printing.
The RIP associates each spool folder with a Page Setup, giving the benefits described in Section 3.2,
A more complex use of the Navigator RIP, when the RIP was published as a network printer. In particular, you can define several spool folder inputs, each with a different Page Setup, to match the needs
of different users or applications. (If you find it convenient, you can use the same Page Setup with a
spool folder and other types of input.)
To define a spool folder, follow these steps:
1. Choose Input Controller from the Navigator RIP menu (or bring that window to the front if there
is already a check mark against that menu option). When the Input Controller dialog box
appears, click New. In the Input Channel Edit dialog box, choose a Name for the output device
you are about to publish, say SpoolPrint, and type it in. Choose SpoolFolder from the Type menu
and for Page Setup choose an appropriate Page Setup.
Click Configure to specify the folder. The default folder is called Spool in the SW folder. You can
use any other folder that the RIP can access. See Using the Spool Folder input folder on page
200 for more information. Exit the Spool Folder Configuration dialog box by clicking OK.
2. In the Input Channel Edit dialog box, select the Enabled box and click OK to exit. If necessary,
choose Start Inputs from the Navigator RIP menu. You will see a dial appear as the new setup is
published.
This starts the spool folder and any other enabled inputs. If there are files already in the spool
folder, the RIP asks if you want to start by printing them. Files that are put into the folder after
this input is enabled are rendered and printed in order of arrival in the folder.
Note: The RIP may fail to publish a spool folder input. If so the relevant entry in the Status
column of the Input Controller dialog box shows Stopped. The most likely reason is that you
have tried to use a folder already in use by another spool folder input: return to the Spool Folder
Configuration dialog box and choose a new folder.
3. When you want to stop running the spool folder (and all other enabled inputs), choose Start
Inputs in the Navigator RIP menu again.
To disable a spool folder temporarily, select it in the Input Controller and click Off. To remove a spool
folders entry in the Input Controller, select the entry and click Delete. (Removing the entry does not
remove the associated folder on disk, nor any contents of that folder.)
Note: Even though PostScript Language compatibility level 1 is rarely used, you should note that the
spool folder plugin does not work with Page Setups set to PostScript Language compatibility level 1.
See PostScript language compatibility level on page 136 for more information. If this is attempted an
undefined findresource error will occur.
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3.4 Monitoring the Navigator RIP
The Navigator RIP window shows the progress of jobs through the Navigator RIP. The text displays
information about timing, errors, job completion, fonts, and other messages.
Figure 3.7 shows some example messages in the Navigator RIP window.
Figure 3.7 Navigator RIP window messages
The window displays only messages since the start of the RIP session and can display the last 32,000
characters of these messages. (Within this limit, you can scroll back to inspect the messages for old
jobs: the window scrolls back to the end when new text appears.) In Multiple (Parallel) mode the
default page buffer mode timings require careful interpretation, because the RIP may be outputting
and interpreting jobs at the same time. Also, if the RIP has to pause (for example, to wait for disk
space to be freed), the timings may be misleading because of the variable time spent freeing space.
The RIP adds a copy of all the messages appearing in the text window to a file, called LOGFILE, in the
SW folder.
The size of the log file can be restricted by editing the GeneralPreferences text file found within the
Config folder in the SW folder.
By changing the value of /MaxLogfileSize to any value other than 0 will specify the maximum size of
the file in bytes. When this maximum value is reached LOGFILE will be changed to LOGFILE.OLD.
The size of the file is checked when the RIP is started and each time a message is written to the file.
Only one LOGFILE.OLD is retained. Therefore, you must be aware of the size of the log files and
rename them to keep all messages.
Note: You will only see messages that have been added to the log file since you started the current RIP
session. To view the entire contents of the log file including messages from any earlier sessions, you
must use a text editor like Notepad or WordPad, provided with Windows.
The log file is an important source of information when difficulties arise. Refer to it if you have any
problems.
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This manual uses the term throughput to mean the productivity of your RIP workflow - how much
work you are completing in a given time. The Navigator RIP provides a comprehensive set of tools
that allow you to maximize your throughput.
4.1 Historical overview
The Navigator RIP is able to overcome many of the problems which have beset other interpreters and
renderers for page description languages.
RIPs have traditionally operated in a serial fashion, that is, the RIP processes a page of the PDL and
then outputs it, then processes the next page and outputs it, and so on.
The Navigator RIP can operate in this manner. This approach to processing (which includes both
interpreting and rendering) and output is usually adequate with low to medium resolution devices.
However, with higher resolution devices this approach becomes wasteful, because periods are spent
with the output unit idle while the RIP is working, and then with the RIP idle while the output unit is
working. The RIP allows you to overlap processing and output for greater throughput.
Also, if you need to change cassettes or deal with a printer fault or media jam, most RIPs must wait
until the fault is cleared before they can output the current page and continue. If you are processing a
long job and a fault occurs, it must be reinterpreted once the fault has been detected. For an overnight
job, the fault will probably not be detected until the morning, in which case a lot of time will have
been wasted.
The Navigator RIP overcomes these limitations by allowing you to choose one of four different modes
of operation.
4.2 Page buffering modes
Depending on the job involved, and the configuration of your hardware, you can choose whichever
mode is most suitable and overcome many of the problems described above.
There are two general methods of operation in the RIP; multiple and single. Multiple modes allow you
to write each interpreted page to disk, ready for later printing and reprinting. Single modes only interpret one page before printing must occur (and hence make the RIP operate in a more traditional manner).
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The four specific modes are: Single, Single (if required), Multiple, and Multiple (Parallel). Table 4.1
introduces and compares these modes.
Table 4.1 Comparison of page buffer modes
Mode
Single (if required)
Behavior
Only buffers a page to disk if the page is too complex to
process in working memory‚ deletes this buffer after
printing.
Otherwise, sends output directly to the output device.
Single
Always buffers a page to disk before printing it.
Deletes the page after printing.
Multiple
Always buffers a page to disk before printing it.
Retains on disk all pages created for a job, for ease of
reprinting.
Multiple (Parallel)
Always buffers a page to disk before printing it
Retains on disk all pages created for a job, for ease of
reprinting.
Sends interpreted pages to the output device while interpreting other pages at the same time.
Note: For normal use, you should use Multiple (Parallel) mode. This gives the best overall performance from the RIP and the best control over every page processed. The RIP uses this mode by
default.
Refer to Chapter 7, Configuring the RIP, for details of how to select different page buffering modes in
the RIP.
4.2.1 Page buffering modes for the headless RIP
When run as a headless RIP the page buffering mode is automatically changed to Single (if required).
From Navigator v7.1 the page buffering mode can be changed from Single (if required) to one of the
other available throughput modes. This can only be done programatically using a PostScript language
file or via the SOAR interface.
4.2.2 Operating modes
Figure 4.1 presents an overview of the behavior of the Navigator RIP in the single and multiple
modes.
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When the RIP is in either of the single modes, it sends each page straight to the output device once it
has been interpreted. If the RIP buffers a page to disk, that page buffer is deleted once the page has
been printed.
Single Modes
Multiple Modes
Interpreter
Interpreter
....../manualfeed
exch def
/paperheight
exch def
....../manualfeed
exch def
/paperheight
exch def
Jobs
Jobs
Page buffer
file
Page buffer
files
Output device
Output device
Figure 4.1 How the Navigator RIP behaves in Single and Multiple Modes
When in one of the multiple modes, pages are always buffered, and they are not usually deleted (until
disk space is required for new pages) so they can be reprinted at a later point. The throughput system
tools can be used to oversee printing allowing a range of benefits, which are described below. See The
throughput system on page 59.
Note also that when in Multiple (Parallel) mode, interpretation can take place at the same time as outputting an earlier page to a printer or imagesetter, but this is not true of either of the single modes. This
is not illustrated in the diagram.
Even though the increase in job throughput is significant when in Multiple (Parallel) mode, there may
be cases usually because of hardware limitations when you will need to use one of the other modes
provided. For example, you may not have enough disk space to store any page buffers, or the combination of a slow disk and an output device with a high data rate may mean that working in Multiple
(Parallel) mode becomes impractical. See The throughput system on page 59 for more details.
4.3 The throughput system
This section describes the Output Controller, which is the central part of the throughput system, and
discusses how it can be used to increase throughput. The Output Controller is available when either of
the multiple modes is selected (see Control of page buffering modes on page 179, for details on how to
change the page buffer mode).
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The Output Controller gives you powerful facilities for controlling any jobs output by the RIP. These
include:
Reprinting without reinterpreting the original page description.
Changing the order of the pages to be printed.
Control over a variety of page characteristics without reinterpreting the page description.
Aborting any page before it is completely printed.
4.3.1 Output Controller
To display the Output Controller (if it is not already displayed), select Output Controller from the Output menu, or type Ctrl+O. It will appear as a separate window on your screen, as shown in Figure 4.2.
If you want to remove it, choose the menu option again. By default, the Output Controller is displayed
when you start up the RIP.
Figure 4.2 Output Controller / Monitor dialog box
4.3.1.1 The Active Queue and Held Queue
The Active Queue and Held Queue in the Output Controller can contain a number of items, each representing a page of output.
The Active Queue contains pages which are currently queued for printing. Pages listed at the top of the
Active Queue will be printed first.
The Held Queue contains pages which are being held on your hard disk. They may have already been
printed, or you may have moved them there yourself. (See Moving page buffers on page 61).
The number of items in a queue, together with the amount of disk space they use, is displayed below
each queue.
If a page is currently being printed, it is shown in the box at the top of the Output Controller between
the Active Queue and Held Queue.
As pages are printed, there is a constant flow from the Active Queue to the Held Queue. After a page has
been interpreted, it will be placed at the end of the Active Queue, printed in its turn, and then trans-
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ferred to the Held Queue where it will be retained until disk space is needed for new pages, when it will
be automatically deleted. This is illustrated in Figure 4.3.
4. Print page buffer
3. Place page buffer in
Active Queue
5. Retain page buffer in
Held Queue
2. Interpret job
1. Issue print command
Figure 4.3 Flow of a page buffer between the active and held queues
4.3.1.2 Interrupting output
The Disable output check box can be used at any time to stop printing. When it is selected, pages will
remain in the Active Queue until you clear the check box to resume the printing.
Disable output does not stop the current page printing, if there is one. To stop a page while it is printing,
drag the page name from the top box into the Held Queue or Active Queue.
If pages are interpreted while output is disabled, the new pages created are added to the Active Queue
as normal. Disabling output does not prevent you from processing jobs.
You will find Disable output useful if you need to renew the media in an output device, or if there is a
fault on a device, but you wish to continue interpreting and preparing more pages for output.
The RIP automatically disables output when certain errors occur, for example if a device determines
that the wrong cassette is mounted.
4.3.1.3 Moving page buffers
You can move any of the pages shown in the Output Controller between the Active Queue and Held
Queue by selecting and moving them with the mouse.
To move a page buffer, do the following:
1. Select the desired file.
2. Holding down the left mouse button, drag the file between the queues.
The selected page will move with the mouse pointer and enter the list at the position where you release
the mouse button.
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Shift
If you wish, you can move a block of several pages at once. To select a block, select the first one, then
hold down the Shift key and select the last one.
Ctrl
You can also select several page buffers which do not form a contiguous block. Hold down the Control
key while selecting the page buffers.
You can reprint or abort a job, or reorder the pages in the queue, easily and quickly, by moving the
pages between the queues, as follows:
To reprint a page, move it from the Held Queue to the Active Queue.
To stop a page before it is printed, move it from the Active Queue to the Held Queue.
To abort the page that is currently being printed, move it from the box between the queues to
the Held Queue.
To change the order of the pages in a queue, move them within the queue.
If you are moving a lot of pages at once, disable output first to ensure that none of them are
inadvertently printed before you are able to move them.
4.3.1.4 Page buffer information
Information about each page is displayed in the Active Queue and Held Queue. Refer to Figure 4.2 on
page page 60 to see examples of this. The following items of information are displayed:
The delete permission for each page.
Whether or not the page was created by an older version of the RIP.
The page number of the original job.
The original job name.
The color for printing the page.
The delete permission for (or origin of) each page
You can configure the RIP so that it automatically deletes pages once they have been printed, or when
space on the hard disk is low. However, you can still retain an important page by changing its delete
permission. See Deleting buffered pages on page 64, for details on deleting pages automatically, and
Operations on buffered pages on page 65, for details on retaining important pages.
The mark, if any, to the left of each page in the Active Queue and Held Queue indicates its delete permission.
The page is locked and cannot be deleted automatically
The page is unlocked and can be deleted automatically
The page was created in an earlier version of the Navigator RIP
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Note: The mark ( < ) in front of the name of an older buffer is there to remind you that there are some
limitations on what you can do with earlier versions of page buffers: see Page buffers produced by
older versions of the Navigator RIP on page 69 for details.
The page number of the original job
The page number of the original job from which the page buffer comes is displayed on the right of the
delete permission.
For example, if you are producing separated CMYK color, the RIP produces four monochrome pages
for each original page of the job. The first four pages represent the Cyan, Magenta, Yellow, and Black
separations for the original page 1. The next four represent the CMYK separations for the original
page 2, and so on. Separated pages produce pages with the original number labeled by color. Thus the
four separations for page 1 are called 1. Jobname (C), 1. Jobname (M), and so on.
If you only print a range of pages from a document, they are labeled in the original job from 1
upwards, rather than with the true page number in the document. For example, pages 3 through 7 of a
document are labeled from 1 through 5 in the job.
The original job name
The name to the right of the page number is the job name. This is not necessarily the same as the file
name of the job.
If the job name for a PostScript language job is not specified in the page description, then one of the
following will apply:
If the input came from a file, the file name will be used.
If the input came from the Executive, then the value of %exec% will be used.
If the input came from an AppleTalk network, then the value of %ip:atalkname% will be used.
The atalkname is the AppleTalk printer it came from.
For other types of jobs, the file name will be used.
The color for printing the page
Color separation pages in the Output Controller are labeled with their separation name (for example:
C, M, Y, or K; or the spot color name), or Composite if there are several colors on one page, for example
when using the PackDrum page feature. (PackDrum is intended for use with drum imagesetters, and it is
an example so you must add it before use, as described in Features on page 133.)
4.3.1.5 Monitoring progress
The Output Controller can be used to monitor the progress of each page as it is printed: the large box
between the two queues gives you an indication of the progress of the job. As soon as a buffer begins
to print, the shape of this progress box changes to reflect the aspect ratio of the page. For instance, if it
is a portrait page, the box will have greater height than width, and if it is a landscape page, it will be
wider than it is high.
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As the page is printed, the box starts to fill from the top with a light gray pattern, followed by dark
gray. Figure 4.2, page 60, shows this happening.
The amount of dark gray in the progress box indicates the proportion of the job that has already
been printed.
The amount of light gray in the progress box indicates the proportion of data currently in the
printer buffer, waiting to be printed.
The amount of white space in the progress box indicates the proportion of data not yet printed
and not yet buffered.
When the progress box is completely filled with dark gray, the page has finished printing,
though margins and extra feeds may require a few more seconds.
In addition, the time taken for the current page buffer is displayed in the message area below the
progress box.
Some printers may also buffer the data internally, so they may not start printing until some or all of the
data has been received.
The message area and the progress box are both used to display additional information when problems
arise. For example, if your printer becomes low on media, an icon will be displayed in the progress
box, together with an appropriate status message. See Appendix A, Troubleshooting, for a full
description of these error messages.
Note: In either of the single modes, the Output Controller is not available and the progress box
appears in a separate window.
4.3.2 Job management
The Output Controller gives you control over a variety of page attributes. Using the Output Controller
you can for example:
Ensure that certain pages will never be automatically deleted.
Specify the number of copies of any page to print.
Change individual page characteristics without having to interpret the job again.
There are two general methods of controlling these attributes: configuring the RIP so that it carries out
certain tasks automatically, and changing them yourself.
4.3.2.1 Deleting buffered pages
When the RIP is in either of the multiple page buffering modes, pages are kept buffered on disk. When
the hard disk fills up, however, there is no room for new pages, and so the RIP cannot interpret any
further jobs. To proceed, the RIP deletes some existing pages to make room for new ones.
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The drop-down list labeled Delete in the Output Controller lets you specify one of three strategies to
follow. Choose whichever option you prefer.
The default strategy is When necessary. As disk space is required for new page buffers, the
oldest ones will automatically be deleted from the Held Queue. Pages which have been locked
will not be deleted. (See Locking important pages on page 67, for details of how to lock pages.)
The amount of hard disk space currently available is displayed at the bottom of the Output
Controller, so you can tell when old page buffers are likely to be deleted. (The number displayed does not include any space you have reserved for the system, see Chapter 7, Configuring the RIP).
Choosing Always will cause pages to be deleted immediately after they have been output. This
means that page buffers will never be retained for reprinting, unless they have been locked
before printing was completed. (See Locking important pages on page 67, for details of how to
lock pages.) When switching to Always from another strategy, any unlocked pages in the Held
Queue will be automatically deleted if you answer yes to a prompt.
Choosing Never will cause pages to be locked as soon as they have been output, which means
that they will never be deleted automatically. If this strategy is used for long periods of time,
the hard disk will eventually fill up, and no more jobs will be processed until you manually
remove pages or otherwise create more disk space.
Note: The option When necessary offers a good way to retain newer page buffers and manage disk
space automatically. If you choose Never or Always for some special purpose, we strongly suggest that
you return the setting to When necessary as soon as possible‚ the RIP remembers and uses the option
you choose for Delete, even between RIP sessions.
In When necessary and Always modes, it is possible for the RIP to get so far ahead of the output device
that the disk becomes filled with pages in the Active Queue. In this case, the RIP will temporarily suspend creating more pages until some of the existing ones are output and can be deleted to allow it to
continue. The Navigator RIP window displays a message warning that the system has temporarily run
out of disk space.
If disk space runs out when there are no pages that can be removed and no pages still to be output, the
RIP will continue anyway, and if the disk reserve is used up then it will abort the job.
4.3.2.2 Operations on buffered pages
There are a number of useful tasks that you can perform on buffered pages, as listed below. Some of
the options are only available for pages which are not currently being output or when no pages are
being output.
Using the lists of page buffers, and the Roam button, you can:
View pages on the screen.
Select several color separations and view them on the screen.
Using the Info button and the Info dialog box, you can:
Lock and delete page buffers.
Print multiple copies of page buffers.
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Change a page to print in negative or vice versa.
Change the exposure with which page buffers are printed.
Trim excess white space from the output.
Select the output device and cassette for page buffers (when appropriate).
Set margins and center the page on the media (when appropriate).
Change the colors used to Roam page buffers.
You can apply these changes to the selected page only, or to all the pages of a job.
These options are available in the Info dialog box. (Some options can be unavailable: either temporarily while you are Roaming a related page buffer or permanently because the output plugin requires
particular settings.) Display the Info dialog box by selecting a page and pressing the Info button, or by
double-clicking on the page.
Note: The mark ( < ) in front of the name of an older buffer is there to remind you that there are some
limitations on what you can do with earlier versions of page buffers: see Page buffers produced by
older versions of the Navigator RIP on page 69 for details.
4.3.2.3 Viewing pages with the Roam function
You can view one page or several pages or separations at the same time.
By selecting one page buffer and clicking Roam, you can preview the selected page. This prevents
wasted film and time by letting you check that an image has processed correctly before it is printed.
While roaming a page, the RIP is still able to process other jobs, but not to output them. You cannot
roam a page while the RIP is outputting, so you should disable output when using Roam.
To roam more than one page at once, select all the pages you wish to view and click Roam; the
selected pages will be overlaid in the Roam window. For example, this allows you to preview all separations of a color image together. Remember, you can select several buffers using the Shift and
Control keys.
When viewing a higher resolution image, the Roam > Reduced Roam menu option is probably available. It allows you to see more of the image in one view. You must close the Roam window (and the
Reduced Roam window if you opened it) before you can roam another page.
For more details about the Roam function see Roam and Preview windows on page 84.
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4.3.2.4 Locking important pages
To lock a page buffer so that it is not deleted by the RIP when disk space is low, select the Don’t delete
page check box in the Info dialog box. Page buffers which have been locked in this way are displayed
in the Output Controller with a mark on the left of the job name, as described on page page 62.
Figure 4.4 Info dialog box
You can delete any buffers from the hard disk‚ whether locked or not‚ by selecting them and clicking
on the Remove button in the Output Controller. A warning dialog box appears which lets you cancel
the operation if necessary.
4.3.2.5 Printing multiple copies
Multiple copies of any page buffer can be printed by specifying the number of copies required in the
Copies to print text box of the Info dialog box for the appropriate page buffer. The next time that buffer
is printed, the specified number of copies will be produced, with the number in the Copies to print text
box reducing with each copy until the value is 1. The Copies printed value keeps count of how many
pages have been printed in total.
4.3.2.6 Printing in negative
You can produce a negative copy of a positive page buffer or a positive copy of a negative page buffer
by selecting the Negative check box in the Info dialog box. The default value taken by this option is the
one specified in the Page Setup for the selected job; for instance, if the Page Setup specifies negative
printing, you can use this option to produce a positive copy. See Chapter 5, Configuring Output Formats, for details of Page Setups and how they are defined.
Note: If you have calibrated your output device, selecting this option from the Info dialog box may
produce incorrectly calibrated output. If so, select the Negative option in the Edit Page Setup dialog
box instead, and output the job again.
4.3.2.7 Trimming blank space
You can trim white space from the top and bottom of a page by selecting the Trim page check box in
the Info dialog box. The default trim page setting is specified in the Page Setup for the selected job.
See Other options that save media on page 119, for details. Trim page is switched off as a default.
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4.3.2.8 Changing the output device or cassette
You can change the selected output device or cassette for a page by choosing the one you want in the
Output device or Cassette drop-down lists of the Info dialog box. Next time the page is printed, the new
output device or cassette will be used. The default value taken by these options is the one specified in
the Page Setup for the selected job. See Chapter 5, Configuring Output Formats, for details.
Only output devices suitable for the page buffer are shown in the Info dialog box.
4.3.2.9 Changing the exposure
If an appropriate output device is selected, you can change the exposure for the selected page. Type in
the new value in the Exposure text box of the Info dialog box. Next time the buffer is printed, the new
exposure value will be used. You should consult the documentation for your output device to find
appropriate exposure values, and also see Chapter 12, Calibration.
4.3.2.10 Changing the color
You can specify the color of a job separation to roam from the Info dialog box. Click the Change roam
color button to use the Change Roam Color dialog box, as described in Changing the color in Roam on
page 367.
When roaming color images, this lets you assign different colors to different separations and view the
resulting image without having to interpret the job again.
4.3.2.11 Specifying page layout
You can change a variety of margin settings for a page buffer by clicking Page layout in the Info dialog
box. The Page Layout dialog box will then be displayed, as shown in Figure 4.5. It is the same as the
Page Layout dialog box that you can display by clicking Page layout in the Edit Page Setup dialog box,
as described in Default page size on page 120.
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Figure 4.5 Page Layout dialog box
This dialog box allows you to change the margins for the selected page buffer. Type the margin size
you want into the appropriate text boxes. You can choose the units of measurement you require from
the Select units drop-down list. In addition, you can center the selected page on the media by clicking
on the Center page on Media Width and Center page on Media Length check boxes. The default value for
each option is taken from the Page Setup for the selected page buffer. If you override any of these values, they will take effect next time you print the page buffer.
Some of the fields in the Info dialog box may not be editable, depending on the type of device.
Note: When Centre page on Media Length and Centre Page on Media Height are enabled the left and top
margin values are set to zero. In other words, the RIP does not clip when those options are turned on.
The page buffer ignores the margin when the centre options are turned on.
4.3.2.12 Changing attributes for the whole job
Each of the options described above only affects the selected page buffer. However, many jobs consist
of more than one page, and very often you will want to make the same changes to all of the page buffers produced by the job, not just one. Making changes to each buffer individually can be tedious, if not
impractical, so an option is available which allows you to change all the page buffers produced by a
job at once.
To propagate changes in the current page to all other pages produced by the job, make your changes
for one page buffer then select the Change all pages in job check box in the Info dialog box before clicking OK to close the dialog box. This change affects pages in both queues. If the current page is from a
job currently being processed and pages are still being created, the new pages will get the new
attributes if this option is selected.
4.3.3 Page buffers produced by older versions of the Navigator RIP
The Navigator RIP can read and print page buffers created by older versions of the RIP. The newer
installation of the RIP must have an output device that matches the output device used to create the
page buffers. There are some limitations on what you can do with earlier versions of page buffers,
depending on the way in which you access the older page buffers.
There are several ways to use older page buffers with a newer version of the RIP:
You can copy the older page buffers into a special transfer folder used only for that purpose by
the newer version of the RIP. This is the safest method because it avoids any interaction
between the two versions of the RIP, but it uses more disk space and requires you to manage
two page buffer folders in the newer version. Choose Navigator RIP > Configure RIP, then click
Change to change the folder used to hold page buffers.
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You can copy the older page buffers directly into the page buffer folder used by the newer version of the RIP. You may need to restart that version of the RIP before the RIP displays the
page buffers.
Warning: Take care not to copy page buffers with the same file names as ones already in the
destination folder.
You can leave the page buffers in the page buffers folder of the older version of the RIP. In the
newer RIP version, choose Navigator RIP > Configure RIP, then click Change to change the
folder used to hold page buffers.
Note: If you use Reduced Roam on a page first in the newer version of the RIP, this prevents
you using Reduced Roam on that page in the same folder when using the older version of the
RIP.
You can inspect the information displayed in the Info or Page Layout dialog boxes for an older page
buffer but you cannot change anything. The main consequences are that you cannot change the number of copies to be printed and you cannot change the permission for automatic deletion.
You can Roam older page buffers without any problems beyond a small color change, which is most
pronounced in continuous tone, unscreened page buffers.
4.4 Advanced details of page buffering modes
This section gives more details about each page buffer mode. As mentioned earlier, you should use
Multiple (Parallel) mode whenever possible, but if this proves difficult, you can specify a different
mode in the Configure RIP dialog box, described in Chapter 7, Configuring the RIP.
Recall that a page is buffered to disk into a file of rasterized data, produced as the RIP interprets the
data on the page. When the page has been interpreted, the data in the buffer file is sent to the output
device and printed.
Using buffers on disk means that complex pages can be interpreted without requiring large amounts of
working memory.
This section provides more specific details than the brief description in Page buffering modes on page
57. You may find this section useful if you wish to experiment with running the RIP in different
modes.
4.4.1 Multiple (Parallel) mode
Multiple (Parallel) mode is a highly efficient way of increasing throughput, utilizing your computer to
the full, and is the recommended mode for most cases. However, if you have an output device that can
stop / start, you may want to use the Single (if required) mode, especially if the data rate of the printer
is high.
Interpretation of pages can proceed while other, already interpreted, pages are being output. In addition, multiple page buffers are created and saved on disk in this mode. These are not deleted after the
pages have been output, allowing pages to be reprinted whenever necessary. This is extremely useful
if a problem such as a developer jam occurs with the output device.
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All the available processor time on your machine is used in this mode priority goes to the task of sending bitmap data to the output device, and any processor time not used in that way can be used to interpret the next page of data.
It is possible for several pages to have been written to disk, but not yet sent to the output device. This
may occur if there are pages which are quick to interpret, or if the printer is relatively slow or is not
ready.
Eventually, of course, this will fill up the hard disk. When this happens, interpretation is suspended
until enough pages have been output and deleted, or disk space has been freed up by another application. When the disk fills up, the Navigator RIP window displays this message:
System warning: Insufficient Disk Space
In Multiple (Parallel) mode, you can customize the RIP so that when disk space runs out, it automatically deletes pages which have been output. See Deleting buffered pages on page 64 for details.
4.4.2 Multiple mode
In Multiple mode, like Multiple (Parallel) mode, page buffers are kept on disk. (This is in contrast to
the single modes, where only one page can be held on disk at a time.) Before reprinting, the Output
Controller can be used to change many characteristics of the interpreted pages, meaning that time is
not wasted in interpreting jobs again.
As in Multiple (Parallel) mode, it is possible that the hard disk will become full you should ensure that
page buffers are deleted when necessary to free up disk space. You can let the RIP delete pages for
you, preserving important pages which you do not want deleted, or you can delete page buffers yourself whenever you want.
The main difference between this Multiple mode and Multiple (Parallel) mode is that interpreted
pages cannot be output while other pages are being interpreted.
In Multiple mode, when a page is ready, interpretation is suspended until it has been output, in a similar fashion to the way the single modes operate. The advantage of Multiple mode over either of the
single modes is that, because multiple page buffers can be written to disk, interpretation can continue
even if the output device is not ready to accept data (for instance, if there is a media jam or if it has
been turned off).
Multiple mode should be used if you experience a lot of data underrun in Multiple (Parallel) mode.
This is only likely to happen with very complex jobs or an output device that requires data to be supplied at a very high speed.
Note: Data underrun occurs when an output device does not receive data to print at a fast enough rate.
Some devices will signal an error and stop when this occurs. Others may continue to feed through
media with the consequence that large bands will appear in the output. Still others will attempt to stop
and restart. This may result in a loss in quality of the image, and in any case is likely to be slower. For
more information about using the Navigator RIP with such printers, see Using a printer that can stop /
start on page 180. See also Printer buffer size on page 184.
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4.4.3 Single mode
When running in this mode, the RIP interprets a page of a job and sends it to the output device, then
interprets the next page and sends it, and so on, until all the jobs specified have been printed.
Note: To run successfully in Single mode, as in Multiple mode, it is important that the RIP can send
data to the output device as quickly as the output device requires it.
In this mode, the RIP always creates a single page buffer, sends the data in it to the output device, and
then deletes the page buffer to make room for the next one. This means that you cannot use the
throughput system tools.
By default, if a data underrun occurs and data cannot be read from the page buffer fast enough to keep
up with the printer, the RIP tries once more to output the page and, if it still fails, aborts the job.
Note: The RIP does not display the Output Controller/Monitor in Single mode and Single (if required)
mode.
In this mode, the Output menu, on the main Navigator RIP window, contains a Hold and Reprint
option. (You can also select this option by pressing Ctrl+H.) Selecting this option allows you to choose
whether or not to reprint each following page without having to reinterpret it. This can be used to print
more copies of a page.
When you have selected the Hold and Reprint option, the RIP displays a dialog box at the end of processing each page asking if you want to reprint the page. You can answer: Yes, in which case the RIP
reprints the page and re-displays the dialog box; or No, in which case the RIP deletes the page buffer
and interprets the next page.
Note: As a side effect of using Hold and Reprint, the RIP displays a harmless error message in the
Navigator RIP window:
%%[PrinterError: re-print for hold and re-print]%%
4.4.4 Single (if required) mode
This mode is similar to Single mode, except that a single page buffer will be created only when it is
necessary. The RIP will attempt to output a page to the printer without using a page buffer at all, but
will create one in either of the following cases:
It is not possible to interpret the page quickly enough to keep up with the printer, and the
printer does not have a stop and restart function.
All the available working memory on your computer has been filled by interpreted data before
the page has been completed.
In the second case, the interpreted data is placed in a page buffer, thus freeing memory. More data is
interpreted, and when memory is exhausted again the data is merged into the original page buffer, and
memory is again available to continue the job. This process continues until all the data for the page has
been interpreted, at which point the data in the page buffer is sent to the chosen output device, as for
Single mode.
This mode is very productive but robust where there is an unpredictable mix of simple and complex
jobs, and is especially useful when most jobs are relatively simple. It is productive because the RIP
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Page buffering modes: a summary
processes the simple jobs without creating disk buffers and achieves maximum throughput for these
jobs. It is robust because, when a job is complex enough to require buffering, the RIP creates and then
sends the page buffer: this takes some extra time but the time is taken only when required.
In some cases, Single (if required) mode provides the quickest way to output a job.
The Output menu on the main Navigator RIP window, contains a Hold and Reprint option, as described
for Single mode.
4.4.5 Multiple (Parallel) compared to Single (if required) mode
The preferred mode for maximum performance and convenience is Multiple (Parallel) mode. The Single and Multiple modes will always be slower than Multiple (Parallel) mode: they are available only
to help you cope with very demanding output devices that are not able to stop/start, when there is very
little memory to use as a printer buffer.
However, in some circumstances, it is possible that the Single (if required) mode will be faster than
Multiple (Parallel) mode. This is because the bitmap of an output page does not need to be compressed, written to disk, read back from disk and decompressed again, before being printed. If you run
in Multiple (Parallel) mode, and the page buffer folder is on a RAM disk, the disk time required is
minimal, but you still have to compress and decompress the page. It is a question of speed versus convenience. Multiple (Parallel) mode offers much greater convenience, and will usually also offer the
best performance.
However, you should use Single (if required) mode if you are either only outputting a single page, (so
there can be no benefit from the overlapping of outputting and interpreting) or if the time to compress
and decompress the page to and from disk is large. This is true, for example, of the Seybold Rainbow
Islands test job, where 30% time savings are possible if Single (if required) mode is used at 2400 dpi.
®
The main problem with Single (if required) mode is that if the job is too complex, then the printer will
catch up, a paint to disk will be necessary, and the page output again: wasting the time spent on the
failed page and some media.
Another potential inefficiency of Single (if required) mode is that if the page is relatively simple, a lot
of processing time is wasted when the page is outputting, which could be used to get the next page
ready (as happens in Multiple (Parallel) mode).
4.5 Page buffering modes: a summary
The table below provides a summary of the major capabilities of each page buffering mode.
Single (if
required)
Single
Multiple
Multiple
(Parallel)
Ever create a page buffer?
Y
Y
Y
Y
Always create a page buffer?
N
Y
Y
Y
Will the Navigator RIP‚¶
Table 4.2 Summary of the capabilities of each page buffering mode
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Single (if
required)
Single
Multiple
Multiple
(Parallel)
Ever create more than one page
buffer?
N
N
Y
Y
Retain any page buffers on disk?
N
N
Y
Y
Always output as soon as a page
is ready?
Y
Y
Y
Y
Always stop interpreting while
outputting?
Y
Y
Y
N
Interpret pages while outputting
other pages?
N
N
N
Y
Allow pages to be output again?
Y
Y
Y
Y
Allow modification of page
buffer settings without
reinterpretation?
N
N
Y
Y
Allow previewing the page?
N
N
Y
Y
Will the Navigator RIP‚¶
Table 4.2 Summary of the capabilities of each page buffering mode (Continued)
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Configuring Output Formats
Chapter 3, Getting Started with the Navigator RIP, presented some of the basic ways of getting output
from the RIP. That chapter introduced the Page Setup Manager and Edit Page Setup dialog box and
showed how you can use Page Setups to choose the output device and many output options.
This chapter describes the details of these dialog boxes and discusses likely output devices.
5.1 Creating and managing Page Setups
Every job that you supply to the RIP takes its imaging options from a named Page Setup. This is true
both for jobs arriving through a managed network input defined in the Input Controller, and for jobs
that are the result of you choosing a menu option in the RIP, for example: Proof Fonts or Print File.
(These menu options can be a useful way to test new Page Setups.)
You can keep a number of different Page Setups which you use regularly‚ perhaps one that has Harlequin Precision Screening (HPS) turned on, and one that does not, one that previews images, and one
that sends output to a particular printer. You can save as many configurations as you wish.
Page Setups are such an important part of the RIP that you must name each one as you create and save
it. You can use up to 30 characters in a name. It is useful to give each Page Setup a meaningful name,
without being too specific about its contents.
Choose a meaningful name because the Page Setup name appears in several menus where you
have to choose a Page Setup. Also, for each job, the RIP displays a message in the RIP Monitor
saying which Page Setup it used.
Choose a form of name that suits the variety of jobs and output devices that you work with.
Consider making the name contain parts indicating the output device, and settings such as resolution. Another tactic might be to label a Page Setup with its general purpose, for example:
proofing or final output.
Try not to be too specific because you can change the settings within a Page Setup without
changing its name.
For example, this can be useful if you change the device you use for proofing. If you have several networked inputs that each use the same Page Setup, it is easier to edit just one Page Setup
than to create a new Page Setup and then change all the inputs to use the new Page Setup.
You can give an experimental Page Setup a less carefully chosen name, but try to make it clear that it
is not for routine use.
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5.2 Page Setup Manager dialog box
The Page Setup Manager dialog box appears when you choose Page Setup Manager from the Navigator
RIP menu, or when you type Ctrl+S. (You must stop inputs before you can display the Page Setup
Manager: if necessary, choose the Navigator RIP > Start Inputs menu option or click the tool bar button
that shows a red arrow and traffic lights.)
Figure 5.1 Page Setup Manager dialog
The Page Setup Manager contains a list of all existing Page Setups, showing the name of each Page
Setup, the corresponding output device and some important settings: the output resolution, the calibration set in use, and the separations style.
In a new installation of the RIP, there is always one Page Setup called Default Page Setup. This
Page Setup uses a set of options that can be expected to work with any installation of the RIP, producing a low-resolution on-screen preview. You can delete or redefine this Page Setup to suit your installation.
5.2.1 Controls and actions
The controls below the list allow you to create new Page Setups, and to edit, copy, or delete existing
Page Setups. You can also choose the units in which to view the resolution of output listed for each
Page Setup.
Select a Page Setup and click this button to edit it in the Edit Page Setup dialog box. A shortcut is to double-click a Page Setup. See Edit Page Setup dialog box on page 77 for details of using this dialog box.
Edit
Note: To rename a Page Setup, copy it and save the copy with the desired
name, before deleting the original.
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New
Click this button to create a new Page Setup and edit it in the New Page Setup
dialog box. See Edit Page Setup dialog box on page 77 for details of using
this dialog box.
Copy
Select a Page Setup and click this button to edit a copy in the New Page Setup
dialog box.
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Delete
Edit Page Setup dialog box
Select one or more Page Setups and click this button to delete them.
If any of the Page Setups are in use by a managed input, the RIP displays a
warning dialog box for each used Page Setup. Click Yes if you are certain that
you want to delete the Page Setup.
5.2.2 Reordering Page Setups
You can also select Page Setups and reorder them by dragging them to new positions in the list. The
order in the Page Setup Manager is the order of the Page Setups listed in the Print File, Proof Fonts,
and Print Calibration dialog boxes and in the Select Page Setup dialog box shown before entry to the
Executive window.
5.2.3 Selecting several Page Setups
You can select multiple Page Setups when you want to delete or reorder them. Use the following keys:
Shift
To select a block of setups that appear together in the list, select the first setup in the block, then, while
holding down the Shift key, select the last setup in the block.
Ctrl
To select several setups, regardless of whether they form a continuous range, hold down the Control
key while selecting the setups you wish to delete.
5.2.4 Closing the Page Setup Manager
You must close the Page Setup Manager before you can use any tool bar buttons or menu options in
the RIP: for example, to start inputs.
You have these choices:
Click OK to confirm all the changes you have made in the Page Setup Manager or in the Edit
Page Setup or New Page Setup dialog boxes.
Click Cancel to discard all changes.
5.3 Edit Page Setup dialog box
The Edit Page Setup dialog box (shown again in Figure 5.2) appears when you click Edit in the Page
Setup Manager. The New Page Setup dialog box appears when you click New or Copy. The New Page
Setup dialog box is the same as the Edit Page Setup dialog box, except that the OK button is labeled
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Save As. See Closing the New Page Setup dialog box on page 79 for details. References to the Edit
Page Setup dialog box throughout this manual also apply to the New Page Setup dialog box.
Figure 5.2 Edit Page Setup dialog box
The options you can configure from the Edit Page Setup dialog box include:
The device to which the RIP sends output.
The separations to be created from each job, together with the output format.
The halftone screening to be used with each job.
The calibration to be applied to each job.
The color setup for the job.
The effects to be applied to input jobs.
Selecting different devices on page 80 through XPS Options on page 145 describe the options within
these categories. Many options involve subsidiary dialog boxes.
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Edit Page Setup dialog box
All the information that you need to create a Page Setup is available from the Edit Page Setup dialog
box. You can call the Device Manager, Separations Manager, Color Setup Manager, Calibration Manager, and the Cassette Manager from the Edit Page Setup dialog box.
The changes you make in these managers are independent of the Page Setup you are creating. For
example, you can use the Separations Manager to create a separations style, even if you do not want to
use that separations style in the Page Setup.
5.3.1 Closing the Edit Page Setup dialog box
You must close the Edit Page Setup dialog box to save your changes. You must also close the Page
Setup Manager before you can use any tool bar buttons or menu options in the RIP: for example, to
start inputs.
Click OK to confirm all the changes you have made in the Edit Page Setup dialog box. This confirmation is provisional: you must also click OK in the Page Setup Manager to finally save your changes.
Alternatively, click Cancel to discard your changes immediately.
Note: If you open one of the other managers from the Edit Page Setup dialog box, changes that you
make in that manager are independent of the Edit Page Setup dialog box. For example, if you open the
Separations Manager and create a separations style, as long as you close the Edit Style and Separations Manager dialog boxes with OK or Select, the new style will remain even if you click Cancel in the
Edit Page Setup dialog box.
5.3.2 Closing the New Page Setup dialog box
You must close the New Page Setup dialog box to save your changes. You must also close the Page
Setup Manager before you can use any tool bar buttons or menu options in the RIP: for example, to
start inputs.
If you click Save As in the New Page Setup dialog box, a dialog box appears, requesting that you enter
a name for the new Page Setup. Figure 5.3 shows this dialog box.
Figure 5.3 Save Setup dialog box
The dialog box shows a list of existing Page Setups. You have these options:
Type a name in the Save As text box and click Save. The new Page Setup is added to the list in
the Page Setup Manager.
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Select a name from the list of the Page Setups to transfer it to the Save As text box. You can edit
the name first or click Save immediately to overwrite the existing setup.
Click Cancel to return to the New Page Setup dialog box.
If you attempt to save a setup using an existing name, the RIP asks you to confirm the action before
overwriting the existing setup. If you answer No, you return to the Save Setup dialog box where you
can choose another name.
Once you have saved the Page Setup, you must also click OK in the Page Setup Manager to finally
save your changes.
5.4 Selecting different devices
The Device drop-down list in the Edit Page Setup dialog box allows you to specify where your output
is to be sent once the job has been interpreted.
You can send output to a physical printer, write it to a file in a specified format, or preview the file on
your screen. Although the precise configuration of available devices may vary, the following output
devices are always shipped with the evaluation copy of the RIP:
Preview enables you to preview on your monitor any jobs processed. This output device is
available in both single and multiple modes.
None does not produce any printed output, but does perform all the necessary processing for
the job, including the production of page buffers. This can be used for testing and timing jobs,
and is especially useful for previewing on screen when you want to jump between pages or
overlay separations using the Output Controller. The Output Controller is available in either of
the multiple modes.
TIFF produces TIFF (Tag Image File Format) files. Most desktop publishing applications can
import this format of file.
And, depending on which physical output devices are available:
Plugin devices, for example, Ultre, PelBox and Hewlett Packard HP650.
Note that if you change the Device, you may have to choose a separations style from the Style dropdown list and a cassette name from the Cassette drop-down list before you can save the Page Setup.
5.4.1 Setting the resolution
Under Resolution, there are two options that allow you to specify the resolution of the image to be
printed. The resolution defines the detail with which an image is printed or displayed, and is given in
terms of dots per inch (dpi).
The list of available resolutions varies between output devices. Most physical output devices support a
limited number of resolutions and you must choose from the values shown in the drop-down lists. For
some devices (such as TIFF) you can either type in a resolution or choose one of the values.
Normally the vertical and horizontal resolutions should be the same value: this is your only option
when the screening method is HDS or when the chosen output device requires the same vertical and
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Selecting different devices
horizontal resolution. For other screening methods and with other output devices you can set the resolutions to different values if you need to.
Set both resolutions at once by defining just the vertical resolution the horizontal resolution is
automatically set to the same value.
Set different vertical and horizontal resolutions by setting first the vertical and then the horizontal resolution.
Note: The resolutions shown in this dialog box always take effect for jobs that do not specify a resolution. If the job attempts to specify the resolution, you must select the Override resolution in job check
box if you want to produce the resolution shown here.
5.4.2 Image interpolation
When an image is at a different resolution to the device on which it is to be imaged, artifacts can be
introduced with various degrading visual effects. Image Interpolation attempts to eliminate these
effects, using extra processing to effectively recreate the image specifically for the device.
Image Interpolation works both ways: reducing the resolution of the image to match an output device
with a lower resolution and increasing the resolution of an image to match an output device with a
higher resolution.
5.4.2.1 Increasing image resolution
If you input an image that has a resolution which is slightly lower (between 50%-100%) than the resolution of the output device, the resulting image appears with jaggies. Image interpolation will generally eliminate this type of problem, with very little (if any) perceptible loss of image quality.
If you input an image that has a resolution which is significantly lower (50% or less) than the resolution of the output device, the resulting image appears blocky. Image interpolation will smooth such
images giving a blurry look. If the resolution of the original image is reduced more when compared to
the output device, the output becomes more blurry.
In practice, you can still get jaggies when the image has a resolution that is significantly lower in resolution, but their effects are not as pronounced as in the slightly lower case.
It is a good idea to run some tests and decide whether or not to use image interpolation.
Image interpolation works by producing a smooth transition between adjacent sample values rather
than painting all pixels covered by a source sample with the same color.
There is a performance penalty when interpolation takes place, and this penalty is related to the area of
the output image, and to whatever color management is taking place.
Because it may increase the time required to render the image, image interpolation is disabled by
default. It is enabled when the width or height (or both) of an image on the device is larger than the
corresponding dimension of the source. If either dimension of the image on the device is less than that
of the source, the filter is deactivated.
Image interpolation takes place when the Interpolate flag in an image or mask dictionary is set to true
and this is set by the generating application, or you can force all images to be interpolated.
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Note: Interpolation (image and mask) is not supported for type 4 images.
Image interpolation increases the resolution of the image to the device resolution by increasing the bit
depth of the image. For example, a 1 bit grayscale image will interpolate to, say, an 8 bit image, with a
smooth gray scale transition between each black and white pixel.
Image mask interpolation produces output that is 4 times higher in resolution than the input, but it can
run up to three times in a row, providing at most 64 (4 x 4 x 4) times higher resolution output. The
mask interpolator uses two criteria to choose if higher resolution output is needed:
If the source mask width and height are both higher than the device resolution, stop.
If either the source mask width or height are more than 150% of device resolution, stop.
Otherwise, interpolate again.
The second check is concerned with images whose source data is not square, but they have been transformed so that on the device they are close to becoming square. This is to avoid the larger side of the
image becoming very large as the smaller side tries to achieve the device resolution.
5.4.2.2 Reducing image resolution
When an image is reduced on an output device, rows and columns of the source image are discarded to
make the image fit in the desired area.
Some images are generally unaffected by this process photographs for example. However, some
images, such as technical drawings, can become badly affected. When an image contains many fine
horizontal and vertical lines they can become badly distorted or even lost completely by the process
naively discarding whole columns and rows.
The image reduction filter eliminates this kind of problem by resampling the whole image to the
device resolution, ensuring that all pixels in source image are represented on the output. Thin lines on
a white background would become more faint as the image is reduced, rather than be discarded completely.
Any reduced image may benefit from the reduction filter however images containing fine line detail
will show the most benefit.
Although some processing time is required, the reduction filter can, in some cases, speed up processing as it reduces the amount of information the RIP has to work with. In particular, large, high-resolution images being output on a relatively low-resolution device (1200 dpi image on a 300 dpi device)
may notice a speed improvement, particularly if the job is using color management.
The image reduction filter becomes active when the width or height (or both) of an image on the
device is smaller than the corresponding dimension of the source. If either dimension of the image on
the device is greater than that of the source, the filter is deactivated.
5.5 Sending output to the screen
There are two output devices that are provided for sending output to the screen: Preview and None.
None is the more flexible choice if you are running the RIP in the Multiple or Multiple (Parallel) page
buffer mode.
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None is a dummy device provided for test runs and for previewing, so no physical printing takes
place. You can preview the pages sent to the None device using the Roam command from the Output
Controller in the same way as you can preview the pages sent to an actual device. You can roam several pages at once if they are the same size, which allows you to view selected separations of a color
image together or to compare buffers for the same page when processed with different Page Setups.
You can also hide one or more separations when previewing a composite image. The Output Controller is only available in either of the multiple page buffer modes.
Preview is also a dummy device, and it enables you to preview individual separations, a composite
image, or selected colors of a composite image in all page buffer modes. The Preview device does
not allow you to combine pages or separations for viewing, and jobs sent to Preview do not appear in
the Output Controller.
5.5.1 Using the Preview device
By setting the output device to Preview, you can preview any jobs processed on your monitor. As a
separate output device, Preview is most useful when running in Single or Single (if required) modes,
when the Output Controller is not available. The RIP pauses all job processing while you are viewing
a page and resumes only when you close the Preview window.
When you print a file to the Preview device, a new window appears containing the image processed,
as shown in Figure 5.4.
Figure 5.4 Preview window
You have already seen an example of screen roam in Chapter 3, Getting Started with the Navigator
RIP. Using screen preview as a device gives you the same options as screen roam. You can preview up
to 24-bit RGB or 32-bit CMYK raster images, as long as you have sufficient memory. If you have
installed an N-color device, you can also roam N-color images.
Navigation in the Preview window is the same as in the Roam window. For details see Roam and Preview windows on page 84. You can hide one or more separations when previewing a composite
image. See Roam Options and Preview Options dialog boxes on page 85 for details.
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5.5.2 Using the None device
When running in a multiple page buffering mode, you can preview pages from within the Output Controller by clicking the Roam button. (See Job management on page 64.) By setting the output device to
None, you can carry out test runs, and preview pages and separations.
You have already seen an example of screen roam in A simple Navigator RIP session on page 43. As
you saw in that example, when you print to the None device, you can select a page in the Held Queue
of the Output Controller and click Roam. The Roam window appears. The title bar of the Roam window contains the name of the file, the resolution and the color of the page or pages. You can view any
page in any queue of the Output Controller, not just the pages you printed to the None device.
To roam more than one page at once, select all the pages you wish to preview and click Roam; the
selected pages will be overlaid in the Roam window. For example, this allows you to preview some or
all separations of a color image together. Remember, you can select several page buffers using the
Shift and Control keys.
If you roam the separations of a color image or if you are roaming a composite image then the combined image may become difficult to interpret, particularly if any of the separations have similar colors. There are ways to reduce the complexity:
You can hide one or more separations as you are roaming the separations until all but one separations are hidden. See Roam Options and Preview Options dialog boxes on page 85 for
details.
You can choose to display a separation in any color (in the Info dialog for that separation)
before starting to roam it. See Changing the color in Roam on page 367 for details.
The Roam and Preview windows are described in detail in the following sections.
5.5.3 Roam and Preview windows
Note: This description applies to both Roam and Preview windows. For ease of description, this section refers to the Roam and Reduced Roam windows only: the same description applies to the Preview
and Reduced Preview windows except that the word Roam in menus becomes Preview.
When previewing pages, the size of the image is proportional to the resolution chosen in Edit Page
Setup: the higher the resolution, the larger the image appears. Choose a high resolution if you want to
look at a processed image in fine detail; choose a lower resolution to see the whole image at once.
When you are viewing a higher resolution image, the Roam > Reduced Roam menu option is probably
available in the Roam window. It allows you to see more of the image in one view. You must close the
Roam window (and the Reduced Roam window if you opened it) before you can roam another page.
For most sizes of page, there are horizontal and vertical scroll bars at the edges of the Roam window.
(The scroll bars appear only when the window is too small to display the whole page at one time.)
When there are scroll bars, you can use them to move your view to different parts of the page image.
Alternatively, you can drag the page image around by holding down the left mouse button when the
cursor is over the image and moving the mouse. While you are dragging the image, the shape of the
mouse cursor changes to a hand. The hand speed determines how quickly the image moves when you
move the mouse. You can set the hand speed, together with other options, in the Roam Options dialog
box. See Roam Options and Preview Options dialog boxes on page 85 for details.
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Sending output to the screen
Shift
Hold down the Shift key to see cross hairs marking the location of the view, in proportion to the size of
the Roam window. For example, if the cross hairs are shown in the bottom right of the window, the
window contains the bottom right portion of the page. Hold down the Shift key and click the mouse
(Shift-click) to jump to another part of the page. For example, if you Shift-click on the middle of the
window, the window scrolls to show the middle of the page.
5.5.3.1 Roam Options and Preview Options dialog boxes
Note: This description applies to the options for both the Roam windows and the Preview windows.
For ease of description, this section refers to the Roam and Reduced Roam windows only: the same
description applies to the Preview and Reduced Preview windows.
Display this dialog box by choosing the Options command from the Roam menu in either the Roam
window or the Reduced Roam window.
Figure 5.5 Roam Options dialog box
The Roam Options dialog box contains a list of the separations shown in the Roam window and the
Reduced Roam window.
You can use this dialog box to choose the separations that are displayed. Select a separation, or use the
Shift or Control keys to select multiple separation names, then click one of these buttons:
On
Displays the selected separation or separations.
Off
Hides the selected separation or separations. You cannot use this button if
using it would hide all separations.
The other controls do not require a selected separation.
Color display
Navigator RIP version 9
By default, the RIP displays the page image as quickly as possible. If you
prefer a more accurate (but slower) display of colors, select Accurate from the
Color display drop-down list. (This control may be unavailable if there are
restricted display colors because of hardware limitations or display modes
chosen in the operating system.)
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Hand speed
The hand speed determines how quickly the image moves when you move
the mouse. If you find that the page image moves too quickly, you can slow
down the hand speed by selecting Medium or Slow from the Hand speed dropdown list.
Negative
The Negative option allows you to switch the Roam image from positive to
negative or vice versa. This is particularly useful for negative images allowing you to view the image as a normal positive image.
You can close the Roam Options dialog box using the Roam > Options menu option again. Alternatively, closing the Roam window will also close the Roam Options dialog box. If you do not close the
Roam Options dialog box explicitly, it will be displayed the next time you preview pages.
5.5.3.2 Reduced Roam and Reduced Preview windows
When viewing a large or high resolution image, the Roam > Reduced Roam menu option is probably
available in the Roam window. It allows you to see more of the image in one view. You must close the
Roam window (and the Reduced Roam window if you opened it) before you can roam another page.
Shift
If you Shift-click at a particular point in the Reduced Roam window, the view in the Roam window
scrolls to center on that point on the page.
Shift
If you Shift-drag with the mouse (hold down Shift key, then press and hold the mouse button), you can
range over the part of the page which is visible in the Reduced Roam window.
5.6 Output to Preview
By setting the output device to Preview in the Edit Page Setup dialog box, you can preview any jobs
processed on your monitor. Using screen preview as a device gives you the same options as screen
roam. As well as navigating a preview of an image, you can display a reduced preview window, which
shows the same image reduced in size.
If you are running the RIP in one of the multiple modes and wish to preview jobs, you may find it useful to process those documents using None, and then preview each page buffer separately from within
the Output Controller by clicking the Roam button.
Under Separations, Screening & Color, the Style drop-down list contains all the separations styles created for the Preview device. The choice of separations style determines the color space and format of
the output.
See Sending output to the screen on page 82 for further information about the Preview and None
devices.
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Output to None
5.7 Output to None
The None device option available in the Edit Page Setup dialog box does not produce any printed output, but it does perform all the required processing for the job, including the production of page buffers in the appropriate modes. This can be used for testing and timing jobs, and is especially useful for
previewing on screen when you want to jump between pages or overlay separations using the Output
Controller.
Under Separations, Screening & Color, the Style drop-down list contains all the separations styles created for the None device. The choice of separations style determines the color space and format of the
output.
Note: The Output Controller is only available in either of the multiple modes. You can preview a page
in one of the single modes by setting the output device to Preview instead of None.
See Sending output to the screen on page 82 for further information about the Preview and None
devices.
5.8 Output to TIFF
The Navigator RIP can produce TIFF (Tag Image File Format) files, which you can choose by selecting the TIFF output device in the Edit Page Setup dialog box. Most desktop publishing applications
can import this format of file.
The Navigator RIP produces TIFF files which are compatible with TIFF 5.0, Classes B (bilevel), G
(gray scale), and R (RGB color). CMYK color separations are also supported as defined in the published TIFF 6.0 specification, Appendix K.
Note: From Eclipse Release SP4, if a TIFF file of 4GB or more is produced the output will abort, and
a File size overflow message will appear.
Under Separations, Screening & Color, the Style drop-down list contains all the separations styles created for the TIFF device. The choice of separations style determines the color space and format of the
output.
Note: The TIFF file is complete when it appears in the file system with the name requested by the
user, primarily to ease any subsequent, automatic processing of the file. (To make this possible, the
RIP produces, and then removes, an intermediate file with the suffix .TMP , or the suffix .TEM if the
requested name has extension .TMP .)
You can configure how the RIP produces and names TIFF files by clicking Configure Device in the Edit
Page Setup dialog box, when the selected output device is TIFF. Alternatively, if you are running the
RIP in one of the multiple modes, the device of any page buffer in the Output Controller can be configured by clicking Configure Device in the Info dialog box of that page buffer.
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Figure 5.6 shows the TIFF Configuration dialog box.
Figure 5.6 TIFF Configuration dialog box
The options in this dialog box fall into categories: location and naming, file format, and post processing‚ as described in the following subsections.
5.8.1 TIFF file location and naming options
Choose the folder in which the Navigator RIP places files by clicking the Folder button and choosing a
folder from the dialog box open the folder in the list and then click OK. The TIFF Configuration dialog box then shows the path to the folder that you chose.
If Path includes resolution is selected, the RIP places any TIFF files created in a sub folder of your chosen folder with the name of that sub folder set to the resolution of the job: for example, 300 or 2400.
Two naming options are available; Conventional and Template-based file name generation. Conventional file naming is much the same as previous versions. Template-based file naming uses various
tags to generate the name. This method has previously been used in a number of Navigator RIP plugins.
Choose the method you wish to use by selecting the option in the File name generation field.
5.8.1.1 Template-based name generation
Selecting Template-based in the File name generation text box allows you to specify the automatic generation of an output file name using a template of fixed text and tags. When this method is selected,
only the Template field is used for file name generation. All options in the Conventional name generation
section are ignored (including the Suffix field).
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Most tags are content tags, representing variables such as the date and time a job is processed; the
other tags allow you to reject names that would be illegal in a specified operating system.The maximum length of variables can be specified by preceding the tag name with an integer. For example,
<5jobname> truncates the job name to a maximum of five characters. Tags that produce numeric
values are truncated from left to right, whereas tags that produce alphanumeric strings (strings containing the characters a-z, A-Z, and 0-9) are truncated from right to left. See the example below for
further details.
Fixed text can be part of the file name stem or extension. For example, stem_<3unique>tif would generate a file name of the form: stem_000Cyan.tif, in which stem_ can
be any identifying text.
Try to use a file name extension that does not clash with any established convention.
Note: This file naming scheme does not provide useful file names derived from job names that contain
double-byte characters.
The default when Template-based is selected but the template field is left blank is:
TIFF<2unique>.TIF
This means that when 100 files have been processed the RIP will stop.
Note: If you use unrecognized tags they will be maintained in the output filename.
The following tags are available and can be used in any order:
Tag
Description
The color space of the device, such as DeviceCMYK, DeviceRGB, or
PhotoInk.
The name of the separation, such as Cyan.
The date when the job is processed, in the format YYYYMMDD, unless a truncated form is specified.
Separates the stem of the file name from the file extension, and appears as a
period character ( . ) in the file name. For example, stemext
appears as stem.ext. The use of the tag enables the verification of
the stem and extension lengths.
The exposure setting, a device specific integer.
The job number allocated by the RIP. Automatic numbering means that successive jobs have incremented job numbers: 000, 001, 002, 003, and so on.
The page buffer name without the page number prefix and without characters
illegal to the operating system. Whitespace characters are used, if present in the
job name.
The page buffer name without the page number prefix, and using only alphanumeric characters (a-z, A-Z, 0-9). Whitespace characters are not used.
The page number (allocated by the RIP), within the current job. For example:
002.
The page number prefix from the page buffer name, such as 1., 2., and so on.
Table 5.1 Output file name tags
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Tag
Description
You can use this tag to include the characters from the prefix before the full point
in the job name.
The page number is determined using the HqnPageCounter procset. This
is zero if the HqnPageCounter procset is not available.
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