- #SCRIBUS REVIEW MAC OS X#
- #SCRIBUS REVIEW INSTALL#
- #SCRIBUS REVIEW UPDATE#
- #SCRIBUS REVIEW CODE#
- #SCRIBUS REVIEW PROFESSIONAL#
If you work on Magazines or newspapers or are a professional publisher, I suggest you wait. Schools and Churches who also do lightweight publishing and are on a tight budget and cannot see spending, hundreds to thousands of dollars on a commercial product, will find this tool very useful. Professionally my company uses Scribus to create our brochures and press releases and we use it to create our customer manuals, basic lightweight Desktop Publishing. I use it personally to create all the howtos on my site. But, if you use PageMaker or Microsoft Publisher, then you will find similar functionality to Scribus and will probably find Scribus to be a great alternative. To be honest, I do not see Quark Express users or Adobe InDesign users flocking to Scribus.
#SCRIBUS REVIEW UPDATE#
They should update the tool bar icons to something more modern, either crystal or an aqua type theme. They are the same Icons that you would see with KDE 1 or KDE 2, this makes the Application look dated. The major peeve I had was with the tool bar icons. It kept everything in format and the output looks professional.Īs usual with all software, everyone has their pet peeves or things they would like to see changed or added. Printing with Scribus was handled very well. I had problems with Font rendering, but after a visit to the mailing list, I found out that it is a Red Hat problem with its font engine. All the distributions I tried Scribus on, it worked well except for Red Hat 9. It loads rather quickly and all the fonts on my system were picked up and ready for use by Scribus. I had no adverse effects and no unexplained crashes. Everything worked properly as they were supposed to. I found Scribus 1.0 to work very well in comparison to the developer builds. Scribus as of 1.0 now has the Multiple Document Interface, where you can work on multiple documents at one time. With PDF’s it can also handle transperencies. You can create Python scripts for Scribus and you can import and export SVG’s. PDF/X-3 files and you can assign presentation effects and you can encrypt PDF’s. One feature that I like is that the Scribus file format is based on XML, meaning that if you have a document that got damaged you can recover some of that document using a text editor.
Graphics formats that can be utilized by Scribus are, jpeg, PNG and Xpixmap. Scribus has some professional publishing features, such as CMYK color, create PDFs easily, Encapsulated Postscript import/export. Scribus has a very clean interface and very easy to learn. Basically any machine that you have that has QT on it you can compile Scribus. There are efforts to port Scribus to Cygwin and Windows 2000 Professional.
#SCRIBUS REVIEW MAC OS X#
There are some reports that Scribus can be installed on Mac OS X through Fink, although I have not tested it or had a look yet. I have compiled Scribus for SuSE Linux 8.1 and 8.2, Yellowdog Linux 3.0 and Red Hat Linux 9.
#SCRIBUS REVIEW INSTALL#
To install CUPS and QT on Red Hat install the KDE Desktop and KDE Developer packages. LittleCMS packages can be downloaded from here. SuSE Linux 8.x has all the necessary packages and they are installed by default, but Red Hat Linux and Debian Linux do not have TiffLib or Little CMS and they need to be downloaded and installed. It is good to have these but CUPS and LittleCMS are not required, but you will not be able to utilize all the features of Scribus without them.
The configure script looks for QT 3.0.3 at least, CUPS, Tifflib, FreeType2 and LittleCMS. Debs are an efficient way of installation.
#SCRIBUS REVIEW CODE#
The source code is downloaded and easy to configure and make.
Scribus does not have any prebuilt RPM’s or binary packages available for it. Scribus is meant to one day replace Adobe InDesign, Quark Express and if it continues on its current path it will meet its goal. It is developed byįranz Schmid and his team of many contributors. It is written in QT so it can run on a variety of Operating Systems. Scribus is a open source Desktop Publishing Lapp. 1.0 came with so many bug fixes and has become so refined I decided to do a review of it. I have used Scribus both personally and professionally since the early development times. On Jthe Scribus project had a milestone release.