When you??™ve made your choices, click
Export to create the PDF.
7. Your OpenOffice.org file will still be onscreen so that you can edit it. To open your new
PDF document, locate it in your favorite file manager. Acrobat Reader (or Ghostview,
depending on how your system is configured) will display your exported file.
Figure 7.10 shows a PDF created with OpenOffice.org in Acrobat Reader.
CHAPTER 7 Printing with openSUSE 134
FIGURE 7.10 Create your own PDF documents with OpenOffice.org.
TIP
Learn more about the things you can do with OpenOffice.org and other Linux office
suites in Chapter 9, ???Being Productive: Office Suites and Other Tools.???
Console Print Control
As with nearly everything else in Linux, you don??™t need X running to print a file. CUPS
answers shell commands very well, and if for some reason the CUPS daemon won??™t run,
you still have access to the old UNIX/Linux print standard, LPRng, which responds to the
same commands. This section will cover how to print from your command line.
TIP
If you don??™t know much about the shell or console, there??™s much more in Chapter 8,
???Shaking Hands with Your Shell.
Pages:
313
314
315
316
317
318
319
320
321
322
323
324
325
326
327
328
329
330
331
332
333
334
335
336
337