Get Started With Scribus:10

Publishing Demands Freedom.PDF.
[PDF-authoring] The screenshot shows the GnuLinux version of Acrobat Reader. Yes, a free version is available from the Adobe site for GnuLinux as well. The document you see inside it, is a scoreboard created from Scribus, the free desktop publishing software. The background is an SVG graphic with a tint, and the fields, check boxes, and even the 'Click to Submit' button has been authored inside Scribus. Yes, the PDF elements contain Javascript embedded from within Scribus.

You guessed it. Scribus is a mature PDF-authoring software. Use it to create PDF forms, PDF documents, and you can even digitally sign your PDF documents with Scribus.

Look carefully. The headline bands are semi-transparant. The flame shows through. Scribus supports PDF 1.4 transparancy too. For your convenience, this is a separate file: FyugScoreCard.sla. Also check out its PDF version. [Design The PDF Layout] The design looks dramatic, but the layout is quite simple. It has only one column, which contains all the questions, in one text frame, on the left. The half-column on the right contains some information in a text frame. The headline and the Name, Address, etc, are in a text frame that spans the entire width of the page. The colored bands to mark the sections are obviously colored rectangles drawn behind the section sub-heads. The logo in the background is just the flame from the 'inflammable' SVG graphic. This time it is colored to Red at 20% shade. It is kept on another Layer stacked at the back.

[Clickable PDF Elements] The real questions are, how are the text fields, number fields, check buttons, and 'submit' button drawn that they work interactively inside Acrobat Reader or other PDF viewer programs? Use the special PDF tools in Tools>Toolbars>PDF Tools. Chances are you already have it open on your screen. An almost complete array of PDF elements can be authored in Scribus.

Once drawn, use the Properties palette for some cosmetic finishes. Then right-click the PDF element, and choose 'Is PDF Annotation' from the pop-up menu. Right-click again, and this time choose 'Field Properties.' You could also double-click the PDF element to configure it for PDF options. All PDF features are expressed here as screenshots so you can look and learn. Enjoy.

[PDF for Press] Scribus' greatest feature is that it can create PDF files which can be handed to a publishing house or printing plant for production. Yes, PDF comes in many flavours. One size does not fit all. The flavour for pre-press is called PDF/X-3. It basically signifies a PDF based on the Postscript Language 3, and contains ICC color profiles for handling independent color-managed workflows. Anywhere on the planet.

To create a PDF/X-3, or a more generic flavour of PDF that works for your desktop printer, or for the web, click the PDF icon in the taskbar at the top. One-click PDFs are always cool! The dialog box contains all you need to customize your PDF. Explore.

[Choose Your Flavour] In the dialog-box, start by clicking on the 'General' tab, and selecting PDF/X-3 from the drop-down menu for 'Compatibility.' It's a good idea to Downsample images to 300 dpi, at the bottom left here.

[Color Management] In the 'Fonts' tab, choose to embed all fonts and 100% of all characters. Then click on the 'Color' tab. Note you can use a source ICC profile for the file, choose its rendering intent, and also choose whether to use the source profile of the Images, or to discard it and choose your own. If you don't understand this, don't worry. It is quite simple.

Head out to littlecms.com and read the documentation available there. Also read the documents on the Scribus website, and check out the links to the excellent reference material on Scribus' page.

[Press Inks] Finally, click on the 'PDF/X-3' tab. You have to choose the output profile, which is basically selecting the kind of ink and paper you are printing your magazine on, and giving the job a mandatory 'Info String'. Give the name of your file here. You can also handle some amount of trimming, which is changing an existing paper-size in a document to a slightly smaller size to accommodate a print-job.

Before sending your job to the press, please go to Extras> Print Preview. You can see a soft-preview of your file in the inks of Cyan, Magenta, Yellow, and Black, and even simulate a progressive proof on-screen.

[Native Scribus File To Press] If you are blessed to have a Scribus-savvy printing plant, and wish to deliver a native Scribus file, go to File>Collect For Output. Select a folder and Scribus will copy your file, as well as put copies of all graphics and images, and even font files, in this directory. Transfer this folder to your press. May I recommend you throw in a copy of Scribus in this folder too. A clueless person can discover the joys of Scribus. Go ahead, this is perfectly legal, thanks to the power of GPL.