Turnthiswikipageintoapdf
CSS Print?
CSS Print is a module within the CSS language standards maintained by the W3C.
Some reasons why CSS Print can be interesting to use:
- publishing pipelines
- generated publications, layout engines
- using HTML+CSS know how for print
- web & print in one workflow
- non-linear workflows (writing and design in parallel)
- collective workflows
- networked publications (using web materials)
- web culture & aesthetics in print
- ...
@media print
@media print{
h1{
width: 100%;
text-align: center;
}
}
from wiki page to HTML page
CTRL+P / CMD+P
That speaks for itself :)
But.. when doing this on the wiki, there is only one stylesheet for all wiki pages :(
curl
$1=WIKIPAGE
# Download a wikipage in HTML
curl https://pzwiki.wdka.nl/mediadesign/$WIKIPAGE?action=render > $WIKIPAGE.html
# Change the links in the images
sed -i "s/\/mw-mediadesign/https:\/\/pzwiki.wdka.nl\/mw-mediadesign/g" $WIKIPAGE.html
# Add stylesheet(s)
pandoc \
--standalone \
--css screen.css \
--css print.css \
$WIKIPAGE.html \
--output $WIKIPAGE.html
Now open the web page in your browser, and CTRL+P
/ CMD+P
!
Weasyprint
$ weasyprint https://pzwiki.wdka.nl/mediadesign/Protocols_for_Collective_Performance:_Radio_Broadcast_1?action=render --stylesheet print.css broadcast1.pdf
Paged.js
Download the Paged.js library:
- https://unpkg.com/pagedjs@0.4.3/dist/paged.polyfill.js (as pagedjs.polyfill.js)
- https://gitlab.coko.foundation/pagedjs/interface-polyfill/-/raw/master/interface.css (as pagedjs.interface.css)
WIKIPAGE=$1
# Download a wikipage in HTML
curl https://pzwiki.wdka.nl/mediadesign/$WIKIPAGE?action=render > $WIKIPAGE.html
# Change the links in the images
sed -i "s/\/mw-mediadesign/https:\/\/pzwiki.wdka.nl\/mw-mediadesign/g" $WIKIPAGE.html
# Add stylesheet(s) + paged.js library
pandoc \
--standalone \
--css print.css \
--css pagedjs.interface.css \
--include-in-header=pagedjs.polyfill.js \
$WIKIPAGE.html \
--output $WIKIPAGE.html
Maybe: not a single system!
$ pdfunite file1.pdf file2.pdf file3.pdf output.pdf
Booklet making
There are many ways to make booklets with the terminal, using Imposition tools.
For example:
$ pdfbook2 output.pdf --no-crop --short-edge --paper=a4paper