I use acrobat (prof) as reference viewer from the editor and okular (kde
windows version) on a second screen as handy constantly open one; I tried a
few more but stuck to these two.
For MFLua I need to show 2 pages with thousand of MP points and look
on how the curves of the glyph join together.
With ctrl-r and magnification of 6400% AdobeReader is the only one
On Tue, Apr 17, 2012 at 9:42 AM, Hans Hagen wrote:
that is able to show the pdf without need to take an italian coffe at
every refresh.
When I need to typeset black&white or not-critical-colors document,
emacs+xpdf+ two_rows_of_workspace_in_gnome is ok --- no need another
monitor: the bottom row has the editor, the top rows has the viewer.
Maybe a wide 16:9 screen and the latest Emacs (which can render a pdf
into a buffer) are also ok: just split an emacs windows vertically in
two, left side is the editor, right side the viewer. I use the shell
buffer, so another split is needed.
Moving between buffers is not agile but the advantage is to minimize
the use of the mouse.
Anyway with a laptop it's not a problem to have another monitor, and
I use this configuration if I'm under Windows,especially with the
sumatra pdf or the ReaderX.
For all the rest (critical colors, interactive features, flash into
pdf..) the latest AcrobatProfessional is a must.
--
luigi