Scribus

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Scribus

Scribus under Linux Mint
Developed by The Scribus Team
Initial release June 26, 2003
Latest release 1.3.3.12 / 2008-06-23; 286 days ago
Preview release Through SVN
Written in C++
Operating system Cross-platform
Available in Multilingual
Development status Active
Type Desktop publishing
License GPL
Website www.scribus.net

Scribus is a desktop publishing (DTP) application; released under the GNU General Public License, it is free software. Native versions are available for Linux, Unix, Mac OS X, OS/2, and Microsoft Windows. It is known for its broad feature set of page layout features comparable to leading commercial applications such as Adobe PageMaker, PagePlus, QuarkXPress and Adobe InDesign.

Scribus is designed for flexible layout and typesetting, and the ability to prepare files for professional quality image setting equipment. It can also create animated and interactive PDF presentations and forms. Example uses include writing small newspapers, brochures, newsletters, posters and books.

An official Scribus manual has been available since the 18th January 2009[1], published through flesbooks.com.

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[edit] Capabilities

Scribus supports most major image formats in addition to SVG. Professional type/image setting features include CMYK colors and ICC color management. Although written in C++, it has built-in scripting using Python. It is available in more than 24 languages.

Printing is achieved via its own internal level 3 PostScript driver, including support for font embedding and sub-setting with TrueType, Type 1 and OpenType fonts. The internal driver fully supports Level 2 PostScript constructs and a large subset of Level 3 constructs.

PDF support includes transparency, encryption and a large set of the PDF 1.4 spec as well as PDF/X3, including interactive PDFs form fields, annotations and bookmarks. However, although PDF export is very good, it is not currently able to import/edit PDF files, and PDFs exported from Scribus are not searchable in Acrobat Reader if the document contains proportional fonts.[2][3]

The file format, called SLA, is based on XML and is fully documented. Text can be imported from OpenDocument text documents, as well as RTF, Microsoft Word .doc, and HTML formats (although limitations apply).

Scribus cannot read or write the native file formats of commercial programs like QuarkXPress, Microsoft Publisher, and InDesign; the developers feel that reverse engineering those file formats would be beyond their abilities as hobby programmers and could risk legal action from the makers of those programs, even though each of the commercial programs can deal freely with the file formats of the others and no lawsuit has been brought.[4]

Although Scribus supports Unicode character encoding, it currently does not properly support complex script rendering and so cannot be used with Unicode text for languages written with Arabic, Hebrew, Indic and South East Asian writing systems.[5][6]

[edit] Milestones

Scribus 1.3.3.7 in Windows
  • June 26, 2003 – Scribus 1.0 stable version released
  • August 28, 2004 – Scribus 1.2.0 stable version released, first stable release in the 1.2.x.x series
  • July 15, 2005 – Scribus 1.3.0 development version released, first version running natively on Windows and Mac OS X
  • November 10, 2006 – Scribus 1.3.3.5 stable version released, first stable release in the 1.3.x.x series
  • January 9, 2007 – Scribus 1.3.3.7 stable version released, first release running on OS/2
  • March 15, 2007 – Scribus 1.3.3.8 stable version released
  • May 30, 2007 – Scribus 1.3.4 development version released
  • January 8, 2008 – Scribus 1.3.3.10 stable version released
  • January 11, 2008 – Scribus 1.3.3.11 stable version released
  • June 23, 2008 – Scribus 1.3.3.12 stable version released

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[edit] See also

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