Book Image

Scribus 1.3.5: Beginner's Guide

4 (1)
Book Image

Scribus 1.3.5: Beginner's Guide

4 (1)

Overview of this book

Scribus is an Open Source program that brings award-winning and inexpensive professional page layout to desktop computers with a combination of "press-ready" output and new approaches to page layout. Creating professional-looking documents using Scribus is not a cakewalk, especially with so many features at your disposal, it’s hard to know where to get started! Scribus Beginners guide walks users step by step through common projects, such as creating a brochure,newsletter, business cards and so on. It also includes guidelines on starting a web newsletter and online PDF (Adobe Acrobat format) newsletter along with basic scripting to extend Scribus as per your requirements. This book begins with the simplest tasks and brings you progressively to adapt your workflow to the most efficient tools. It commences with the description of the graphic tool chain and an overall chapter on how to draw a simple and attractive business card. You'll then see how to manage the pages of your document and organized their structure thanks to guides. Then being invited to fill them with text, you'll be able to import, set text style as well as use replacement and hyphenation tool. Pictures or vector drawing will be added to the documents too. You'll be taught to choose the best format at the best time, modify or distort the shapes to get very custom documents. You will also learn how Scribus handles advanced color features such as transparencies, overprinting, spot colors precisely and be sure they are set well for a print result without bad surprise. At the end, you'll know to produce a perfect PDF file, be it for print jobs or web with effects, buttons and javascript interactivity, extend the document capacities as well as Scribus tools with simple programming especially with the python language.
Table of Contents (19 chapters)
Scribus 1.3.5 Beginner's Guide
Credits
About the Author
About the Reviewers
www.PacktPub.com
Preface
Index

About the Reviewers

Robert Charles first dabbled in computer programming in 1984 when his family purchased a Radio Shack TRS-80 (AKA)- CoCo, Tandy Color Computer, and the Trash Eighty. Financial limitations kept Robert from pursuing a career in the technology fields until 1998, when he attempted to capitalize on the dot-com boom through web design.

After the dot-com crash, Robert joined the IT department of a financial company and was introduced to the Open Source community through a work colleague.

Robert started his own company in 2006, employing and touting many open source solutions, such as OpenOffice, GIMP, Scribus, SME, and Paint.Net in his business and personal use.

Alessandro Rimoldi lives in Zurich, where he promotes free software, especially through the workshops created for the Grafiklabor. He has been part of the Scribus community since it began, and since 2009, he has been an active member in the board of the Libre Graphics Meeting.