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CDLABELGEN(1)	      User Contributed Perl Documentation	 CDLABELGEN(1)

NAME
       cdlabelgen - CD/DVD labels, jewel case inserts, and envelopes creator.
       Generates frontcards and	traycards for CD cases,	single-cd envelopes,
       DVD case	inserts, as well as output suitable for	direct printing	on
       CD/DVD.

SYNOPSIS
       cdlabelgen [ -c <category> -s <subcategory> -i <item1%item2%etc>	-f
       <itemsfile>  -v <num_items_cover> -e <cover_epsfile> -S
       <cover_eps_scaleratio>[,<image_x_offset>,<image_y_offset_inches>] -E
       <tray_epsfile> -T
       <tray_eps_scaleratio>[,<image_x_offset>,<image_y_offset_inches>]	-d
       <date> -D -o <outputfile> -t <template> -b -C -w	-h -m -M -O -p -y
       <page_offset_inches>  -l	<line_width_points>] --create-dvd-inside
       --create-dvd-outside --slim-double-case --double-case --create-cdlabel
       --rotate-endcaps	--plaque-color <r,g,b> --category-color	<r,g,b>
       --subcategory-color <r,g,b> --text-color	<r,g,b>	-n <volume/number in
       set> --rows-columns <row_count_for_items,column_count_for_items>
       --tray-overlay <overlay_epsfile>	--tray-overlay-scaleratio
       <tray_overlay_image_scaleratio>[,<image_x_offset>,<image_y_offset_inches>]

VERSION
       Version 4.2.0, April 2012

DESCRIPTION
       cdlabelgen's purpose in life is twofold:

          To  be  run	automatically  and  swiftly  from  a  shell script and
	   automatically generate a frontcard and a traycard for a cd--usually
	   data	archive	cd's. The traycard (which goes behind the  CD  itself)
	   is  U-shaped	and the	ends of	the CD case bear the label of what the
	   CD is.  Inside inserts for DVDs are also supported.

          To have a minimum of	dependencies--cdlabelgen only requires perl.

       cdlabelgen was designed to simplify the process	of  generating	labels
       for  CD's.  It  originated  as  a  program  to allow auto generation of
       frontcards and traycards	for CD's burned	 via  an  automated  mechanism
       (specifically  for  archiving  data),  but  has	now become popular for
       labelling CD compilations of  mp3's,  and  copies  of  CDs.  Note  that
       cdlabelgen   does  not  actually	 print	anything--it  just  spits  out
       postscript, which you can then do with as you please. It	 can  also  be
       combined	 with  output  from  other  programs such as "barcodegen" - to
       print a barcode as a tray overlay image.

       The latest version of cdlabelgen	as well	as this	document can be	 found
       at http://www.aczoom.com/tools/cdinsert/. The software package includes
       CGI scripts that	can be used to serve cdlabelgen	over the internet.  An
       older	     version	     may	be	  available	   at:
       http://www.red-bean.com/~bwf/software/cdlabelgen/.

       cdlabelgen comes	with several eps images	for you	to use on your labels.
       These   images	can   be   found   in	/usr/local/lib/cdlabelgen   or
       /usr/share/cdlabelgen	     or		/opt/lib/cdlabelgen/	    or
       /usr/local/share/cdlabelgen, depending on your  installation.  Included
       are  a  Recycling  icon,	 an  mp3 icon, the Compact Disc	icon (with and
       without 'Digital' on it), Tux the penguin, and the new  Debian  'swirl'
       logo.   Two  color  background  images  called  Music  Notes  are  also
       available.

       CDs: cdlabelgen prints a	'tongue' as part of the	traycard.  This	 folds
       around  and is viewable from the	front in jewel boxes that are entirely
       clear (CD holder	piece is not opaque). If you do	not have  a  clear  CD
       holder  in  your	 jewel	box,  you  may	find it	easier to just cut the
       'tongue'	off--it's a bit	easier to fold without it.

       Paper Sizes: Normal CD cases, Slim CD cases, DVD	inside inserts can  be
       printed on a letter or A4 sized page.  CD/DVD Envelopes and DVD outside
       inserts	will not fit on	a letter sized paper, a	larger paper size will
       be needed to make it fit.

       cdlabelgen requires Perl	Version	5.003 or greater. Ghostscript  is  not
       required,  but  is  recommended	so  that  you can test out your	labels
       without wasting paper.

SWITCHES
       -c, --category <category>
	   Set the category (title) for	the CD

       -s, --subcategory <subcategory>
	   Set the subcategory (subtitle) for the CD

       -i, --items <items>
	   'items' should be a '%' separated list of items  to	print  on  the
	   traycard  of	the CD.	 Note that if the number of items are too many
	   to fit on the tray card, cdlabelgen will leave out  some  items  at
	   the end.  cdlabelgen	automatically flows the	items into 2, 3, 4, or
	   5  columns  and  scales  the	 fontsize accordingly, unless the "-P"
	   option is used.  You	can insert blank lines by inserting 2  percent
	   signs in a row into the items list.

       -f, --items-from-file <filename>
	   Get item names from file named filename. Each item should be	on its
	   own	line  separated	by carriage returns.  cdlabelgen automatically
	   flows the items into	2, 3, 4, or 5 columns and scales the  fontsize
	   or  clips  the  items  as  needed.	You  can insert	blank lines by
	   placing blank lines between items in	this file.

	   Special commands can	be embedded in the file, all of	these commands
	   should be present starting at the first column of  the  line.   The
	   codes  are  used to change the font for an item, the	code itself is
	   not printed in the output.

	    {#BI}     -	make the item bold and italic
	    {#I}      -	make the item italic
	    {#B}      -	make the item bold
	    {#M}      -	make the item mono-spaced (Courier font)
	    {#MB}     -	make the item monospaced and bold (Courier-Bold	font)

	   Example:

	    {#MB}    Text 1 Item
	   would print the line	"    Text 1 Item" in a monospaced bold font.

       -v, --cover-items <number_of_items_for_cover>
	   Normally, all the items are printed on the tray card.  But  if  you
	   have	 a  large number of items, you may wish	to print some items on
	   the cover, and rest on the tray card.  This option provides	a  way
	   of  specifying  how	many  items  should  be	 printed on the	cover.
	   Default is 0	(i.e., print no	item on	the cover, print all items  on
	   the	tray). The items to be printed on the cover are	taken from the
	   list	of items, from the top of the list.  Note that if  the	number
	   of  items  is too many to fit on the	cover, it will result in items
	   being dropped. As of	Jan 2002, around 250-300 items can  be	fitted
	   on	 the   cover   or   the	  tray,	  depending   on   whether   a
	   title/subtitle/date is used or not.

       -d, --date <date>
	   Set the date	to be used as 'date' if	not set	or not overridden with
	   the -D flag,	today's	date will be used (default is  today's	date).
	   Use	this  option  if you don't like	cdlabelgen's default format of
	   YYCC-MM-YY, for example.

       -D, --no-date
	   Do not print	any date (overrides -d as well)

       -e, --cover-image <cover_epsfile>
	   Filename of eps file	 to  print  on	cover.	Note  that  cdlabelgen
	   requires  that the eps file contain a proper	'%%BoundingBox LLx LLy
	   URx	URy'  declaration  according  to   the	 PostScript   Document
	   Structuring Conventions. cdlabelgen uses this line to determine the
	   dimensions	of  the	 eps  graphic  so  that	 it  can  position  it
	   appropriately on the	cover. Note that cdlabelgen  first  looks  for
	   this	 file  in your working directory. If it	doesn't	find it	there,
	   it will look	in the list of directories where the default eps files
	   are stored (see @where_is_the_template). This makes it easy to  use
	   the	images	shipped	 with  cdlabgelgen  without  typing  miles  of
	   pathnames.

       -S, --cover-image-scaleratio <cover_eps_scaleratio
       [,image_x_offset,image_y_offset_inches]>
	   The ratio by	which you want to scale	the epsfile  that  appears  on
	   the	cover.	If you omit this flag, cdlabelgen assumes a scaleratio
	   of 1.0. This	flag allows you	to squeeze larger  graphics  into  the
	   cover or expand smaller graphics to fill the	cover. Scaleratio must
	   be a	number (int or float).

	   If the scale	value passed is	0 (or 0.0), then the logo is used as a
	   background  image - it will be scaled as required to	fit the	entire
	   cover.

	   The -S option also takes optional  translate	 arguments.   Normally
	   images  are	printed	 on the	cover and the tray so that the bottom-
	   right of the	image is anchored to the bottom-right of the cover  or
	   tray.  To  move  the	images away from the bottom and	right borders,
	   use this option. For	example, to leave two inches  of  gap  between
	   the	image  and  the	 bottom	 border,  and 0.5 inches from the left
	   border, and use 1.0 scaleratio, use this: -S	1.0,-2,0.5

	   This	offset only applies when the image is being used as a  logo  -
	   i.e.,  image	 is  not  being	 used as background to fill the	entire
	   cover or tray.

       -E, --tray-image	<tray_epsfile>
	   Filename of eps file	to print on  traycard.	Note  that  cdlabelgen
	   requires  that the eps file contain a proper	'%%BoundingBox LLx LLy
	   URx	URy'  declaration  according  to   the	 PostScript   Document
	   Structuring Conventions. cdlabelgen uses this line to determine the
	   dimensions	of  the	 eps  graphic  so  that	 it  can  position  it
	   appropriately on the	cover. Note that cdlabelgen  first  looks  for
	   this	 file  in your working directory. If it	doesn't	find it	there,
	   it will look	in the list of directories where the default eps files
	   are stored (see @where_is_the_template). This makes it easy to  use
	   the	images	shipped	 with  cdlabgelgen  without  typing  miles  of
	   pathnames.

       -T, --tray-image-scaleratio <tray_eps_scaleratio
       [,image_x_offset,image_y_offset_inches]>
	   The ratio by	which you want to scale	the epsfile  that  appears  on
	   the	 traycard.  If	you  omit  this	 flag,	cdlabelgen  assumes  a
	   scaleratio of 1. This flag allows you to  squeeze  larger  graphics
	   into	 the traycard or expand	smaller	graphics to fill the traycard.
	   Scaleratio must be a	positive number	(int or	float) specifying  the
	   scale.

	   If the scale	value passed is	the word fill1,	then the image is used
	   as  a  background  -	 it  is	scaled so that it completely fills the
	   interior tray card region.  The value 0 (or 0.0) works same as  the
	   fill1 argument.

	   If  the value passed	is the word fill2, then	the image is used as a
	   background to fill more than	just the tray.	For normal  CD	cases,
	   the	image is scaled	so that	it completely fills both the tray card
	   region, and	the  two  endcaps  (but	 not  the  extreme  right-hand
	   'tongue-cap')  for  normal  cd  cases.   For	 Slim  CD cases	or DVD
	   Inside/Outside covers, the tray image will fill both	the  tray  and
	   cover  regions  (including any spines).  For	directly printing on a
	   CD (--create-cdlabel), fill2	option works like the fill1 option.

	   The -T option also takes optional  translate	 arguments.   Normally
	   images  are	printed	 on the	cover and the tray so that the bottom-
	   right of the	image is anchored to the bottom-right of the cover  or
	   tray.  To  move  the	images away from the bottom and	right borders,
	   use this option. For	example, to leave two inches  of  gap  between
	   the	image  and  the	 bottom	 border,  and 0.5 inches from the left
	   border, and use 1.0 scaleratio, use this: -T	1.0,-2,0.5

	   This	offset only applies when the image is being used as a  logo  -
	   i.e.,  image	 is  not  being	 used as background to fill the	entire
	   cover or tray.

       -o, --output-file <outputfile>
	   If the -o flag is used, cdlabelgen prints to	outputfile instead  of
	   STDOUT.

       -t, --template <template>
	   Specify  explicitly	which  template	 to use. This is useful	if you
	   need	to debug the PostScript	code in	the template, use a  different
	   template,  or  if you have created your own template	to use in lieu
	   of the one provided with cdlabelgen.

       -b, --no-tray-plaque
	   Suppresses printing of the Plaque on	the  traycard,	thus  allowing
	   you	to  either  fit	 even  more items on the traycard, or to use a
	   slightly larger font	size for the items.

       -C, --no-cover-plaque
	   Suppresses printing of the plaque on	the front cover, thus allowing
	   a cover image that fills the	 front	cover,	but  still  displaying
	   category and	sub-category information in the	other usual places.

       -h, --help
	   print out the usage message

       -w, --tray-word-wrap
	   Enables word	wrapping of the	items that print on the	traycard. Note
	   that	 this  is *not*	extensively tested and may be buggy! Make sure
	   that	you preview your label before printing	it  if	you  use  this
	   flag.

	   If  there  is  a problem with "-w", the best	option right now is to
	   split lines in the input itself, and	to omit	the "-w" option.

       -m, --slim-case
	   Creates covers suitable for use in slim  cd-cases,  this  means  no
	   tray	 card  (the  tray  card	 is now	the inside front cover).  This
	   creates a two page, folding cover insert. This could	also  be  used
	   in normal cd	cases as an inside insert.

	   Slim	  case	 option	 can  be  used	with  outside  dvd  inserts  (
	   --create-dvd-outside	) also - in which case the outside  insert  is
	   created for half-height DVD case.

       -O, --outside-foldout
	   Output  slim	 cd cover cases	(or dvd	inserts) with the order	of the
	   pages switched so the folding line lies on the outside of a	normal
	   case.  Can  be  used	 when printing either the slim-cd-case or dvd-
	   inside inserts.

	   This	option is best used along  with	 option	 -m  (--slim-case)  or
	   --create-dvd-inside.

       --rotate-endcaps
	   Endcap text is rotated by 180 degrees, to flip the text around.

       -M, --create-envelope
	   Creates  covers suitable for	use as envelopes for a CD. Guide lines
	   are printed,	to aid in folding the printout correctly.

       --create-dvd-inside
	   Creates inserts suitable for	use as inside insert for a normal  DVD
	   case.   Guide  lines	 are  printed,	to aid in folding the printout
	   correctly.  Note: DVD inserts may not print fully on	Letter	or  A4
	   sized paper printers; it may	require	larger paper sizes.

       --create-dvd-outside
	   Creates  inserts  suitable  for  use	as outside cover inserts for a
	   normal DVD case.  Guide lines are printed, to aid  in  folding  the
	   printout  correctly.	  Note:	 DVD  inserts  may  not	print fully on
	   Letter or A4	sized paper printers;  it  may	require	 larger	 paper
	   sizes.

	   Slim	 case  option  (  --slim-case  )  can be used with outside dvd
	   inserts also	- in which case	the  outside  insert  is  created  for
	   half-height DVD case.

       --double-case
	   Create  covers  for	double-sided DVD cases that hold 6 DVDs.  Only
	   double-width	DVD cases are supported, double-width CD cases are not
	   supported.	Therefore,  using  --double-case  also	 implies   the
	   --create-dvd-outside	option.	 Note: DVD inserts may not print fully
	   on  Letter  or A4 sized paper printers; it may require larger paper
	   sizes.

       --slim-double-case
	   Create covers for double-sided DVD cases that hold 6	DVDs in	 boxes
	   1.5	times  the  depth  of  normal  dvd  cases.  Only DVD cases are
	   supported with this option,	slim-double-width  CD  cases  are  not
	   supported.	Therefore,  using  --slim-double-case also implies the
	   --create-dvd-outside	option.	 Note: DVD inserts may not print fully
	   on Letter or	A4 sized paper printers; it may	require	 larger	 paper
	   sizes.

       --create-cdlabel
	   For directly	printing on a CD or DVD. As of January 2005, there are
	   inkjets  printers  that  can	print on certain types of blank	CD/DVD
	   discs.  Only	a small	number of items	can be printed on the CD,  and
	   the number of characters in the title and subtitle is also limited.
	   Always  check  the  output  visually	by using PostScript viewers or
	   printing on paper, before printing on the CD.

	   With	this option, the  top  portion	of  the	 disc  represents  the
	   "cover"   area   -	so  arguments  related	to  the	 cover:	 title
	   (--category),    subtitle	(--subcategory),    --no-cover-plaque,
	   --cover-items,  --cover-image,  etc all apply to the	top area.  The
	   bottom portion of the disc represents the "tray" area, so arguments
	   related to the tray:	--no-tray-plaque, --tray-image,	etc all	 apply
	   to  the  bottom  area.   The	 date  (--date)	string,	if present, is
	   printed along the bottom curved edge	of the disc.

	   Background images can be specified using the	--cover-image  option,
	   modified  as	need by	the --cover-image-scaleratio.  If --tray-image
	   is also specified, note that	the cover image	is printed first, then
	   the tray image overwrites the cover image. The title/items text  is
	   then	finally	printed	over all the images.

	   The	 --no-tray-plaque   and/or   --no-cover-plaque	 (along	  with
	   --cover-items) option is also  recommended  with  --create-cdlabel,
	   otherwise  there may	be no space for	any items to be	printed	on the
	   disc.

	   The --clip-items option is also recommended.

       -p, --clip-items
	   Enables clipping of items; uses fixed  font	size  for  all	items.
	   Normally,  the  template.ps	used  by cdlabelgen will try to	fit an
	   item	in a given column by reducing the font size if needed. This is
	   ok if done for one or two items, but	if done	too  often,  it	 makes
	   the tray card look ugly, with text of varying font sizes.

	   Use	this  option  to  use a	fixed width font for all items.	If the
	   item	is too large to	fit in a column,  the  text  will  be  clipped
	   instead.

       -y, --page-offset [<page_x_offset_inches,]<page_y_offset_inches
	   Use	this  to move the entire output	up or down (y_offset), to make
	   the output fit on appropriate sized paper. For letter sized	paper,
	   0.8	works  well, and for A4	paper, 1.5 works well. The value is in
	   units of inches.  An	optional X-axis	offset can also	be  specified.
	   Default values: 1 inch for X-axis, 0.8 inches for Y-axis.

       -l, --line-width	<line_width_points>
	   Specify  size in points of the edge and interior lines of the cover
	   and tray card.  If this is 0, then the lines	are omitted  for  both
	   the	cover  and  tray  (but guide cut lines are still printed). The
	   size	is specified in	points (1 point	is 1/72	inch).

       --plaque-color <r,g,b>
	   Specify a color to fill plaque.  Color must be specified using  the
	   rgb components, each	value should be	between	0 and 255.

       --category-color	<r,g,b>
	   Specify  a  color  for category.  Color must	be specified using the
	   rgb components, each	value should be	between	0 and 255.

       --subcategory-color <r,g,b>
	   Specify a color for subcategory.  Color must	be specified using the
	   rgb components, each	value should be	between	0 and 255.

       --text-color <r,g,b>
	   Specify a color for text - this is used for the list	of items,  and
	   the	date display under the plaque and in the end-caps.  Color must
	   be specified	using the rgb components, each value should be between
	   0 and 255.

       -n, --number-in-set <string>
	   Append volume information to	the end	 of  the  date	string.	  This
	   should  be  a  single  string.  If used in conjuction with "-D", it
	   will	be in place of the date; otherwise, it is appended to the date
	   as "	- <number-in-set>"

       --rows-columns <row_count_for_items,column_count_for_items>
	   The --rows-columns options forces the list of items to  be  printed
	   using  that many rows, and that many	columns.  Both numbers have to
	   be provided,	no spaces, for example:	--rows-columns=11,3

	   The list of items is	laid out in top-down,  left-to-right  fashion.
	   Use blank items in the input, to get	appropriately aligned columns.

	   --rows-columns  applies  to	the  list  of  items wherever they are
	   printed - normally on the tray only,	but may	include	cover, or  the
	   top	and bottom portions of the round printouts for direct CD label
	   printing.  Same values apply	to all these  variations,  so  if  you
	   need	 different  number  of rows/columns for	cover vs tray, you can
	   use two different runs of cdlabelgen, to get	two postscript	files,
	   and	pick  the  cover  from	one printout, and tray from the	other.
	   This	will work for jewel-case inserts, but may not work for	direct
	   CD label printing.

       --tray-overlay overlay_epsfile
	   Filename of eps file	to print as overlay on traycard. This image is
	   printed  over the background	image (tray-image) as well as the list
	   of items. Therefore,	this is	useful for things like	barcodes.   In
	   terms  of  EPS  file	 requirements,	see  the  --tray-image	option
	   description.

       --tray-overlay-scaleratio
       tray_overlay_image_scaleratio[,image_x_offset,image_y_offset_inches]
	   The ratio by	which you want to scale	the epsfile that is used  with
	   the --tray-overlay option, and optionally to	translate the overlay.
	   Normally  overlay  image is printed on the tray so that the bottom-
	   right of the	image is anchored to the bottom-right of the tray.  To
	   move	 the  images  away from	the bottom and right borders, use this
	   option. For example,	to leave 0.1 inches of gap between  the	 image
	   and	the  bottom  border, and 0.2 inches from the right border, and
	   use	   1.0	   scaleratio	  (no	  scaling),	use	 this:
	   --tray-overlay-scaleratio 1.0,-0.2,0.1

EXAMPLES
	   cdlabelgen -c "My Filesystem"
			-s "/usr/local/foo"
			-e postscript/recycle.eps > foo.ps

	   cdlabelgen -c "title	of cd"
			-s "subtitle"
			-i "Item 1%and Item 2%a	third item here	perhaps"
			-e postscript/recycle.eps -o bar.ps

	   cdlabelgen -c "Fitz"
			-s "home directory"
			-o qux.ps

	   cdlabelgen -c "Backups"
			-s "home directory"
			-n "4 of 5"

	   Direct printing on a	CD or DVD, if file "example5.txt" has list of items:
	   cdlabelgen --clip-items --no-tray-plaque --date "Jan	2005"
	     -c	"Collections 12" -s "- english songs -"
	     --cover-image "music2.eps"	--cover-image-scaleratio 0.0
	     --tray-image "mp3.eps" --tray-image-scaleratio 0.5,-0.5,2
	     --page-offset 0.5,0.5 -f example5.txt -o test.ps

CHARACTER ENCODINGS - using ogonkify
       cdlabelgen  uses	 the Helvetica family of fonts for various text	items,
       using the default encoding of ISO-Latin1.

       To use other encodings, the "ogonkify" program can be used; this	 is  a
       package	available at http://www.pps.jussieu.fr/~jch/software/ogonkify/
       The output from cdlabelgen can be  piped	 into  ogonkify,  example  for
       Latin2 encoding:

	  cdlabelgen <args>  | ogonkify	-H -eL2	   > <outputfilename>

       See  the	 man  page  for	 ogonkify  for	other  possible	values for the
       encoding.

       Hint: if	you always work	with a particular encoding, you	can  just  run
       ogonkify	on template.ps - and use the output as the new template.ps.

	  ogonkify -H -eL2 template.ps > template-enc.ps

       This  way  ogonkify  has	 to  be	 run only once,	cdlabelgen output will
       contain the correctly encoded fonts from	the modified template.ps.  Use
       the  -t	cdlabelgen  option to specify the new template-enc.ps file, or
       save the	old template.ps	and renmae template-enc.ps to template.ps.

PRINTING
       When using tools	such as	Adobe Acrobat to print the .ps or a .pdf file,
       make sure that "Fit To Paper" option is unchecked.   Also  uncheck  any
       option  that  will  perform scaling up or down of the cdlabelgen	output
       file.

       Failure to do so	will result in incorrect size printouts.

       Paper Sizes: Normal CD cases, Slim CD cases, DVD	inside inserts can  be
       printed on a letter or A4 sized page.  CD/DVD Envelopes and DVD outside
       inserts	will not fit on	a letter sized paper, a	larger paper size will
       be needed to make it fit.

       When using different sized paper, experimentation with  the  -y	(also:
       --page-offset)	[<page_x_offset_inches,]<page_y_offset_inches>	option
       may be required to place	the image  in  the  printable  region  of  the
       paper.

AUTHOR
       Avinash Chopde <avinash@aczoom.com>

       Original	author:	B. W. Fitzpatrick <fitz@red-bean.com>

THANKS
	   - Karl Fogel, for general encouragement and that free software vibe
	   - Adam Di Carlo, for	bug testing, help and making the .deb
	   - Greg Gallagher, for bug testing, coding, and tons of suggestions
	   - Goran Larsson, for	feedback and date fixes
	   - Jens Claussen, for	the patch to allow arbitrary ISO-Latin1	characters
	   - Bernard Quatermass, for contributing several excellent new	features
	   - Sebastian Wenzler <sick@home.and.drunk.at>	for reports, tests, RPM	['01]
	   - Peter Bieringer <pb@bieringer.de> for RPM .spec file ['02]
	   - Ronald Rael Harvest <number6@cox.net> for original	envelope template ['02]
	   - Alessandro	Dotti Contra <alessandro.dotti@libero.it> for color support,
	       man page	and other improvements ['02]
	       Mathias Herberts
	   - Mathias Herberts <Mathias.Herberts@iroise.net>, for slim cdcase foldout
	   - Stephan Grund <Stephan.Grund@isst.fraunhofer.de>, for monospaced
	     font and for rotated-end-caps text	support
	   - Dominique Dumont <dod@debian.org>
	       for half-height DVD case	support
	       for slim-double depth DVD case support
	       (patches	forwarded by Juan Manuel Garcia	Molina <juanma@debian.org>)
	   - Peter Bieringer <pb@bieringer.de> for testing CD label printint ['05]
	   - Andras Salamon <asalamon@chello.hu> for double-width DVD support ['08]

TODO
	** Word	wrap does not work well	at all.	It will	clip lines, or it will
	   auto-reduce the font	size, both of which option look	bad.

	** Ability to change the text style on a given line:
	   {#B}Track#  {#P}Title   {#I}	Text...
	   [Workaround available: just use multi columns input,	use blank
	    lines to spread out	input items into columns]

	** Ability to select or	specify	fonts for the text/items

perl v5.10.0			  2012-04-15			 CDLABELGEN(1)

Want to link to this manual page? Use this URL:
<https://man.freebsd.org/cgi/man.cgi?query=cdlabelgen&sektion=1&manpath=FreeBSD+Ports+15.0>

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