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python-reportlab-docs-3.3.0-1.mga6.i586.rpm

<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<!-- edited with XMLSPY v2004 rel. 3 U (http://www.xmlspy.com) by Andy Robinson (ReportLab Europe Ltd.) -->
<!DOCTYPE presentation SYSTEM "../pythonpoint.dtd">
<presentation filename="figures.xml" pageDuration="10">
  <stylesheet module="standard" function="getParagraphStyles"/>
  <title>New Feature Tests</title>
  <author>
        Andy Robinson
    </author>
  <subject>
        Reportlab Sample Applications
    </subject>
  <section name="Main">
    <!-- any graphics in the section go on all its pages as a backdrop -->
    <rectangle height="555" fill="ReportLabBlue" x="20" width="96" y="20"/>
    <!--fixedimage height="64" filename="leftlogo.gif" x="20" width="96" y="510"/-->
    <customshape module="customshapes" class="Logo" initargs="(20,510,96,64)"/>
    <!--infostring size="14" align="right" x="800" y="36">
            &#187;%(title)s, page %(page)s&#171;
        </infostring-->
    <!-- Now for the slides -->
    <slide title="Introduction" id="Slide001" effectname="Box" effectduration="2">
      <frame height="468" x="120" y="72" rightmargin="36" width="700" leftmargin="36">
        <para style="Heading1">
                    New Feature Test Cases - Figures, Drawings and Included Pages
                </para>
        <para style="BodyText">
                    especially images and pagecatcher stuff...
                </para>
        <para style="BodyText">
          <i>
                        PythonPoint
                    </i>
                    lets you create attractive and consistent presentation slides
                on any platform.  It is a demo app built on top of the PDFgen PDF library
                and the PLATYPUS Page Layout library.  Essentially, it converts slides
                in an XML format to PDF.
                </para>
        <para style="BodyText">
                    It can be used right now to create slide shows, but will
                    undoubtedly change and evolve.  Read on for a tutorial...
                </para>
      </frame>
    </slide>
    <slide title="Test Drawing Tag" id="Slide002" effectname="Dissolve" effectduration="2">
      <frame height="468" x="120" y="72" rightmargin="36" width="700" leftmargin="36" border="true">
        <para style="Heading1">
                    Drawing Tag In Action within story context
                </para>
        <para style="BodyText">
                    especially images and pagecatcher stuff...
                </para>
        <para style="BodyText">Hope that came out right-aligned with a box around it...</para>
        <drawing module="slidebox" constructor="SlideBoxDrawing" showBoundary="1" hAlign="CENTER"/>
      </frame>
    </slide>
    <slide title="Test PageFigure Tag" id="Slide002" effectname="Glitter" effectduration="2">
      <frame height="468" x="120" y="72" rightmargin="36" width="300" leftmargin="36" border="true">
        <para style="Heading1">PageFigure</para>
        <para style="BodyText">This imports a page and displays it.  Since this will typically be used to show
        A4/Letter pages, it does a 'shrink to fit' based on frame width.  The scaleFactor attribute can override this,
        as I did below...
        </para>
        <pageCatcherFigure filename="../../../../rlextra/pageCatcher/test/ir684.pdf" pageNo="0" caption="IR684 - Authorizing your Agent" scaleFactor="0.1"/>
      </frame>
      <frame height="468" x="450" y="72" width="325" border="true">
        <pageCatcherFigure filename="../../../rlextra/pageCatcher/test/ir684.pdf" pageNo="0" caption="IR684 - Authorizing your Agent"/>
      </frame>
    </slide>
  </section>
</presentation>