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Desktop publishing

Desktop publishing (DTP) is the creation of documents using page layout software on a personal ("desktop") computer. It was first used almost exclusively for print publications, but now it also assists in the creation of various forms of online content.[1] Desktop publishing software can generate layouts and produce typographic-quality text and images comparable to traditional typography and printing. Desktop publishing is also the main reference for digital typography. This technology allows individuals, businesses, and other organizations to self-publish a wide variety of content, from menus to magazines to books, without the expense of commercial printing.[2]

Desktop publishing often requires the use of a personal computer and WYSIWYG page layout software to create documents for either large-scale publishing or small-scale local multifunction peripheral output and distribution - although non-WYSIWYG systems such as TeX and LaTeX are also used, especially in scientific publishing. Desktop publishing methods provide more control over design, layout, and typography than word processing. However, word processing software has evolved to include most, if not all, capabilities previously available only with professional printing or desktop publishing.[3]

The same DTP skills and software used for common paper and book publishing are sometimes used to create graphics for point of sale displays, presentations, infographics, brochures, business cards, promotional items, trade show exhibits, retail package designs and outdoor signs.

History

Desktop publishing was first developed at Xerox PARC in the 1970s.[4][5] A contradictory claim states that desktop publishing began in 1983 with a program developed by James Davise at a community newspaper in Philadelphia.[6] The program Type Processor One ran on a PC using a graphics card for a WYSIWYG display and was offered commercially by Best info in 1984.[7] Desktop typesetting with only limited page makeup facilities[citation needed] had arrived in 1978–1979 with the introduction of TeX, and was extended in 1985 with the introduction of LaTeX.

The desktop publishing market took off in 1985 with the introduction in January of the Apple LaserWriter printer.[8] This momentum was kept up by with the addition of PageMaker software from Aldus, which rapidly became the standard software application for desktop publishing. With its advanced layout features, PageMaker immediately relegated word processors like Microsoft Word to the composition and editing of purely textual documents. The term "desktop publishing" is attributed to Aldus founder Paul Brainerd,[9] who sought a marketing catchphrase to describe the small size and relative affordability of this suite of products, in contrast to the expensive commercial phototypesetting equipment of the day.

Before the advent of desktop publishing, the only option available to most people for producing typed documents (as opposed to handwritten documents) was a typewriter, which offered only a handful of typefaces (usually fixed-width) and one or two font sizes. Indeed, one popular desktop publishing book was titled The Mac is Not a Typewriter, and it had to actually explain how a Mac could do so much more than a typewriter.[10] The ability to create WYSIWYG page layouts on screen and then print pages containing text and graphical elements at crisp 300 dpi resolution was revolutionary for both the typesetting industry and the personal computer industry at the time; newspapers and other print publications made the move to DTP-based programs from older layout systems such as Atex and other programs in the early 1980s.

Desktop publishing was still in its embryonic stage in the early 1980s. Users of the PageMaker-LaserWriter-Macintosh 512K system endured frequent software crashes,[11] cramped display on the Mac's tiny 512 x 342 1-bit monochrome screen, the inability to control letter-spacing, kerning, and other typographic features, and the discrepancies between screen display and printed output. However, it was a revolutionary combination at the time, and was received with considerable acclaim.[citation needed]

Behind-the-scenes, technologies developed by Adobe Systems set the foundation for professional desktop publishing applications. The LaserWriter and LaserWriter Plus printers included high quality, scalable Adobe PostScript fonts built into their ROM memory. The LaserWriter's PostScript capability allowed publication designers to proof files on a local printer, then print the same file at DTP service bureaus using optical resolution 600+ ppi PostScript printers such as those from Linotronic.

Later, the Macintosh II was released, which was considerably more suitable for desktop publishing due to its greater expandability, support for large color multi-monitor displays, and its SCSI storage interface (which allowed fast high-capacity hard drives to be attached to the system). Macintosh-based systems continued to dominate the market into 1986, when the GEM-based Ventura Publisher was introduced for MS-DOS computers. PageMaker's pasteboard metaphor closely simulated the process of creating layouts manually, but Ventura Publisher automated the layout process through its use of tags and style sheets and automatically generated indices and other body matter. This made it particularly suitable for the creation of manuals and other long-format documents.

Desktop publishing moved into the home market in 1986 with Professional Page for the Amiga, Publishing Partner (now PageStream) for the Atari ST, GST's Timeworks Publisher on the PC and Atari ST, and Calamus for the Atari TT030. Software was published even for 8-bit computers like the Apple II and Commodore 64: Home Publisher, The Newsroom, and geoPublish. During its early years, desktop publishing acquired a bad reputation as a result of untrained users who created poorly organized, unprofessional-looking "ransom note effect" layouts; similar criticism was leveled again against early World Wide Web publishers a decade later. However, some desktop publishers who mastered the programs were able to achieve highly professional results. Desktop publishing skills were considered of primary importance in career advancement in the 1980s, but increased accessibility to more user-friendly DTP software has made DTP a secondary skill to art direction, graphic design, multimedia development, marketing communications, and administrative careers. DTP skill levels range from what may be learned in a couple of hours (e.g., learning how to put clip art in a word processor), to what's typically required in a college education. The discipline of DTP skills range from technical skills such as prepress production and programming, to creative skills such as communication design and graphic image development.

As of 2014, Apple computers remain dominant in publishing, even as the most popular software has changed from QuarkXPress – an estimated 95% market share in the 1990s — to Adobe InDesign. As an Ars Technica writer puts: "I've heard about Windows-based publishing environments, but I've never actually seen one in my 20+ years in design and publishing".[12]

Terminology

There are two types of pages in desktop publishing: digital pages and virtual paper pages to be printed on physical paper pages. All computerized documents are technically digital, which are limited in size only by computer memory or computer data storage space. Virtual paper pages will ultimately be printed, and will therefore require paper parameters coinciding with standard physical paper sizes such as A4, letterpaper and legalpaper. Alternatively, the virtual paper page may require a custom size for later trimming. Some desktop publishing programs allow custom sizes designated for large format printing used in posters, billboards and trade show displays. A virtual page for printing has a predesignated size of virtual printing material and can be viewed on a monitor in WYSIWYG format. Each page for printing has trim sizes (edge of paper) and a printable area if bleed printing is not possible as is the case with most desktop printers. A web page is an example of a digital page that is not constrained by virtual paper parameters. Most digital pages may be dynamically re-sized, causing either the content to scale in size with the page or the content to re-flow.

Master pages are templates used to automatically copy or link elements and graphic design styles to some or all the pages of a multipage document. Linked elements can be modified without having to change each instance of an element on pages that use the same element. Master pages can also be used to apply graphic design styles to automatic page numbering. Cascading Style Sheets can provide the same global formatting functions for web pages that master pages provide for virtual paper pages. Page layout is the process by which the elements are laid on the page orderly, aesthetically and precisely. Main types of components to be laid out on a page include text, linked images (that can only be modified as an external source), and embedded images (that may be modified with the layout application software). Some embedded images are rendered in the application software, while others can be placed from an external source image file. Text may be keyed into the layout, placed, or – with database publishing applications – linked to an external source of text which allows multiple editors to develop a document at the same time. Graphic design styles such as color, transparency and filters may also be applied to layout elements. Typography styles may be applied to text automatically with style sheets. Some layout programs include style sheets for images in addition to text. Graphic styles for images may include border shapes, colors, transparency, filters, and a parameter designating the way text flows around the object (also known as "wraparound" or "runaround").

Comparisons

With word processing

As desktop publishing software still provides extensive features necessary for print publishing, modern word processors now have publishing capabilities beyond those of many older DTP applications, blurring the line between word processing and desktop publishing.

In the early 1980s, graphical user interface was still in its embryonic stage and DTP software was in a class of its own when compared to the leading word processing applications of the time. Programs such as WordPerfect and WordStar were still mainly text-based and offered little in the way of page layout, other than perhaps margins and line spacing. On the other hand, word processing software was necessary for features like indexing and spell checking – features that are common in many applications today. As computers and operating systems became more powerful, versatile, and user-friendly in the 2010s, vendors have sought to provide users with a single application that can meet almost all their publication needs.

With other digital layout software

In earlier modern-day usage, DTP usually does not include digital tools such as TeX or troff, though both can easily be used on a modern desktop system, and are standard with many Unix-like operating systems and are readily available for other systems. The key difference between digital typesetting software and DTP software is that DTP software is generally interactive and "What you see [onscreen] is what you get" (WYSIWYG) in design, while other digital typesetting software, such as TeX, LaTeX and other variants, tend to operate in "batch mode", requiring the user to enter the processing program's markup language (e.g. HTML) without immediate visualization of the finished product. This kind of workflow is less user-friendly than WYSIWYG, but more suitable for conference proceedings and scholarly articles as well as corporate newsletters or other applications where consistent, automated layout is important.

In the 2010s, interactive front-end components of TeX, such as TeXworks and LyX, have produced "what you see is what you mean" (WYSIWYM) hybrids of DTP and batch processing.[13] These hybrids are focused more on the semantics than the traditional DTP. Furthermore, with the advent of TeX editors the line between desktop publishing and markup-based typesetting is becoming increasingly narrow as well; a software which separates itself from the TeX world and develops itself in the direction of WYSIWYG markup-based typesetting is GNU TeXmacs.

On a different note, there is a slight overlap between desktop publishing and what is known as hypermedia publishing (e.g. web design, kiosk, CD-ROM). Many graphical HTML editors such as Microsoft FrontPage and Adobe Dreamweaver use a layout engine similar to that of a DTP program. However, many web designers still prefer to write HTML without the assistance of a WYSIWYG editor, for greater control and ability to fine-tune the appearance and functionality. Another reason that some Web designers write in HTML is that WYSIWYG editors often result in excessive lines of code, leading to code bloat that can make the pages hard to troubleshoot.

With web design

Desktop publishing produces primarily static print or digital media, the focus of this article. Similar skills, processes, and terminology are used in web design. Digital typography is the specialization of typography for desktop publishing. Web typography addresses typography and the use of fonts on the World Wide Web. Desktop style sheets apply formatting for print, Web Cascading Style Sheets (CSS) provide format control for web display. Web HTML font families map website font usage to the fonts available on the user web browser or display device.

Applications

A wide variety of DTP applications and websites are available and are listed separately.

File formats

The design industry standard is PDF. The older EPS format is also used and supported by most applications.

See also

References

  1. ^ Bear, Jacci Howard. "What's Involved in Desktop Publishing?". Lifewire. Retrieved 2019-05-02.
  2. ^ Ruiter, Maurice M. de (1988-04-29). Advances in Computer Graphics III. Springer Science & Business Media. ISBN 9783540187882.
  3. ^ Amanda Presley (2010-01-28). "What Distinguishes Desktop Publishing From Word Processing?". Bright Hub. Retrieved 2019-05-02.
  4. ^ Winograd, Terry (1996). Bringing Design to Software. Addison-Wesley. ISBN 978-0201854916.
  5. ^ Jones, Steve (2002). Encyclopedia of New Media. SAGE Publications. p. 127. ISBN 978-0761923824.
  6. ^ "What You See Is Pretty Close to What You Get: New h&j, pagination program for IBM PC, " Seybold Report on Publishing Systems, 13(10), February 13, 1984, pp. 21-2.
  7. ^ "Type-X '85: Fulfilling the Promise of the PC, " Seybold Report on Publishing Systems, 15(2) pp. 4-5.
  8. ^ Casselman, Grace (November 2, 1992). "Desktop Publishing". Computer Dealer News. 8 (22) – via Gale Cengage Computer Database.
  9. ^ Stiff, Paul (13 September 2006). "The Stafford papers". The optimism of modernity: recovering modern reasoning in typography. Retrieved 27 December 2009.
  10. ^ Williams, Robin (1990). The Mac is Not a Typewriter: A Style Manual for Creating Professional-level Type on Your Macintosh. Berkeley: Peachpit Press. p. 11. ISBN 9780938151319.
  11. ^ Thompson, Keith (8 June 1987). "MacIntosh Layout Package Remarkably Fast, Powerful". InfoWorld. 9 (23): 51. Retrieved 2011-04-15.
  12. ^ Girard, Dave (2014-01-13). "How QuarkXPress became a mere afterthought in publishing". Ars Technica.
  13. ^ For more editors in the genre, see Comparison of TeX editors under the WYSIWYM / (partial) WYSIWYG editing style.

desktop, publishing, digital, typography, redirects, here, more, general, directory, digital, systems, typography, template, typography, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliabl. Digital typography redirects here For a more general directory of digital systems in typography see Template Typography This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Desktop publishing news newspapers books scholar JSTOR May 2016 Learn how and when to remove this template message This article possibly contains original research Please improve it by verifying the claims made and adding inline citations Statements consisting only of original research should be removed March 2023 Learn how and when to remove this template message Desktop publishing DTP is the creation of documents using page layout software on a personal desktop computer It was first used almost exclusively for print publications but now it also assists in the creation of various forms of online content 1 Desktop publishing software can generate layouts and produce typographic quality text and images comparable to traditional typography and printing Desktop publishing is also the main reference for digital typography This technology allows individuals businesses and other organizations to self publish a wide variety of content from menus to magazines to books without the expense of commercial printing 2 Desktop publishing often requires the use of a personal computer and WYSIWYG page layout software to create documents for either large scale publishing or small scale local multifunction peripheral output and distribution although non WYSIWYG systems such as TeX and LaTeX are also used especially in scientific publishing Desktop publishing methods provide more control over design layout and typography than word processing However word processing software has evolved to include most if not all capabilities previously available only with professional printing or desktop publishing 3 The same DTP skills and software used for common paper and book publishing are sometimes used to create graphics for point of sale displays presentations infographics brochures business cards promotional items trade show exhibits retail package designs and outdoor signs Contents 1 History 2 Terminology 3 Comparisons 3 1 With word processing 3 2 With other digital layout software 3 3 With web design 4 Applications 5 File formats 6 See also 7 ReferencesHistory EditDesktop publishing was first developed at Xerox PARC in the 1970s 4 5 A contradictory claim states that desktop publishing began in 1983 with a program developed by James Davise at a community newspaper in Philadelphia 6 The program Type Processor One ran on a PC using a graphics card for a WYSIWYG display and was offered commercially by Best info in 1984 7 Desktop typesetting with only limited page makeup facilities citation needed had arrived in 1978 1979 with the introduction of TeX and was extended in 1985 with the introduction of LaTeX The desktop publishing market took off in 1985 with the introduction in January of the Apple LaserWriter printer 8 This momentum was kept up by with the addition of PageMaker software from Aldus which rapidly became the standard software application for desktop publishing With its advanced layout features PageMaker immediately relegated word processors like Microsoft Word to the composition and editing of purely textual documents The term desktop publishing is attributed to Aldus founder Paul Brainerd 9 who sought a marketing catchphrase to describe the small size and relative affordability of this suite of products in contrast to the expensive commercial phototypesetting equipment of the day Before the advent of desktop publishing the only option available to most people for producing typed documents as opposed to handwritten documents was a typewriter which offered only a handful of typefaces usually fixed width and one or two font sizes Indeed one popular desktop publishing book was titled The Mac is Not a Typewriter and it had to actually explain how a Mac could do so much more than a typewriter 10 The ability to create WYSIWYG page layouts on screen and then print pages containing text and graphical elements at crisp 300 dpi resolution was revolutionary for both the typesetting industry and the personal computer industry at the time newspapers and other print publications made the move to DTP based programs from older layout systems such as Atex and other programs in the early 1980s Desktop publishing was still in its embryonic stage in the early 1980s Users of the PageMaker LaserWriter Macintosh 512K system endured frequent software crashes 11 cramped display on the Mac s tiny 512 x 342 1 bit monochrome screen the inability to control letter spacing kerning and other typographic features and the discrepancies between screen display and printed output However it was a revolutionary combination at the time and was received with considerable acclaim citation needed Behind the scenes technologies developed by Adobe Systems set the foundation for professional desktop publishing applications The LaserWriter and LaserWriter Plus printers included high quality scalable Adobe PostScript fonts built into their ROM memory The LaserWriter s PostScript capability allowed publication designers to proof files on a local printer then print the same file at DTP service bureaus using optical resolution 600 ppi PostScript printers such as those from Linotronic Later the Macintosh II was released which was considerably more suitable for desktop publishing due to its greater expandability support for large color multi monitor displays and its SCSI storage interface which allowed fast high capacity hard drives to be attached to the system Macintosh based systems continued to dominate the market into 1986 when the GEM based Ventura Publisher was introduced for MS DOS computers PageMaker s pasteboard metaphor closely simulated the process of creating layouts manually but Ventura Publisher automated the layout process through its use of tags and style sheets and automatically generated indices and other body matter This made it particularly suitable for the creation of manuals and other long format documents Desktop publishing moved into the home market in 1986 with Professional Page for the Amiga Publishing Partner now PageStream for the Atari ST GST s Timeworks Publisher on the PC and Atari ST and Calamus for the Atari TT030 Software was published even for 8 bit computers like the Apple II and Commodore 64 Home Publisher The Newsroom and geoPublish During its early years desktop publishing acquired a bad reputation as a result of untrained users who created poorly organized unprofessional looking ransom note effect layouts similar criticism was leveled again against early World Wide Web publishers a decade later However some desktop publishers who mastered the programs were able to achieve highly professional results Desktop publishing skills were considered of primary importance in career advancement in the 1980s but increased accessibility to more user friendly DTP software has made DTP a secondary skill to art direction graphic design multimedia development marketing communications and administrative careers DTP skill levels range from what may be learned in a couple of hours e g learning how to put clip art in a word processor to what s typically required in a college education The discipline of DTP skills range from technical skills such as prepress production and programming to creative skills such as communication design and graphic image development As of 2014 update Apple computers remain dominant in publishing even as the most popular software has changed from QuarkXPress an estimated 95 market share in the 1990s to Adobe InDesign As an Ars Technica writer puts I ve heard about Windows based publishing environments but I ve never actually seen one in my 20 years in design and publishing 12 Terminology EditThere are two types of pages in desktop publishing digital pages and virtual paper pages to be printed on physical paper pages All computerized documents are technically digital which are limited in size only by computer memory or computer data storage space Virtual paper pages will ultimately be printed and will therefore require paper parameters coinciding with standard physical paper sizes such as A4 letterpaper and legalpaper Alternatively the virtual paper page may require a custom size for later trimming Some desktop publishing programs allow custom sizes designated for large format printing used in posters billboards and trade show displays A virtual page for printing has a predesignated size of virtual printing material and can be viewed on a monitor in WYSIWYG format Each page for printing has trim sizes edge of paper and a printable area if bleed printing is not possible as is the case with most desktop printers A web page is an example of a digital page that is not constrained by virtual paper parameters Most digital pages may be dynamically re sized causing either the content to scale in size with the page or the content to re flow Master pages are templates used to automatically copy or link elements and graphic design styles to some or all the pages of a multipage document Linked elements can be modified without having to change each instance of an element on pages that use the same element Master pages can also be used to apply graphic design styles to automatic page numbering Cascading Style Sheets can provide the same global formatting functions for web pages that master pages provide for virtual paper pages Page layout is the process by which the elements are laid on the page orderly aesthetically and precisely Main types of components to be laid out on a page include text linked images that can only be modified as an external source and embedded images that may be modified with the layout application software Some embedded images are rendered in the application software while others can be placed from an external source image file Text may be keyed into the layout placed or with database publishing applications linked to an external source of text which allows multiple editors to develop a document at the same time Graphic design styles such as color transparency and filters may also be applied to layout elements Typography styles may be applied to text automatically with style sheets Some layout programs include style sheets for images in addition to text Graphic styles for images may include border shapes colors transparency filters and a parameter designating the way text flows around the object also known as wraparound or runaround Comparisons EditWith word processing Edit As desktop publishing software still provides extensive features necessary for print publishing modern word processors now have publishing capabilities beyond those of many older DTP applications blurring the line between word processing and desktop publishing In the early 1980s graphical user interface was still in its embryonic stage and DTP software was in a class of its own when compared to the leading word processing applications of the time Programs such as WordPerfect and WordStar were still mainly text based and offered little in the way of page layout other than perhaps margins and line spacing On the other hand word processing software was necessary for features like indexing and spell checking features that are common in many applications today As computers and operating systems became more powerful versatile and user friendly in the 2010s vendors have sought to provide users with a single application that can meet almost all their publication needs With other digital layout software Edit In earlier modern day usage DTP usually does not include digital tools such as TeX or troff though both can easily be used on a modern desktop system and are standard with many Unix like operating systems and are readily available for other systems The key difference between digital typesetting software and DTP software is that DTP software is generally interactive and What you see onscreen is what you get WYSIWYG in design while other digital typesetting software such as TeX LaTeX and other variants tend to operate in batch mode requiring the user to enter the processing program s markup language e g HTML without immediate visualization of the finished product This kind of workflow is less user friendly than WYSIWYG but more suitable for conference proceedings and scholarly articles as well as corporate newsletters or other applications where consistent automated layout is important In the 2010s interactive front end components of TeX such as TeXworks and LyX have produced what you see is what you mean WYSIWYM hybrids of DTP and batch processing 13 These hybrids are focused more on the semantics than the traditional DTP Furthermore with the advent of TeX editors the line between desktop publishing and markup based typesetting is becoming increasingly narrow as well a software which separates itself from the TeX world and develops itself in the direction of WYSIWYG markup based typesetting is GNU TeXmacs On a different note there is a slight overlap between desktop publishing and what is known as hypermedia publishing e g web design kiosk CD ROM Many graphical HTML editors such as Microsoft FrontPage and Adobe Dreamweaver use a layout engine similar to that of a DTP program However many web designers still prefer to write HTML without the assistance of a WYSIWYG editor for greater control and ability to fine tune the appearance and functionality Another reason that some Web designers write in HTML is that WYSIWYG editors often result in excessive lines of code leading to code bloat that can make the pages hard to troubleshoot With web design Edit Desktop publishing produces primarily static print or digital media the focus of this article Similar skills processes and terminology are used in web design Digital typography is the specialization of typography for desktop publishing Web typography addresses typography and the use of fonts on the World Wide Web Desktop style sheets apply formatting for print Web Cascading Style Sheets CSS provide format control for web display Web HTML font families map website font usage to the fonts available on the user web browser or display device Applications EditFor a more comprehensive list see List of desktop publishing software A wide variety of DTP applications and websites are available and are listed separately File formats EditFor a more comprehensive list see List of desktop publishing file formats The design industry standard is PDF The older EPS format is also used and supported by most applications See also EditComparison of desktop publishing software List of desktop publishing software Document processor Camera ready Desktop video DTP artist E book Digital publishing Web design WYSIWYGReferences Edit Bear Jacci Howard What s Involved in Desktop Publishing Lifewire Retrieved 2019 05 02 Ruiter Maurice M de 1988 04 29 Advances in Computer Graphics III Springer Science amp Business Media ISBN 9783540187882 Amanda Presley 2010 01 28 What Distinguishes Desktop Publishing From Word Processing Bright Hub Retrieved 2019 05 02 Winograd Terry 1996 Bringing Design to Software Addison Wesley ISBN 978 0201854916 Jones Steve 2002 Encyclopedia of New Media SAGE Publications p 127 ISBN 978 0761923824 What You See Is Pretty Close to What You Get New h amp j pagination program for IBM PC Seybold Report on Publishing Systems 13 10 February 13 1984 pp 21 2 Type X 85 Fulfilling the Promise of the PC Seybold Report on Publishing Systems 15 2 pp 4 5 Casselman Grace November 2 1992 Desktop Publishing Computer Dealer News 8 22 via Gale Cengage Computer Database Stiff Paul 13 September 2006 The Stafford papers The optimism of modernity recovering modern reasoning in typography Retrieved 27 December 2009 Williams Robin 1990 The Mac is Not a Typewriter A Style Manual for Creating Professional level Type on Your Macintosh Berkeley Peachpit Press p 11 ISBN 9780938151319 Thompson Keith 8 June 1987 MacIntosh Layout Package Remarkably Fast Powerful InfoWorld 9 23 51 Retrieved 2011 04 15 Girard Dave 2014 01 13 How QuarkXPress became a mere afterthought in publishing Ars Technica For more editors in the genre see Comparison of TeX editors under the WYSIWYM partial WYSIWYG editing style Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Desktop publishing amp oldid 1145771007, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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