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I have a file bookletdemo.tex with the following code

\documentclass[12pt]{article}
\usepackage[a5paper]{geometry}
\usepackage{lipsum}  % this package is for creating filler text


\author{N.~N}
\title{The booklet}

% \usepackage[print,1to1]{booklet} \nofiles 
% \target{\magstep0}{297mm}{210mm}


\begin{document}

\maketitle

\tableofcontents

\section{Europe}
\subsection{Berlin}
\lipsum[4]
\subsection{Paris}
\lipsum[1-3]
\subsection{Vienna}
\lipsum[10]
\subsection{Rome}
\lipsum[15]
\section{Africa}
\lipsum[1-4]
\subsection{Accra}
\lipsum[5-8]
\subsection{Johannesburg}
\lipsum[9-11]
\subsection{Casablanca}
\lipsum[11-12]
\lipsum[5-6]
\section{Asia}
\lipsum[1-4]
\subsection{Tokyo}
\lipsum[5-8]
\subsection{Beijing}
\lipsum[9-11]
\subsection{Mumbai}
\lipsum[11-12]
\lipsum[5-6]

\end{document}

Fist I run

latex bookletdemo.tex 

two times. The pdf formatting of the document with A5 pages is fine.

Then I uncomment

\usepackage[print,1to1]{booklet} \nofiles 
\target{\magstep0}{297mm}{210mm}

and run

    latex bookletdemo.tex 

to create a booklet. It produces something which resembles a booklet but the title page and the TOC are missing.

How does an example which does this properly look like?

Reference

http://mirror.isoc.org.il/pub/ctan/macros/latex/contrib/booklet/booklet.pdf

2
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    Jan 18, 2014 at 18:31

1 Answer 1

32

I am far from expert and I am hoping that somebody will have a better answer. However, I have spent quite some time on this problem and, as far as I can tell, the use of geometry just does not agree with the use of booklet no matter what. I know the documentation explains how to work around this using noprint and then print with \nofiles but it has never worked for me. I therefore cannot answer your question since I have no idea how to do this 'properly' if that means 'in a way which both works and uses the method in booklet's documentation.

In fact, I can't even answer it if you mean 'in a way which uses booklet'. I used to have a solution which did that but unfortunately it broke some time ago and things don't seem to have changed since. In case it is useful, I'll explain that solution before explaining what I have found works now. This solution, unfortunately, dispenses with booklet altogether. But it does work.

Solution 1: Use booklet without geometry

Currently broken - used to work

The way I did this was to initially load geometry with the verbose option and then retrieve the settings it used from the output when I compiled. (These should also be in the log I expect.) I then took geometry out and set the dimensions manually. Then booklet worked fine.

Running your code, for example, the output from geometry you would be looking for would be:

*geometry* verbose mode - [ preamble ] result:
* driver: pdftex
* paper: a5paper
* layout: <same size as paper>
* layoutoffset:(h,v)=(0.0pt,0.0pt)
* modes: 
* h-part:(L,W,R)=(63.16576pt, 294.76926pt, 63.16577pt)
* v-part:(T,H,B)=(71.70166pt, 418.25368pt, 107.55254pt)
* \paperwidth=421.10078pt
* \paperheight=597.50787pt
* \textwidth=294.76926pt
* \textheight=418.25368pt
* \oddsidemargin=-9.10423pt
* \evensidemargin=-9.10423pt
* \topmargin=-37.56833pt
* \headheight=12.0pt
* \headsep=25.0pt
* \topskip=12.0pt
* \footskip=30.0pt
* \marginparwidth=44.0pt
* \marginparsep=10.0pt
* \columnsep=10.0pt
* \skip\footins=10.8pt plus 4.0pt minus 2.0pt
* \hoffset=0.0pt
* \voffset=0.0pt
* \mag=1000
* \@twocolumnfalse
* \@twosidefalse
* \@mparswitchfalse
* \@reversemarginfalse
* (1in=72.27pt=25.4mm, 1cm=28.453pt)

I would then explicitly define the relevant dimensions, dispense with geometry, add a5paper to the class options and proceed. However, this no longer seems to work and last time I needed to do this I could not make it work no matter what. (Right now, the compilation just seems to ignore the paper size settings. So I think you could do it on A4 and then have booklet scale the pages but I haven't tried. I gave up on booklet.)

Solution 2: Use pdfpages - avoid booklet

This solution is dead simple. The only downside is that you need a second file. All you do is prepare your initial file on A5 paper, ignoring for now the fact that you plan to make a booklet:

\documentclass[12pt]{article}
\usepackage[a5paper,verbose]{geometry}
\usepackage{lipsum}  % this package is for creating filler text

\author{N.~N}
\title{The booklet}

\begin{document}

\maketitle

\tableofcontents

\section{Europe}
\subsection{Berlin}
\lipsum[4]
\subsection{Paris}
\lipsum[1-3]
\subsection{Vienna}
\lipsum[10]
\subsection{Rome}
\lipsum[15]
\section{Africa}
\lipsum[1-4]
\subsection{Accra}
\lipsum[5-8]
\subsection{Johannesburg}
\lipsum[9-11]
\subsection{Casablanca}
\lipsum[11-12]
\lipsum[5-6]
\section{Asia}
\lipsum[1-4]
\subsection{Tokyo}
\lipsum[5-8]
\subsection{Beijing}
\lipsum[9-11]
\subsection{Mumbai}
\lipsum[11-12]
\lipsum[5-6]

\end{document}

Let's say that the pdf produced is prebooklet.pdf. Then you just need this:

\documentclass[12pt]{article}
\usepackage[a4paper]{geometry}
\usepackage{pdfpages}
    \includepdfset{pages=-}

\author{N.~N}
\title{The booklet}

\begin{document}

    \includepdf[pages=-,nup=1x2,landscape]{prebooklet.pdf}

\end{document}

This works perfectly with no trouble at all:

A5 booklet on A4 landscape

The only problem is the pages are not arranged correctly for printing the booklet. But this is easily fixed: just add the signature option:

\documentclass[12pt]{article}
\usepackage[a4paper]{geometry}
\usepackage{pdfpages}
    \includepdfset{pages=-}

\author{N.~N}
\title{The booklet}

\begin{document}

    \includepdf[pages=-,nup=1x2,landscape,signature=20]{prebooklet.pdf}


\end{document}

produces, for example:

Prepared signatures for booklet

I used 20 since you presumably want some multiple of 4 and have 17 actual pages of text.

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  • 6
    +1 You have been learning from egreg how to write a good answer? :)
    – yo'
    Jan 19, 2014 at 9:16
  • @tohecz I'm not sure. Quite possibly. Why?
    – cfr
    Jan 19, 2014 at 15:49
  • Well, the answer seems to be verz well written, showing the issues and their solutions in a fluent way.
    – yo'
    Jan 19, 2014 at 16:16
  • @tohecz Thanks ;). Though I think egreg would be able to offer a better solution to the booklet problem.
    – cfr
    Jan 19, 2014 at 16:21
  • @cfr thank you for the answer. It is good to get the job done.
    – Hannes
    Jan 20, 2014 at 9:23

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