HP PCL/PJL reference (PCL 5 Printer Language) - Technical Reference Manual Part II
EN Automatically Adjusting Image Size to Fit the PCL Picture Frame 18-3
Automatically Adjusting Image Size to Fit the PCL 
Picture Frame 
FrameImported HP-GL/2 drawings can be adjusted automatically to 
fit the size of the PCL Picture Frame without changing the locations of 
P1 and P2 (in Scale mode, as described earlier). This is called picture 
frame scaling.
When using picture frame scaling, specify the HP-GL/2 plot size 
unless the drawing is page size-independent (described below). 
If a drawing is not page size-independent, the printer will not adjust 
the size of the image to fit the picture frame without the HP-GL/2 plot 
size command; the drawing and the picture frame are assumed to be 
the same size. If a drawing is page size-independent, it automatically 
enlarges or reduces to fit within the picture frame without specifying 
an HP-GL/2 plot size.
Creating a Page Size-Independent Plot  
As mentioned, if an imported HP-GL/2 drawing is page size- 
independent, it is adjusted automatically to fit different page sizes 
without specifying the HP-GL/2 plot size. For a drawing to be page 
size-independent, it must not specify any parameters in absolute 
units. This implies that:
z No parameter of any command is in plotter units. The scaled 
mode (SC command) must be used exclusively; either the default 
locations of P1 and P2 are used, or their positions are specified 
with the IR (Input Relative P1 and P2) command. The default 
window is used, or the window is specified in user-units (using 
the IW command). 
z For labels, only the SR (Relative Character Size) mode is used; 
the SI (Absolute Character Size) mode is not used. 
z The Pen Width selection mode (WU) is specified as relative 
instead of metric. 
z The pattern length for the Line Type (LT) is specified as relative 
instead of metric.
z Scalable fonts are used exclusively. 
z The default window is used, or the window is specified in 
user-units. 
z The DR command (relative direction) is used for label direction 
(not DI — absolute direction).










