Instruction Manual
Printing using Xerox utilities and lpr utilities (DOS and UNIX)
3-24 Guide to Submitting Jobs from the Client
– presentation
Distinguishes between different colors. This attribute is a 
good choice for charts and diagrams, because they 
typically use distinctly different colors. Colors that have a 
hue that matches the map color are not changed. 
(Changing these colors would cause discontinuities that 
might produce undesirable results in pictorial material.)
– colorToHighlight
Discards the hue information and preserves the saturation 
and value of the color application. Fully-saturated input 
colors turn into a solid highlight color regardless of the 
map color that is in effect. This option is useful for 
documents that use highlight color only for emphasis.
– colorTables
Uses preset color tables to perform the mapping and is 
provided for compatibility reasons. This attribute applies 
only to red, blue, and green.
– automatic
Chooses a mapping method on an object-by-object basis; 
for example, it applies the pictorial mapping for pictures 
and the presentation mapping for other objects (filled 
areas, strokes, and text).
• -C“(hold)”
Prevents immediate printing, until the job is released at the 
UI.
• -C“(mc=<color>)” (for models 4850/4890/92C only)
Specifies the parts of the document that convert to the 
available highlight color. Acceptable values are “red,” “green,” 
“blue,” “brown,” “yellow,” “cyan,” and “magenta,” “cardinal,” 
“royalblue,” “ruby,” and “violet.”
For example, if you specify the map color as red, all the red 
parts of your document (including portions of composite 
colors such as purple, depending on the rendering algorithm) 
are printed in the available highlight color. The other colored 
parts of the document are printed in shades of gray.
Use this option only if you want the mc and hc values to differ. 
By default, the map color is assumed to be the same as the 
highlight color.










