/usr/share/texmf-texlive/scripts/epspdf/epspdf.help is in texlive-pictures 2009-15.
This file is owned by root:root, with mode 0o644.
The actual contents of the file can be viewed below.
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 61 62 63 64 65 66 67 68 69 70 71 72 73 74 75 76 77 78 79 80 81 82 83 84 85 86 87 88 89 90 91 92 93 94 95 96 97 98 99 100 101 102 103 104 105 106 107 108 109 110 111 112 113 114 115 116 117 118 119 120 121 122 123 124 125 126 127 128 129 130 131 132 133 134 135 136 137 138 139 140 141 142 143 144 145 146 147 148 149 150 151 152 153 154 155 156 157 158 159 160 161 162 163 164 165 166 167 168 169 170 171 172 173 174 175 176 177 178 179 180 181 182 183 184 185 186 187 188 189 190 191 192 193 194 195 196 197 198 199 200 201 202 203 204 205 206 207 208 209 210 211 212 213 214 215 216 217 218 219 220 221 222 223 224 225 226 227 228 229 230 231 232 233 234 235 236 237 238 239 240 241 242 243 244 245 246 247 248 249 250 251 252 253 254 255 256 257 258 259 260 261 262 263 264 265 266 267 268 269 270 271 272 273 274 275 276 277 278 279 280 281 282 283 284 285 286 287 288 289 290 291 292 293 294 295 296 297 298 299 300 301 302 303 304 305 306 307 308 309 310 311 312 313 314 315 316 317 318 319 320 321 322 323 324 325 326 327 328 329 330 331 332 333 334 335 336 337 338 339 340 341 342 343 344 345 346 347 348 349 350 351 352 353 354 355 356 357 358 359 360 361 362 363 364 365 366 367 368 369 370 371 372 373 374 375 376 377 378 379 380 381 382 383 384 385 386 387 388 389 390 391 392 393 394 395 396 397 398 399 400 401 402 403 404 405 406 407 408 409 410 411 412 413 414 415 416 417 418 419 420 421 422 423 424 425 426 427 | Epspdf and epsdftk
******************
This manual is for epspdf, version 0.4.2.
Copyright (C) 2006, 2007, 2008, 2009 Siep Kroonenberg.
Copying and distribution of this file, with or without
modification, are permitted in any medium without royalty provided
the copyright notice and this notice are preserved. This file is
offered as-is, without any warranty.
1 Usage
*******
1.1 Overview
============
Epspdftk converts files between eps, pdf and general PostScript. The
main screen lets you open a file, select some options and convert the
file.
When opening a file, epspdf tries to find out file type and, in the
case of a pdf file, the number of pages. This information is displayed
in the box in the upper part of the screen.
1.2 Viewing
===========
The View button at the bottom of the screen calls an appropriate
external viewer.
Windows: Epspdftk simply tries to use the default Open command. A
second button, labeled View with..., lets the user select a different
program to view the file.
For OS X the viewer is also the default program, but there is no View
with... button.
Under Linux the PostScript- and pdf viewers are configurable; see *note
The configuration screen::.
The View button is grayed if epspdf thinks that there is no previewer
for the current file.
1.3 Conversion options
======================
Grayscaling: Simple color figures can be converted to grayscale.
Bitmapped data won't be converted. If grayscaling doesn't work on
non-bitmapped data, select the "Try harder to grayscale" option. This
may cause an extra pdf-PostScript roundtrip.
Compute tight boundingbox: This option is only available if a single
page is converted.
Page selection: The only possibilities are selecting a single page or
selecting all pages. When converting to eps you are restricted to a
single page.
For general PostScript files, there is no quick way to determine the
number of pages, so the program won't check beforehand whether you
picked an existing page. If you picked a non-existent page, the program
will abort. If you don't like that, convert the entire document to pdf
first - which will be done behind the scenes anyhow.
Specifying options such as grayscaling or page selection may require
several roundtrips between PostScript or eps and pdf.
1.4 Converting
==============
The Convert and save... button calls up a file save dialog. After a
successful conversion, the result becomes the new current file, so you
can judge the result by pressing the View button again.
1.5 The configuration screen
============================
Epspdftk also has a configuration screen. The settings here are
preserved between sessions.
1.5.1 Configuring viewers
-------------------------
Under Linux, the preferred PostScript- and pdf viewers can be configured
in this screen. Epspdf looks for a number of PostScript- and pdf
viewers, from which you can select one, but you can also enter one
manually.
For Windows and Mac OS X, there is no such configuration option. Epspdf
will use the program associated with the file type, which can be
configured outside epspdf. Under Windows, you can use the "View
with..." button instead.
1.5.2 Options for converting to pdf
-----------------------------------
Double-check the setting "Target use" under "Conversion to pdf". Choose
"prepress" for pdfs which are target for commercial printing. This
option will try to embed all fonts, among other things. Often,
printshops insist on this. With luck, Ghostscript fonts and system
fonts will be used for fonts which were not originally embedded.
On the other hand, you may prefer "screen" if file size is a concern.
See also the Ghostscript documentation, in particular Use.htm and
Ps2pdf.htm.
1.5.3 Options for converting to PostScript
------------------------------------------
For conversion the other way you may opt not to use pdftops even if it
is available. In this case, the conversion will be done by Ghostscript.
Characters may be converted to drawn shapes or little bitmaps so this
is not recommended.
Under Windows, this is also the place to point the program to the
location of pdftops.exe.
1.5.4 Hires BoundingBox
-----------------------
Uncheck the option "Use hires boundingbox if possible" if otherwise the
computed boundingbox is slightly too tight, resulting in some clipping.
It has two effects:
* When converting to pdf, it uses the standard rather than the hires
boundingbox for page dimensions
* When computing a boundingbox, it adds a small safety margin of 1pt
to the standard boundingbox, except where it would make any
boundingbox coordinate negative.
2 Command-line usage
********************
epspdf.rb, the library for epspdftk.rb, does double duty as command-line
version of epspdftk.rb. It shares configuration settings with
epspdftk.rb.
It is strongly recommended to invoke epspdf.rb via a wrapper script
epspdf or epspdf.bat on the search path, e.g.
#!/bin/sh
PATH_TO_EPSPDF/epspdf.rb "@"
for Unix/Linux/OS X, or
"PATH_TO_RUBY.EXE" "PATH_TO_EPSPDF.RB" %*
for Windows. It is the responsibility of the caller to provide double
quotes.
The TeX Live package for epspdf already includes a wrapper.
Basic usage:
epspdf [OPTIONS] INFILE OUTFILE
2.1 Option summary
==================
The summary below is the output of a command `epspdf --help' for help.
$ epspdf --help
Epspdf version 0.4.2
Copyright (C) 2006, 2008, 2009 Siep Kroonenberg
Epspdf 0.4.2
Convert between [e]ps and pdf formats
Usage: epspdf.rb [options] infile [outfile]
Default for outfile is file.pdf if infile is file.eps or file.ps
Default for outfile is file.eps if infile is file.pdf
-g, --gray, --grey Convert to grayscale;
success not guaranteed
-G, --GRAY, --GREY Try harder to convert to grayscale
-p, --pagenumber=PAGENUMBER Page to be converted or selected
-b, --bbox, --BoundingBox Compute tight boundingbox
-n, --no-hires Don't use hires boundingbox
-r, --hires Use hires boundingbox
-T, --target=TARGET Target use of pdf; one of
default, printer, prepress, screen, ebook
-N, --pdfversion=PDFVERSION Pdf version to be generated
-V, --version=PDFVERSION Deprecated; use `-N' or `--pdfversion'.
-I Ignore pdftops even if available
(default: use if available)
-U Use pdftops if available
(overrides previous -I setting)
-C, --custom=CUSTOMOPTIONS Custom options for conversion to pdf,
view Use.htm and ps2pdf.htm from
the Ghostscript documentation set
-P, --psoptions=PSOPTIONS Options for pdftops; default -level3,
don't include -eps or page number options;
these will be generated by the program
-i, --info Info: display detected filetype
-s Save (some) settings
-d Debug: don't remove temp files
-v Prints version info
-h, --help Show this message
3 Notes on PostScript and pdf
*****************************
3.1 Bitmapped and vector
========================
Pictures can be described either in terms of pixels, or more abstractly,
in terms of geometric shapes, fonts and text.
Bitmapped or pixel-based graphics are appropriate for photographs and
screenshots, but less so for diagrams and spreadsheet-generated
graphics.
A file in PostScript- or pdf format can contain both types of graphic
data, e.g. a text in vector format agains a photographic background in
bitmapped format.
Vector graphics can be freely scaled without losing sharpness or
becoming pixellated. If bitmapped graphics are enlarged too much,
individual pixels become apparent. With low-resolution bitmaps this
happens sooner than with high-resolution bitmaps, but high-resolution
bitmaps have (much) larger file sizes, and take longer to process.
So avoid converting vector to bitmap. However, converting from bitmap to
vector is also best avoided, since it is very hard to do well.
Epspdf normally avoids conversion from vector to bitmap and never
converts the other way. With the screen- and ebook "Target use" option,
included bitmaps tend to be downsampled, i.e. reduced to a lower
resolution.
3.2 Font embedding
==================
When converting to pdf, Ghostscript handles font embedding differently
depending on the "Target use" option. For prepress, it embeds even the
standard fonts, including Times etc. Ghostscript has copies of these
fonts in case the PostScript file doesn't have them. For screen, it
doesn't embed standard fonts.
You can embed fonts after the fact by converting pdf to eps or ps, and
back to pdf, with target use set to "prepress". However, don't try this
unless you have pdftops.
If target use is set to "screen", then standard fonts will be removed
instead of added. This option may also cause downsampling of bitmaps.
3.3 Eps preview headers
=======================
Preview headers are quietly stripped from eps files. These preview
headers are used by e.g. desktop-publishing software to represent eps
files on screen without having to interpret the PostScript code itself.
Epspdf currently has no option to preserve or add them.
3.4 Bounding- and other boxes
=============================
A PostScript file may have a page size and a boundingbox defined. A pdf
file may have a mediabox, a trimbox and various other boxes. Ghostscript
by itself normally converts the PostScript page - which is anchored at
(0,0) - to the pdf mediabox.
When epspdf or a similar program converts eps to pdf, it adds code to
move the bottom left corner of the graphic to (0,0) and to set the page
to the size of the graphic. Anything outside the boundingbox should be
cut off.
Both Ghostscript and pdftops have some parameters for setting or using
these boxes; consult Ps2pdf.htm from the Ghostscript documentation and
"pdftops -help" or "man pdftops".
3.5 Orientation
===============
There appears to be no reliable way to set orientation for PostScript-
and pdf files. This may result part of a graphic being cut off after
conversion or even everything falling outside the page / mediabox /
boundingbox. It may help to change the extension from ".eps" to ".ps"
before converting to pdf. In this case, let epspdf generate a new
boundingbox.
3.6 Exporting PostScript from Windows programs
==============================================
Often, the only way to get EPS or PostScript from a Windows program is
by "printing" to a PostScript file. From some programs, you can print a
selection. A suitable driver which comes with Windows is Generic / MS
Publisher Imagesetter. Pay attention to the printer properties: choose
"Outline" for font downloading and avoid the "Optimize for speed"
setting for PostScript Output Option. Try e.g. "Archive" instead. These
options can be found under the Advanced button.
Other possibilities are the TpX and wmf2eps programs, which both have
options to write clipboard contents to an emf file. Wmf2eps uses a
printer driver in the background. For faithful conversion, pick
wmf2eps; for subsequent editing, choose TpX. Both programs are
available from `http://www.tug.org/ctan.html'.
4 Bitmapped graphics for LaTeX and pdflatex
*******************************************
pdflatex can use graphics in .png format (best for screenshots) and .jpg
format (best for photographs) directly. However, for LaTeX you are
stuck with .eps format. Tips for converting to .eps:
4.1 Linux
=========
_sam2p_
This command-line bitmap-to-PostScript/pdf conversion utility is
available from `http://code.google.com/p/sam2p/' and may already be
packaged for your distribution. It produces very small files:
`sam2p image.png image.eps'
_ImageMagick/convert_
`convert' from the ImageMagick package is a command-line utility:
`convert image.png image.eps'
_The GIMP_
This is the premier open source image editing program. It is often
pre-installed on Linux, and is also available for other platforms.
The GIMP can save in eps format.
4.2 Mac OS X
============
Mac OS X's built-in Preview application can read most bitmapped formats
and save them as .pdf, which epspdf can convert to .eps.
4.3 Windows
===========
Windows is not a particularly friendly environment for PostScript and
pdf. A couple of command-line utilities try to fill the gap, _e.g._
sam2p image.png image.eps
or
bmeps -c image.png image.eps
sam2p is distributed with TeX Live (Windows only), bmeps both with TeX
Live and with MikTeX. Without the `-c' option, bmeps produces a
grayscale image. It produces larger files than sam2p.
4.3.1 GUI use of sam2p and bmeps
--------------------------------
Create a batchfile `bitmap2eps.bat' with contents
sam2p "%~1" "%~dpn1.eps"
(TeX Live) or
bmeps -c "%~1" "%~dpn1.eps"
(MikTeX) and place it _e.g._ on your desktop. Now if you drop a
bitmapped graphic on this batchfile then you will get an eps file with
the same name as the original, but with extension `.eps'.
You can also right-click on a bitmap, choose _Open With..._ and browse
to this file bitmap2eps.bat, resulting in conversion to .eps. The next
time you do this with a file of the same type, bitmap2eps.bat will
already be in the list of possible programs for opening the file.
5 Troubleshooting
*****************
5.1 Grayscaling fails
=====================
See above, under *note Grayscaling: gray. Epspdf is limited by what can
be done by the backend tools, i.e. Ghostscript and pdftops. In
particular, epspdf cannot grayscale bitmapped data.
5.2 Part of the graphic gets cut off
====================================
Things to try:
* If the PostScript file was generated with the Windows PostScript
driver, experiment with the PostScript Output option. Don't choose
Optimize for Speed.
* Replace the extension with ".ps" and let epspdf generate a
boundingbox.
* Boundingbox calculations may be slightly inaccurate where text is
involved. If just a sliver is cut off, let epspdf ignore the
high-resolutuion boundingbox. Command-line option: "-n" or
"-no-hires".
5.3 Fonts look ugly
===================
If Ghostscript has to do the conversion from pdf to ps then text will
not remain text, but will be replaced by drawn shapes or bitmaps. Try
to get hold of the xpdf suite, which includes pdftops, especially if
your files contain serious amount of text.
5.4 Resources for troubleshooting
=================================
Logfile. Epspdf and epspdftk maintain a log file epspdf.log in your
home directory or, in case of Windows, your profile directory. This
profile directory may be `c:\Documents and Settings\YOUR USER NAME'.
Otherwise, open a DOS box and type `echo %USERPROFILE%', which will
produce this information.
This logfile lists all Ghostscript- and pdftops program calls plus
error information. "EPCallError" is probably a program error.
'EPSystemError" is more likely caused by a faulty file, but may be a
program error as well.
Temporary files. The temporary files may give clues as well. They will
be deleted at the end of the session (for the command-line version,
give a -d parameter to keep the temporary files). Check the logfile as
to which temporary files have been created.
Ghostscript- and pdftops documentation. For Ghostscript, the most
important files are Ps2pdf.htm and Use.htm. For pdftops, type `pdftops
-h'. For Unix, there is also a man page, and for Windows there is a
file pdftops.txt in the distribution zip.
6 Changes in version 0.4
************************
Hi-res boundingboxes are now supported. By default, conversion from eps
to pdf now uses the hires boundingbox as "page" to determine the page
dmensions of the pdf file. Other conversions preserve or generate a
hires boundingbox.
Under Windows, the new version looks for an installed TeX and will use
its private Ghostscript if it cannot find separately installed
Ghostscript. TeX Live's pdftops, being on the searchpath, will be used
unless epspdf finds another copy first.
There is now a "-v" (lowercase) option to print the version string.
|