To print out the load cell schematic (from http://www.luciani.org/geda/util/matrix.pdf) I used the following commands in a Makefile (change your paths and options appropriately):
gschem -oload-cell.ps -s/local/lan/geda/scheme/gschem-print.scm load-cell.sch ps2epsi load-cell.ps load-cell-sch.epsi convert -density 288 -rotate 90 -fill "#F0F0E0" -opaque white load-cell-sch.epsi load-cell-sch.png (* jcl *) On 7/29/05, Hiroshi T. <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > Thank you, John Luciani and John Coppens. > > On Jul 29, 2005, at 9:20 PM, John Luciani wrote: > > The problem may be the way that your viewer is converting vectors > > to dots. > > > > In the document at http://www.luciani.org/geda/util/matrix.pdf > > I used image-magick to set dot densities. > > > > For the PCB layers I used the command-line > > > > convert -density 576 > > > > For the schematics I used > > > > convert -density 288 > > > > (* jcl *) > > > > > > On 7/29/05, Hiroshi T. <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > >> Hello, there! > >> I'm quite new to circuit editors. I've just tried the gEDA tutorial. > >> I want my circuit designs to be exported to Web pages. > >> I saved the tutorial's file one.sch as a PNG file and saw it by an > >> image viewer to find its texts consist of rather small number of dots. > >> I'm on Mac OS X 10.3.4. > >> > >> Are there any ways to improve the quality of resulting PNG files? > >> Thanks in advance. > >> > >> > > > > Do you mean converting PNG file to PNG or any other format by > ImageMagick's convert command with -density argument or converting > directory from gschem format? > > My understanding is that gschem allows to export only to PNG. > > On Jul 30, 2005, at 12:36 AM, John Coppens wrote: > > > On Fri, 29 Jul 2005 10:40:33 -0300 > > John Coppens <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > > > >> Export you PCB to a EPS (Encapsulated Postscript) file - then import > >> it > >> in GIMP - set the interpolation for text and line to highest quality. > >> The result is excellent! > > > > Sorry - this is valid for schematics too, of course. > > Exporting to EPS would be the best way. > How do you convert gschem files to EPS except screen capture? > > --- > Hiroshi TOMARU > >
