But if you still want to use a bitmap format, old plain GIF seems to be the
solution for this case. Just index your figure with as few colors as
possible. For this kind of situations GIF does a way better job than JPG.

On 5/18/07, Les Denham <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:

On Friday 18 May 2007 14:09, Steve Litt wrote:
> > Anyone know of a way I can use a full sized 8.5x11 graphic without it
> > taking over a megabyte of memory? One would think it would be very
> > compressible. Over half the graphic is contiguous pure white, with
> > another 10% contiguous pure black.
>
> I figured it out. With a really big graphic, you you must create the
> graphic as a .eps, and within LyX include that .eps. Whatever graphic
> conversion programs LyX uses blows converts from .jpg or .png to a HUGE
> .eps, much bigger than the .eps would be if you created it directly from
> Gimp.
>
Steve,

Probably the best way of getting a full page graphic with a reasonable
file
size is to use a vector graphic.  I haven't used them for covers, but I
have
used them for full page illustrations within a document.  Some vector
graphic
formats can be taken care of automatically with Lyx -- Grace .agr format,
for
example, which I use very often -- while others you might export as a .eps
file from the application that generates the graphic.
--
Les

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Julio Rojas
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