Re: [SLUG] LaTeX question, Linux command.

2003-08-29 Thread Anthony Wood
On Tue, Aug 26, 2003 at 09:10:16AM +1000, Angus Lees wrote:
 At Mon, 25 Aug 2003 17:41:14 +1000, Michael Lake wrote:
  Bill Bennett wrote:
   I was going to use a .jpg file in a figure in a LaTeX document,
   on the grounds that an.eps file would be too big.
  
  I don't have my cp of Goosens here to look up the graphics rule but it 
  looks like you are wanting to use latex and generate postscript. An eps 
  is not necessarily too big. Both convert and jpg2eps (which might even 
  already be on your system as it comes with many teTeX distributions) 
  just encapsulates the binary jpg and it wont be much bigger at all than 
  the jpg. Then you wont need the graphics rule at all.
 
 . also if you're aiming for postscript output, the jpg will have to
 be converted to postscript at some point in the process.
 
 (iirc, PDF can embed a jpg directly so thats a different story)

pdflatex does this.  pdflatex can't do the jpegs straight out of
my camera for some reason.

jpeg2ps (debian woody/non-free)

DESCRIPTION
   jpeg2ps converts JPEG files to PostScript  Level  2  or  3
   EPS.  In  fact,  jpeg2ps  is  not really a converter but a
   wrapper: it reads the image parameters  (width,  height,
   number  of  color  components)  in a JPEG file, writes the
   according EPS header and then copies the  compressed  JPEG
   data  to  the  output  file.  Decompression is done by the
   PostScript interpreter (only  PostScript  Level  2  and  3
   interpreters  support JPEG compression and decompression).

-- 
Woody
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Re: [SLUG] LaTeX question, Linux command.

2003-08-29 Thread Bill Bennett
 I don't have my cp of Goosens here to look up the graphics rule
 but it  looks like you are wanting to use latex and generate
 postscript. An eps is not necessarily too big. Both convert
 and jpg2eps (which might even  already be on your system as
 it comes with many teTeX distributions) just encapsulates the
 binary jpg and it wont be much bigger at all than the jpg. Then
 you wont need the graphics rule at all.

Well, I'd *better* look at jpg2eps (it isn't on our machine),
cause the jpg file was 452731 bites. The corresponding eps was
29969362 bites. (It was a photograph).

Regards,

Bill Bennett.
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Re: [SLUG] LaTeX question, Linux command.

2003-08-28 Thread Angus Lees
At Mon, 25 Aug 2003 17:41:14 +1000, Michael Lake wrote:
 Bill Bennett wrote:
  I was going to use a .jpg file in a figure in a LaTeX document,
  on the grounds that an.eps file would be too big.
 
 I don't have my cp of Goosens here to look up the graphics rule but it 
 looks like you are wanting to use latex and generate postscript. An eps 
 is not necessarily too big. Both convert and jpg2eps (which might even 
 already be on your system as it comes with many teTeX distributions) 
 just encapsulates the binary jpg and it wont be much bigger at all than 
 the jpg. Then you wont need the graphics rule at all.

.. also if you're aiming for postscript output, the jpg will have to
be converted to postscript at some point in the process.

(iirc, PDF can embed a jpg directly so thats a different story)

-- 
 - Gus
-- 
SLUG - Sydney Linux User's Group - http://slug.org.au/
More Info: http://lists.slug.org.au/listinfo/slug


Re: [SLUG] LaTeX question, Linux command.

2003-08-25 Thread Michael Lake
Bill Bennett wrote:
 I was going to use a .jpg file in a figure in a LaTeX document,
 on the grounds that an.eps file would be too big.

I don't have my cp of Goosens here to look up the graphics rule but it 
looks like you are wanting to use latex and generate postscript. An eps 
is not necessarily too big. Both convert and jpg2eps (which might even 
already be on your system as it comes with many teTeX distributions) 
just encapsulates the binary jpg and it wont be much bigger at all than 
the jpg. Then you wont need the graphics rule at all.

 So I copied the method from Keith Reckdahl's Using Imported Graphics in LaTeX2e, 
 ie.,
...

Mike



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