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On 11/02/2010 12:25 PM, Christian Moe wrote:
Hi,
the librsvg man page says PNG and JPEG raster formats only.
Unless I have completely misunderstood these two formats, they are
raster formats - consequently, svg (vector) has to be converted to
Hi,
the librsvg man page says PNG and JPEG raster formats only.
CM
On 11/2/10 11:40 AM, Rainer M Krug wrote:
On Mon, Nov 1, 2010 at 11:47 PM, Christian Moe m...@christianmoe.com
mailto:m...@christianmoe.com wrote:
Re: converting SVG
Have you looked at rsvg
Christian Moe m...@christianmoe.com wrote:
Hi,
the librsvg man page says PNG and JPEG raster formats only.
CM
On 11/2/10 11:40 AM, Rainer M Krug wrote:
On Mon, Nov 1, 2010 at 11:47 PM, Christian Moe m...@christianmoe.com
mailto:m...@christianmoe.com wrote:
Re: converting
On Mon, Nov 1, 2010 at 11:47 PM, Christian Moe m...@christianmoe.comwrote:
Re: converting SVG
Have you looked at rsvg (http://librsvg.sourceforge.net/)?
I am not sure if it uses vector for pdf, but it might be worth a try?
Cheers,
Rainer
1. Prince (http://www.princexml.com) does SVG to
On Mon, Nov 1, 2010 at 6:47 PM, Christian Moe m...@christianmoe.com wrote:
Re: converting SVG
2. Ask Inkscape -- it's free software; unfortunately, the result is
rasterized.
e.g.
: inkscape --without-gui --export-text-to-path --export-eps=drawing.eps
drawing.svg
From a sample 52 KB SVG
Hi,
Yes, I can confirm batik-rasterizer, despite the name, made nice
vector-based PDF from SVG. Thanks, Nick.
So that's two options now, Inkscape and Batik.
Enough noise from me on this, I think.
Yours,
Christian
On 11/2/10 3:20 PM, Nick Dokos wrote:
Christian Moem...@christianmoe.com
Re: converting SVG
1. Prince (http://www.princexml.com) does SVG to PDF as vector
graphics from the command line, very nicely. Too bad it's proprietary.
e.g.
: prince drawing.svg drawing.pdf
2. Ask Inkscape -- it's free software; unfortunately, the result is
rasterized.
e.g.
: inkscape
Eric Schulte schulte.e...@gmail.com writes:
Łukasz Stelmach lukasz.stelm...@iem.pw.edu.pl writes:
Richard Riley rile...@googlemail.com writes:
Eric Schulte schulte.e...@gmail.com writes:
Phil Hagelberg recently introduced me to epresent.el by Tom Tromey.
It's a very nice little utility
Łukasz Stelmach lukasz.stelm...@iem.pw.edu.pl writes:
[...]
S5 and other HTML slide show frameworks have (at least) one great
advantage over Beamer, one can embed (there are at least two ways) SVG
image, which is quite hard with LaTeX/Beamer duo (is there any
command-line tool to convert
Eric S Fraga ucec...@ucl.ac.uk writes:
Łukasz Stelmach lukasz.stelm...@iem.pw.edu.pl writes:
[...]
S5 and other HTML slide show frameworks have (at least) one great
advantage over Beamer, one can embed (there are at least two ways) SVG
image, which is quite hard with LaTeX/Beamer duo (is
Łukasz Stelmach lukasz.stelm...@iem.pw.edu.pl writes:
Eric S Fraga ucec...@ucl.ac.uk writes:
ImageMagick [1] will convert from/to SVG to/from many formats including
EPS. I've not tried any conversions with SVG, mind you, so this is
based on the documentation.
I'll check it, but I'm
Eric Schulte schulte.e...@gmail.com writes:
Hi,
Phil Hagelberg recently introduced me to epresent.el by Tom Tromey.
It's a very nice little utility for giving presentations using Emacs as
the display engine. Obviously I was aghast to learn that epresent
didn't work with Org-mode documents.
Eric Schulte schulte.e...@gmail.com writes:
Hi,
Phil Hagelberg recently introduced me to epresent.el by Tom Tromey.
It's a very nice little utility for giving presentations using Emacs as
the display engine. Obviously I was aghast to learn that epresent
didn't work with Org-mode documents.
Richard Riley rile...@googlemail.com writes:
Eric Schulte schulte.e...@gmail.com writes:
Phil Hagelberg recently introduced me to epresent.el by Tom Tromey.
It's a very nice little utility for giving presentations using Emacs as
the display engine.
[...]
http://github.com/eschulte/epresent
Hi Eric,
Eric Schulte wrote:
Phil Hagelberg recently introduced me to epresent.el by Tom Tromey. It's a
very nice little utility for giving presentations using Emacs as the display
engine. Obviously I was aghast to learn that epresent didn't work with
Org-mode documents. I took the liberty of
Eric Schulte schulte.e...@gmail.com writes:
Phil Hagelberg recently introduced me to epresent.el by Tom Tromey.
It's a very nice little utility for giving presentations using Emacs as
the display engine.
[...]
http://github.com/eschulte/epresent
(instructions in the README)
I am preparing
Eric,
This is cool and very useful. Thanks.
This must be Zeitgeist-y because I was thinking about preparing
presentations in Emacs this week. Then I saw slidy, now this and s5.
Here's a further idea, to see what people think. Do you think it would be
possible to make a temporary org-mode
Scot Becker scot.bec...@gmail.com writes:
I once saw a video of someone doing a live presentation on something
Emacs-y and he did the presentation by typing headlines, lists and
detail in a clean Emacs buffer as he went along, similar to the way
that some teachers might write out subject
Christopher Allan Webber cweb...@dustycloud.org writes:
However, yeah, I've also been interested in a less nerdy presentation
route myself... s5? One of these others? There seem to be a lot of
good options these days. :)
and here I've been specifically looking for nerdier presentation
Hi Scot,
Scot Becker scot.bec...@gmail.com writes:
Eric,
This is cool and very useful. Thanks.
Thanks, it was fun to work on. Also, most of the cool functionality
already existed in Tom's original version, I just rebased it against
Org-mode.
This must be Zeitgeist-y because I was
Łukasz Stelmach lukasz.stelm...@iem.pw.edu.pl writes:
Richard Riley rile...@googlemail.com writes:
Eric Schulte schulte.e...@gmail.com writes:
Phil Hagelberg recently introduced me to epresent.el by Tom Tromey.
It's a very nice little utility for giving presentations using Emacs as
the
Jambunathan K kjambunat...@gmail.com writes:
Eric Schulte schulte.e...@gmail.com writes:
Hi,
Phil Hagelberg recently introduced me to epresent.el by Tom Tromey.
It's a very nice little utility for giving presentations using Emacs as
the display engine. Obviously I was aghast to learn that
Hi Seb,
Sébastien Vauban wxhgmqzgw...@spammotel.com writes:
Hi Eric,
Eric Schulte wrote:
Phil Hagelberg recently introduced me to epresent.el by Tom Tromey. It's a
very nice little utility for giving presentations using Emacs as the display
engine. Obviously I was aghast to learn that
Eric Schulte schulte.e...@gmail.com writes:
Jambunathan K kjambunat...@gmail.com writes:
Eric Schulte schulte.e...@gmail.com writes:
Hi,
Phil Hagelberg recently introduced me to epresent.el by Tom Tromey.
It's a very nice little utility for giving presentations using Emacs as
the display
Jambunathan K kjambunat...@gmail.com writes:
Eric Schulte schulte.e...@gmail.com writes:
Jambunathan K kjambunat...@gmail.com writes:
Eric Schulte schulte.e...@gmail.com writes:
Hi,
Phil Hagelberg recently introduced me to epresent.el by Tom Tromey.
It's a very nice little utility for
Sébastien Vauban wxhgmqzgw...@spammotel.com writes:
- I did not see any image
I think inline images should be working with the latest version
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