I did have success converting my ps file to pdf with an online converter
at http://www.ps2pdf.com/ -- so it seems it's ghostscript 8.70 bug
(though one that I've only seen with eps files created by matplotlib).
Jon
On Fri, 2011-08-19 at 11:48 +0900, Jae-Joon Lee wrote:
When I converted the ps
On Wed, Aug 17, 2011 at 5:53 AM, Jonathan Slavin
jsla...@cfa.harvard.edu wrote:
Attached are examples of the problem -- a PostScript file and the pdf
that is created using ps2pdf. The y-axis is properly labeled in the ps
file, but the part of the label using mathtext becomes invisible in the
When I converted the ps file to pdf, the result is okay.
I tried
* ps2pdf (from ghostscript version 8.61)
* ps2pdf (from ghostscript version 9.02)
* preview in mac os X
and they all worked fine.
I wonder if this could be a bug in the pspdf (ghostscript 8.70 I believe).
Can you try other
Setting test.usetex to True solved this problem. The only drawback is
that the font used for numbers and that used for axis labels is
different and looks a bit odd. I'm sure the fix for that is not too
difficult, however.
Jon
On Wed, 2011-08-17 at 14:09 +0900, Jae-Joon Lee wrote:
Can you post
Hi all,
I've been making figures for a paper I'm writing (to be submitted to the
ApJ). I'm using LaTeX and so need to use encapsulated PostScript for
the figures. The problem is that when the paper is translated to pdf
from PostScript, the mathtext in the figures disappears. The reason
that I
Hi all,
I've been making figures for a paper I'm writing (to be submitted to the
ApJ). I'm using LaTeX and so need to use encapsulated PostScript for
the figures. The problem is that when the paper is translated to pdf
from PostScript, the mathtext in the figures disappears. The reason
Can you post an output eps file so that we can take a look?
Regards,
-JJ
On Wed, Aug 17, 2011 at 5:52 AM, Jonathan Slavin
jsla...@cfa.harvard.edu wrote:
Hi all,
I've been making figures for a paper I'm writing (to be submitted to the
ApJ). I'm using LaTeX and so need to use encapsulated