> Your best bet is to create an EPS graphic file and then import that into > OO.org. Bear in mind that if you do this, OO.org will import that EPS > file and create a bitmapped preview upon doing so. When you > view on a display or print the file, it will (by default) be the > bitmapped preview that you will see, not the higher quality vector based > EPS image.
Ok, I will have a look at this > BTW, this issue has been covered extensively on the R lists, for both > OO.org and for MS Office. I have seen the discussions on producing high quality output on the R forum, but this seemed to be an OOo question as the copy and paste is fine with Word and Pages, its just with OOo that its horrible. > If you are comfortable using LaTeX, the combination of R and SWeave is > the perfect way of generating high quality publications with formatted > tables and plots in a reproducible fashion. You will find a lot of > information on that subject in the r-help archives as well. This is what > I use on Linux when generating reports and presentations involving > statistical/analytic output. I use OO.org (now 3.0) for other tasks. Well, I do use Latex and Lyx for various things, but have used the easy to produce PDFs for this. I've had a quick look at SWeave, but haven't had the time to work out how to use it. > > Search the r-help list archives here: > > http://www.rseek.org/ > http://finzi.psych.upenn.edu/search.html Thanks, Graham --------------------------------------------------------------------- To unsubscribe, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] For additional commands, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
