On Wed, Nov 27, 2002 at 07:40:25AM +0100, Andre Poenitz wrote:
> On Tue, Nov 26, 2002 at 03:31:16PM -0600, Les Denham wrote:
> > Personally, I think xfig is quite a neat tool to do exactly what you're
> > asking.
>
> So, no, neither PowerPoint nor CorelDraw is necessarily the solution for
> every
On Tue, Nov 26, 2002 at 03:31:16PM -0600, Les Denham wrote:
> Personally, I think xfig is quite a neat tool to do exactly what you're
> asking.
>
> Some alternatives:
> [...]
Small story:
Some girl recently finished her diploma thesis here. Having a Windows
background, the "obvious" "solution"
On Sat, Oct 26, 2002 at 02:58:04PM -0500, Zhigang Li wrote:
> Just wonder how your guys create a hand-drawn pictur in PS format.
Xfig.
And I remove irrelevant part of mails when I answer.
Andre'
--
Those who desire to give up Freedom in order to gain Security,
will not have, nor do they deserv
It is pretty good. I use it for many figures in my thesis (i am
writing it with lyx!). Two features I want most are:
1. Define (closed) path that contains both straight lines and beizer
curves
2. Apply clipping and filling with 1
Only programming with metapost give me those for now. I'd love to
On Saturday 26 October 2002 1458 pm, you wrote:
> Hello,
> Just wonder how your guys create a hand-drawn pictur in PS format. I
> hate to use "Xfig" in UNIX, which is too clumsy to me. Is there any way
> we can draw some plots in Powerpoint, or Paint, etc., then convert them
> into .ps ones with bo
Hello,
Just wonder how your guys create a hand-drawn pictur in PS format. I
hate to use "Xfig" in UNIX, which is too clumsy to me. Is there any way
we can draw some plots in Powerpoint, or Paint, etc., then convert them
into .ps ones with bounding box (so that they will be easily integrated
into .
On Tue, 26 Nov 2002, Jeroen Vriesman wrote:
> Somewhere in my memory there is a note about pstoeps (or ps2eps)
> being part of ¨gsview¨.
>
> On Tue, 26 Nov 2002 10:57:17 +0100
> Pascal Francq <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> > Hi,
> > I have a ".ps" file and I want to convert it to an ".eps" file.
>
On Tue, 26 Nov 2002, Jeroen Vriesman wrote:
>Somewhere in my memory there is a note about pstoeps (or ps2eps) being
>part of ¨gsview¨.
Not really: ghostscript is the package you mean, and it comes with ps2epsi
but it's not the right tool for this. Better is ps2eps:
# ps2eps - convert PostScript
Pascal Francq wrote:
> I have a ".ps" file and I want to convert it to an ".eps" file.
> What is the right way to do?
RTFM! Or take a look in the archive before posting -- the last
time it went around was yesterday!
Matej
--
Matej Cepl, [EMAIL PROTECTED],
Finger: 89EF 4BC6 288A BF43 1BAB 25C3
On Tue, Nov 26, 2002 at 10:57:17AM +0100, Pascal Francq wrote:
> I have a ".ps" file and I want to convert it to an ".eps" file.
> What is the right way to do?
Perhaps the best option is to use ps2eps:
http://www.tex.ac.uk/tex-archive/help/Catalogue/entries/ps2eps.html
(it is better than ps2epsi
On Tue, 26 Nov 2002, Pascal Francq wrote:
> Hi,
> I have a ".ps" file and I want to convert it to an ".eps" file.
> What is the right way to do?
>
Bonjour Pascal,
There is a solution in Ghostscript called 'ps2epsi'.
NAME
ps2epsi - generate conforming Encapsulated PostScript
SYNOPSIS
Somewhere in my memory there is a note about pstoeps (or ps2eps) being part of
¨gsview¨.
On Tue, 26 Nov 2002 10:57:17 +0100
Pascal Francq <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Hi,
> I have a ".ps" file and I want to convert it to an ".eps" file.
> What is the right way to do?
> --
>
>
> Ir Pascal Fra
Hi,
I have a ".ps" file and I want to convert it to an ".eps" file.
What is the right way to do?
--
Ir Pascal Francq
Researcher
Université Libre de Bruxelles
CAD/CAM Department
Avenue F.D. Roosevelt, 50
CP 165/14
B-1050 Brussels
BELGIUM
Tel. +32-2-650 47 65
Fax +32-2-650 47 24
ICQ: 91206668
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