Denis,
just type --> png 3000,3000 yourimage.png
...and there you've got it a 3000x3000 dpi image.
It's all in the manual
On Friday, March 7, 2003, at 11:39 AM, Denis Shcherbakov wrote:
Are we talking Windows here? What would be a good way to enhance this
resolution within linux? How doe
Thank you :)
On Fri, 7 Mar 2003, Scott Classen wrote:
Denis,
just type --> png 3000,3000 yourimage.png
...and there you've got it a 3000x3000 dpi image.
It's all in the manual
when I said "big" I meant using the pymol command "ray" with arguments
specifying the width and heigth:
ray 3000,3000
this works on all platforms/OSes
zac
> Are we talking Windows here? What would be a good way to enhance this
> resolution within linux? How does one make a "big" png? Is
Are we talking Windows here? What would be a good way to enhance this
resolution within linux? How does one make a "big" png? Is it a
command-line option, or you just make the window the size of the screen?
Thanks
Denis
On Fri, 7 Mar 2003, Ezequiel Panepucci wrote:
Fred,
Make sure you creat
Fred,
Also check the settings in Acrobat distiller. The default settings are
for "screen" which means all images are downsampled to 72dpi. If you
choose the "print" setting in distiller then they will be downsampled
to 300dpi. You can customize these setting so there is no downsampling
too if
Fred,
Make sure you create images which are "big" enough for the size of the
print you want to make, e.g. images 3000x3000 print really well on an
area of about 5in x 5in (600 dpi printing resolution).
Also, you should use some application in which you can properly resize
the image to print the a
Hello all,
I have made some really nice .png images with pymol, but when I print them
out they lose quite a bit of resolution. Likewise, when I convert them to
PDF with Acrobat, the resulting .pdf file looks much worse (on my LCD
screen) than the original .png. Is there a way around this pro