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NAME

       ps2eps - convert PostScript to EPS (Encapsulated PostScript) files

SYNOPSIS

       ps2eps [ -f ] [ -q ] [ -N ] [ -O ] [ -n ] [ -P ] [ -c ] [ -C ] [ -m ] [
       -B ] [ -E ] [ -s pagedim ] [ -t offset ] [ -r resolution ] [ -R +|-|^ ]
       [  -l ] [ -g ] [ -H ] [ -d ] [ -h|--help ] [ -W ] [ -L ] [ -V|--version
       ] [ -- ] [ psfile1 ] [ psfile2 ] [ ... ]

DESCRIPTION

       This manual page documents ps2eps version 1.64.

       ps2eps is a tool (written in Perl) to produce  Encapsulated  PostScript
       Files   (EPS/EPSF)   from  usual  one-paged  Postscript  documents.  It
       calculates correct Bounding Boxes for those EPS files and filters  some
       special postscript command sequences that can produce erroneous results
       on printers. EPS  files  are  often  needed  for  including  (scalable)
       graphics of high quality into TeX/LaTeX (or even Word) documents.

       Without  any  argument,  ps2eps reads from standard input and writes to
       standard  output.   If  filenames  are  given  as  arguments  they  are
       processed  one  by  one  and output files are written to filenames with
       extension .eps. If input filenames have the extension .ps or .prn, this
       extension  is  replaced with .eps.  In all other cases .eps is appended
       to the input filename.  Please note that  PostScript  files  for  input
       should  contain only one single page (you can possibly use the psselect
       from the psutils package to extract a single page from a document  that
       contains multiple pages).

       If  BoundingBox  in output seems to be wrong, please try options --size
       or --ignoreBB. See also section TROUBLESHOOTING.

OPTIONS

       ps2eps follows the usual GNU command line  syntax,  with  long  options
       starting  with  two  dashes  (‘-’).   A  summary of options is included
       below.

       -h, --help
              Show summary of options.

       -V, --version
              Show version of program.

       -f, --force
              Force overwriting existing  files.  ps2eps  will  not  overwrite
              files   by   default   to  avoid  deleting  original  EPS  files
              accidently.

       -q, --quiet
              quiet  operation  (no  output  while  processing  files,  except
              errors).

       -N, --noinsert
              do  not  insert  any  postscript code. Normally a few postscript
              instructions are added around the original  postscript  code  by
              ps2eps which can be turned off by this option.

       -O, --preserveorientation
              do not filter %%Orientation: header comment.

       -n, --nofix
              do   not   try   to   fix  postscript  code  by  filtering  some
              instructions.

       -P, --removepreview
              remove preview image (smaller file, but no preview anymore).

       -F, --fixps
              fix postscript code  unconditionally.  Otherwise,  filtering  is
              usually triggered by detection of certain drivers only.

       -c, --comments
              preserve document structure comments.

       -C, --clip
              insert   postscript  code  for  clipping.  Unless  --nohires  is
              specified, the HiResBoundingBox (enlarged by 0.1 points) is used
              for clipping.

       -m, --mono
              use black/white bitmap as base for calculation (default: off).

       -s, --size=pagedim
              where  pagedim  is  a  pre-defined  standard  page  size  (e.g.,
              a4,a0,b0,letter,...)  or  explicitly  specified  in   a   format
              pagedim:=XxY[cm|in],  where X and Y are numbers (floating points
              are accepted) followed by units centimeter (cm)  or  inch  (in),
              (default:  cm).   Use --size=list to list pre-defined pagesizes.
              See also environment variable PS2EPS_SIZE.

       -t, --translate=x,y
              specify an x,y offset (may be  negative)  in  postscript  points
              (1/72  dpi)  for  drawing.  This  option may be required if your
              drawing has negative coordinates which usually lets  ghostscript
              cut  the  negative  part  of  your picture, because it starts to
              render at positive coordinates. The resulting output  will  also
              be shifted.

       -r, --resolution=dpi
              specify  a  resolution  in dpi (dots per inch) for drawing under
              ghostscript. Default resolution is 144 dpi which is  the  double
              of  the  typical  72  dpi.   This  option may help if there is a
              hardware dependent resolution encoded in the  postscript,  e.g.,
              600dpi. Example: ps2eps -l -r 600 test.ps

       -R, --rotate=direction
              This  option  rotates  the  resulting EPS output.  The parameter
              direction determines the direction  of  rotation:  +  means  +90
              degrees (clockwise),- means -90 degrees (counter-clockwise), and
              ^ means 180 degrees (up-side down).

       -l, --loose
              expand the original tight bounding box  by  one  point  in  each
              direction.

       -B, --ignoreBB
              do not use existing bounding box as page size for rendering.

       -E, --ignoreEOF
              do  not  use  %%EOF  as  hint for end of file. Otherwise, ps2eps
              assumes that postscript code ends after the last %%EOF  comment,
              because  some drivers add trailing binary ‘‘garbage’’ code which
              gets deleted by ps2eps by default.

       -g, --gsbbox
              use internal bbox device of ghostscript instead of the  external
              C   program  bbox.  The  internal  bbox  device  of  ghostscript
              generates different values (sometimes even incorrect), so  using
              the  provided  bbox should be more robust.  See also environment
              variable PS2EPS_GSBBOX.

       -H, --nohires
              do not generate a %%HiResBoundingBox comment for output.

       -L, --license
              show licensing information.

       -d, --debuggs
              show ghostscript call. This may be helpful for solving  problems
              that occur during a ghostscript call.

       -W, --warnings
              show  warnings  about  sanity  of  generated  EPS  file. Certain
              postscript commands should not be  contained  in  an  EPS  file.
              With  this  option set ps2eps will issue a warning if it detects
              at least one of them.

TROUBLESHOOTING

       Based on the given postscript source code (in most cases  generated  by
       some  postscript  printer driver) there are many potential obstacles or
       problems that may occur when trying to create proper EPS files.  Please
       read this section carefully to be aware of common pitfalls.

   INCOMPLETE/CLIPPED IMAGES
       or how to determine the right size for ghostscript.

       If  you  have  documents  that are larger than your ghostscript default
       (usually A4 or US letter), you have  to  specify  the  page  dimensions
       explicitly  using  the  -s  option. Otherwise your EPS might be cut off
       during rasterizing by ghostscript resulting  in  a  wrongly  calculated
       bounding  box.  You  can  pass  all  pre-defined  page sizes to -s that
       ghostscript understands. These are  currently:  11x17,  ledger,  legal,
       letter,  lettersmall, archA, archB, archC, archD, archE a0, a1, a2, a3,
       a4, a5, a6, a7, a8, a9, a10, isob0, isob1, isob2, isob3, isob4,  isob5,
       isob6,  b0,  b1,  b2,  b3,  b4,  b5, c0, c1, c2, c3, c4, c5, c6, jisb0,
       jisb1, jisb2, jisb3,  jisb4,  jisb5,  jisb6,  flsa,  flse,  halfletter.
       Unfortunately,  all  sizes  are  currently  only  available in portrait
       orientation (not landscape).

       By default, ps2eps uses an already given %%BoundingBox from the  source
       file,  which  often corresponds to the size of the physical page format
       for which the document was printed. However, you should be  aware  that
       this  already specified bounding box may be not correct, thus resulting
       in a wrongly cropped (or even no usable) .eps-file.  ps2eps can only do
       as  good  as ghostscript does in rendering the original postscript file
       (though ps2eps even works  with  negative  and  fractional  values  are
       contained in the original bounding box by using automatic translation).
       Therefore, if the given bounding box is to small or  incorrect  anyway,
       you can ignore the existing bounding box with the -B option, which will
       cause ghostscript to  use  its  internal  default  size  (or  use  -s).
       However,  if  the  BoundingBox  has  negative coordinates, which is not
       allowed by the specification, ps2eps will shift the output to  positive
       values.

       Hint: to avoid rotating the picture if you have the original drawing in
       landscape format, you may use the ‘‘Encapsulated Postscript’’ option in
       the  printer  driver  which  should  generate  an  EPS file (but with a
       bounding box of the sheet size!). But some Windows printer drivers  are
       drawing  the image with an offset from the bottom of the portrait page,
       so that a part of it is drawn outside the landscape oriented page.   In
       this  case,  you’ll have to specify a square size of the page using the
       maximum length, e.g., 29.7cm x 29.7cm for an A4 page.

   CLIPPING
       or why gets some of my text deleted above the included .eps file?

       Some postscript drivers draw a white rectangle from the top left corner
       of  the  page  to  the right lower corner of the object. This may erase
       some or even all text above your imported/included EPS file,  which  is
       very  annoying. In order to prevent this, most programs have a clipping
       option  for  imported  .eps   files   (within   LaTeX   you   can   use
       \includegraphics*{}) for this purpose. If this is unfortunately not the
       case, you can use the -C option of ps2eps which will (hopefully) do  it
       for  you.  Unfortunately,  PScript.dll  5.2 (Windows XP) introduced new
       very badly behaving Postscript code (initclip) which will even override
       the  outer  clipping!  Thus, a new filter had to be installed in ps2eps
       which will fix it.

       However, because most programs clip directly on the bounding  box,  you
       still  may loose some pixels of your image, because the bounding box is
       described in the coarse resolution of postscript points, i.e.  72  dpi.
       In  order  to prevent this, you can use the -l option or -C option (for
       the latter, clipping by the importing program should be disabled  then)
       to  allow for a 1 point larger bounding box.  -C clips around a 1 point
       enlarged bounding box and -l enlarges the  bounding  box  values  by  1
       point (you can also combine both options).

   INCLUDED FILTERS
       Some  postscript  sequences,  e.g., for using specific printer features
       (featurebegin ...), are not working well within an .eps file, so ps2eps
       tries  to  filter them out. But please note that filters for postscript
       code may not work properly for your printer driver (ps2eps  was  mainly
       tested  with HP and Adobe printer drivers, although it may work for all
       printers using the PScript.dll). In this case you can try  to  turn  of
       filtering  by  using  option -n, or try to find the bad sequence in the
       postscript code  and  adapt  the  filter  rule  in  the  ps2eps  script
       (variables     $linefilter,    $rangefilter_begin,    $rangefilter_end;
       linefilter is an expression for filtering single lines, rangefilter_...
       are  expressions  that  filter  all  lines  between  a pattern matching
       $rangefilter_begin and $rangefilter_end; drop me an  e-mail  with  your
       modifications).  However,  things  may  change  as  the printer drivers
       (e.g., PScript.dll) or postscript language evolve.

       Some applications or drivers generate postscript code with  leading  or
       trailing   binary   code,   which   often   confuses  older  postscript
       interpreters. ps2eps tries to remove such code, but  it  may  sometimes
       make  a  wrong  guess  about  start and end of the real postscript code
       (drop me an e-mail with a zipped postscript source, see section  BUGS).

       Comment  lines or even blank lines are removed (which is the default to
       make .eps files smaller), which may corrupt your output.  Please  check
       the  next section how to fix this.  ps2eps removes blank lines and also
       <CR> (carriage ceturn ‘‘\r’’) at the  end  of  lines.  However,  nicely
       formatted  postscript  code  gives  a  hint  by using ‘‘%%BeginBinary’’
       ‘‘%%EndBinary’’ comments. When ps2eps detects these  comments  it  will
       refrain from any filtering action within the marked binary sections.

       ps2eps  filters  also  %%Orientation:  comments by default (you can use
       option  -O  to   turn   off   filtering),   because   ghostscript   may
       ‘‘automagically’’  rotate  images  when generating PDF images, which is
       not desired in most cases. Hint: you  can  turn  off  that  feature  in
       ghostscript unconditionally by specifying -dAutoRotatePages=/None.

   CORRUPTED OUTPUT
       Some postscript code may get corrupted when comment lines or even blank
       lines are removed (which is the default to make  .eps  files  smaller),
       because  those  files may contain encoded images which also have a % as
       first character in a line or use a special  comment  as  end  of  image
       delimiter.  If this is the case, use the -c option to prevent filtering
       comments.

   COLOR AND MEMORY
       ps2eps supports colored postscript,  consequently  letting  ghostscript
       consume  more  resources for drawing its bitmap (roughly 6MBytes for an
       A4 page). bbox is reading the bitmap line by line so it  consumes  only
       minimal  memory.  If you experience problems with memory consumption of
       ghostscript, you may use the -m option for using  a  monochrome  image.
       But this will probably result in wrongly determined bounding boxes with
       colored images, because ghostscript has to do black/white dithering and
       may thus suppress objects drawn in light colors.

ENVIRONMENT VARIABLES

       Please note that a command line option always takes precedence over the
       related environment variable.

       The environment variable PS2EPS_SIZE can be used to specify  a  default
       page  size and take any argument that --size accepts.  Examples: export
       PS2EPS_SIZE=a0 (bash-like syntax) or  setenv  PS2EPS_SIZE  letter  (csh
       syntax).

       If  the  environment  variable  PS2EPS_GSBBOX  is set the internal bbox
       device of ghostscript will be used  instead  of  the  external  command
       bbox. Examples: export PS2EPS_GSBBOX=true  (bash-like syntax) or setenv
       PS2EPS_GSBBOX 1 (csh syntax).

EXAMPLES

       The usual call is simply: ps2eps -l file

       A relatively failsafe call would be (if your postscript is smaller than
       iso  b0  [100cm  x  141.4cm]  and  you have a fast computer with enough
       memory): ps2eps -l -B -s b0 -c -n file

       If output is not correct try: ps2eps -l -B -s b0 -F file

AUTHOR

       ps2eps was written by Roland Bless.

   WHY?
       Other programs like ps2epsi do not calculate the  bounding  box  always
       correctly (because the values are put on the postscript stack which may
       get corrupted by bad  postscript  code)  or  rounded  it  off  so  that
       clipping  the  EPS cut off some part of the image. ps2eps uses a double
       precision resolution of 144 dpi  and  appropriate  rounding  to  get  a
       proper  bounding box. The internal bbox device of ghostscript generates
       different values (sometimes even incorrect), so using the provided bbox
       should  be  more  robust.   However, because normal clipping has only a
       resolution of 1/72dpi (postscript  point),  the  clipping  process  may
       still  erase  parts  of  your EPS image. In this case please use the -l
       option to add an additional point  of  white  space  around  the  tight
       bounding box.

   ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
       Some people contributed code or suggestions to improve ps2eps. Here are
       at least some names (sorry if I forgot your  name):  Christophe  Druet,
       Hans  Ecke,  Berend  Hasselman,  Erik  Joergensen,  Koji Nakamaru, Hans
       Fredrik Nordhaug

       An earlier version of this manual page was originally written by Rafael
       Laboissiere  <rafael  at  debian.org>  for the Debian system. Thank you
       Rafael!

       Permission is granted to copy, distribute and/or modify  this  document
       under  the  terms of the GNU Free Documentation License, Version 1.1 or
       any later version published by the Free Software  Foundation;  with  no
       Invariant Sections, no Front-Cover Texts and no Back-Cover Texts.

BUGS

       If  you  experience  problems,  please check carefully all hints in the
       section TROUBLESHOOTING first. Otherwise, check for an updated  version
       at   <URL:http://www.tm.uka.de/~bless/ps2eps> or send a gzipped file of
       relevant postscript source code with your error description and  ps2eps
       version  number  to  <roland  at  bless.de>  (please allow some time to
       reply).

SEE ALSO

       bbox (1), gs (1), ps2epsi (1)

                                24 Januar 2007