Penguin

PS2EPSI

PS2EPSI

NAME SYNOPSIS DESCRIPTION USAGE LIMITATIONS COMPATIBILITY FILES SEE ALSO VERSION AUTHOR


NAME

ps2epsi - generate conforming Encapsulated !PostScript

SYNOPSIS

ps2epsi infile.ps [ ''outfile.epsi''? (Unix) ps2epsi infile.ps [ ''outfile.epi''? (DOS)

DESCRIPTION

ps2epsi uses gs(1) to process a !PostScript(tm) file and generate as output a new file which conforms to Adobe's Encapsulated !PostScript Interchange (EPSI) format. EPSI is a special form of encapsulated !PostScript (EPS) which adds to the beginning of the file in the form of !PostScript comments a bitmapped version of the final displayed page. Programs which understand EPSI (usually word processors or DTP programs) can use this bitmap to give a preview version on screen of the !PostScript. The displayed quality is often not very good (e.g., low resolution, no colours), but the final printed version uses the real !PostScript, and thus has the normal

PostScript quality.

USAGE

On Unix systems invoke ps2epsi like this:

ps2epsi infile.ps [ ''outfile.epsi''?

where

ps2epsi infile.ps outfile.epi

where

LIMITATIONS

Not every !PostScript file can be encapsulated successfully, because there are restrictions on what !PostScript constructs a correct encapsulated file may contain. ps2epsi does a little extra work to try to help encapsulation, and it automatically calculates the bounding box required for all encapsulated !PostScript files, so most of the time it does a pretty good job. There are certain to be cases, however, where the encapsulation does not work because of the content of the original !PostScript file.

COMPATIBILITY

The Framemaker DTP system is one application which understands EPSI files, and ps2epsi has been tested on a number of !PostScript diagrams from a variety of sources, using Framemaker 3.0 on a Sun workstation. Framemaker on other platforms should be able to use these files, although I have not been able to test this.

FILES

SEE ALSO

gs (1)

VERSION

This document was last revised for Ghostscript version 6.53. However, the content may be obsolete, or inconsistent with ps2epsi.txt.

AUTHOR

George Cameron


This page is a man page (or other imported legacy content). We are unable to automatically determine the license status of this page.