Since you use pdflatex, have you tried opening EPS file in a vector editor (e.g., Inkscape, Adobe Illustrator etc.) and saving it as a PDF file, then including PDF instead of EPS?
Vector graphic shouldn't get rasterized. You can check this by zooming in: in case of vectors, the edges in figure ...
Search found 3 matches
- Sat Jul 23, 2011 6:14 pm
- Forum: Graphics, Figures & Tables
- Topic: Anti-Aliasing of EPS Figures
- Replies: 7
- Views: 9161
- Fri Jul 22, 2011 6:46 pm
- Forum: Graphics, Figures & Tables
- Topic: Anti-Aliasing of EPS Figures
- Replies: 7
- Views: 9161
Anti-Aliasing of EPS Figures
What exactly is your workflow for including EPS in a LaTeX PDF? Are you using pdflatex and converting with epstopdf or what?
It should remain as a vector image unless you're using a nonstandard workflow.
Antialiasing is really the job of the display software, but I don't know how Adobe Acrobat ...
It should remain as a vector image unless you're using a nonstandard workflow.
Antialiasing is really the job of the display software, but I don't know how Adobe Acrobat ...
- Thu Jul 21, 2011 5:04 pm
- Forum: Graphics, Figures & Tables
- Topic: Anti-Aliasing of EPS Figures
- Replies: 7
- Views: 9161
Anti-Aliasing of EPS Figures
I don't really have an example, I tried looking for the answers but couldn't easily.
Essentially, my goal is to make my EPS figures look better than what they do when I open it in the Latex compiled PDF. Gimp shows my EPS figures looking way better because I set anti-alias on; I want to enable ...
Essentially, my goal is to make my EPS figures look better than what they do when I open it in the Latex compiled PDF. Gimp shows my EPS figures looking way better because I set anti-alias on; I want to enable ...