The default PostScript language output level is 2. Using "1. Should you for some reason need a series of single-page EPS files made up of pages from various input files, try this:. For example, PostScript can't handle transparencies directly it fakes them by converting them into bitmap patterns , and converting such a PostScript file back to PDF will not restore the original transparency feature. The number is the font index in the FCO file, the first name is the Postscript font name, the secong is an Encoding resource name, and the third is a decoding resource name.
CID fonts to be listed in another map file. The format is similar to FAPIfontmap , but dictionaries must contain few different entries :. The last ones defines the configuration for handling resident UFST fonts only.
Follow instructions in it. If UFST needs it and the command line argument is not specified, Ghostscript prints a warning and searches plugin file in the current directory. Some configurations of UFST need a path for finding symbol set files. If UFST needs it and the command line argument is not specified, Ghostscript prints a warning and searches symbol set files in the current directory.
Note that UFST and Free Type cannot handle some Ghostscript fonts because they do not include a PostScript interpreter and therefore have stronger restrictions on font formats than Ghostscript itself does - in particular, Type 3 fonts. Invoking Ghostscript This document describes how to use the command line Ghostscript client.
Here are some basic examples. The details of how these work are described below. Help at the command line: gs -h You can get a brief help message by invoking Ghostscript with the -h or -? The message shows for that version of the Ghostscript executable: the version and release information the general format of the command line a few of the most useful options the formats it can interpret the available output devices the search path the bug report address On other systems the executable may have a different name: System Invocation Name Unix gs VMS gs MS Windows 95 and later gswin You can set the output device and process a file from the interactive prompt as well: epson selectdevice myfile.
You can switch devices at any time by using the selectdevice procedure, for instance like one of these: x11alpha selectdevice epson selectdevice Output resolution Some printers can print at several different resolutions, letting you balance resolution against printing speed. Output to files Ghostscript also allows you to control where it sends its output.
For instance, to convert somefile. Sometimes the initialization files are compiled into Ghostscript and cannot be changed. Interacting with pipes As noted above, input files are normally specified on the command line. This option is also set by the -dFitPage option. If neither of these is specified, the output will use the screen options for any output device that doesn't have an OutputFile parameter, and the printer options for devices that do have this parameter.
This may include any extra bleed area needed to accommodate the physical limitations of cutting, folding, and trimming equipment. The actual printed page may include printing marks that fall outside the bleed box. The trim box defines the intended dimensions of the finished page after trimming.
Some files have a TrimBox that is smaller than the MediaBox and may include white space, registration or cutting marks outside the CropBox. Using this option simulates appearance of the finished printed page.
The art box defines the extent of the page's meaningful content including potential white space as intended by the page's creator. The art box is likely to be the smallest box. It can be useful when one wants to crop the page as much as possible without losing the content.
Unlike the other "page boundary" boxes, CropBox does not have a defined meaning, it simply provides a rectangle to which the page contents will be clipped cropped. By convention, it is often, but not exclusively, used to aid the positioning of content on the usually larger, in these cases media. For files created with encryption method 4 or earlier, the password is an arbitrary string of bytes; with encryption method 5 or later, it should be text in either UTF-8 or your locale's character set Ghostscript tries both.
Annotations are shown by default. By default, AcroForm processing is now enabled because Adobe Acrobat does this. This option is provided to restore the previous behavior which corresponded to older Acrobat. This may be useful for backward compatibility with old versions of Ghostscript and Adobe Acrobat, or for processing files with large values of UserUnit that otherwise exceed implementation limits.
On TrueType fonts, this is often a hollow sqaure. Ghostscript now attempts to mimic this undocumented feature using a user parameter RenderTTNotdef. Pages of all documents in PDF collections are numbered sequentionally. A list can include single pages or ranges of pages.
Ranges of pages use the minus sign '-', individual pages and ranges of pages are separated by commas ','. A trailing minus '-' means process all remaining pages. Note: The differences in appearance of files with overprinting and spot colors caused by the differences in the color model of the output device are part of the PostScript and PDF specifications.
They are not due to a limitation in the implementation of Ghostscript or its output devices. In Adobe Acrobat, viewing of the effects of overprinting is enabled by the 'Overprint Preview' item in the 'Advanced' menu.
This feature is not available in the free Acrobat Reader. The free Acrobat Reader also uses the tint transform functions to convert spot colors to the appropriate alternate color space. Testing a file name for an absolute path System Does the name VMS Contain a node, device, or root specification? Finding PostScript Level 2 resources Adobe specifies that resources are installed in a single directory. It concatenates : The value of the system parameter GenericResourceDir ; The name of the resource category for instance, CMap ; The name of the resource instance for instance, Identity-H.
In this case it concatenates : A directory listed in the section How Ghostscript finds files , except the current directory; The value of the system parameter GenericResourceDir ; The name of the resource category for instance, CMap ; The name of the resource instance for instance, Identity-H Due to possible variety of the part 1, the first successful combination is used. Font lookup Ghostscript has a slightly different way to find the file containing a font with a given name.
First, it looks up the font name in the combined Fontmaps. If this process fails at any step, Ghostscript looks for a file whose name is the concatenation of the value of the FontResourceDir system parameter and the font name, with no extension.
If such a file exists, can be loaded, and defines a font of the desired name, that again is the end. If that fails, Ghostscript then looks for a file on the general search path whose name is the desired font name, with no extension.
It goes to the first directory on the list, and it's descendants, looking for all files that appear to contain PostScript fonts also Truetype fonts ; it then adds all those files and fonts to the combined Fontmaps, and starts over.
Finally, if all else fails, it will try to find a substitute for the font from among the standard 35 fonts. Font-name-to-file-name mapping given in Fontmap files; aliases are possible, and there need not be any relation between the font name in the Fontmap and the FontName in the file.
Font-name-to-file-name mapping is implicit — the FontName in the file is used. Aliases are not possible. Only fonts and files named in Fontmap are used. Every Type 1 font file in each directory is available; if TrueType fonts are supported the ttfont. This must be an absolute path. This is ignored if Path doesn't specify a collection. The first font in a collection is 0.
Default value is 0. Notes on specific platforms Word size 32 or 64 bits The original PostScript language specification, while not stating a specific word sise, defines 'typical' limits which make it clear that it was intended to run as a bit environment. However this is, obviously, dependent on the operating system and compiler support available.
Not all builds of Ghostscript will support bit integers, though some bit builds eg Windows will. Unix The Ghostscript distribution includes some Unix shell scripts to use with Ghostscript in different environments. Although VMS DCL itself converts unquoted parameters to upper case, C programs such as Ghostscript receive their parameters through the C runtime library, which forces all unquoted command-line parameters to lower case. Note: This definitely matters if Ghostscript was compiled with DEC C; we are not sure of the situation if you use gcc.
Xdefaults Ghostscript doesn't look at the default system background and foreground colors; if you want to change the background or foreground color, you must set them explicitly for Ghostscript.
This is a deliberate choice, so that PostScript documents will display correctly by default -- with white as white and black as black -- even if text windows use other colors. The geometry resource affects only window placement. The font tolerance gives the largest acceptable difference in height of the screen font, expressed as a percentage of the height of the desired font.
The palette resource can be used to restrict Ghostscript to using a grayscale or monochrome palette. Ghostscript never preallocates more than half the cells in a colormap. Working around bugs in X servers The " use Some servers do not implement backing pixmaps properly, or do not have enough memory for them. If you get strange behavior or "out of memory" messages, try setting useBackingPixmap to false. Some servers do not implement tiling properly. This appears as broad bands of color where dither patterns should appear.
If this happens, try setting useXSetTile to false. Some servers do not implement bitmap or pixmap displaying properly. This may appear as white or black rectangles where characters should appear; or characters may appear in "inverse video" for instance, white on a black rectangle rather than black on white. If this happens, try setting useXPutImage to false. X device parameters In addition to the device parameters recognized by all devices , Ghostscript's X driver provides parameters to adjust its performance.
Using a client-side pixmap usually provides better performance -- for bitmap images, possibly much better performance -- but since it may require quite a lot of RAM e. For details, please consult the source file gdevx. Command line options Unless otherwise noted, these switches can be used on all platforms.
General switches Input control filename Causes Ghostscript to read filename and treat its contents the same as the command line. This was intended primarily for getting around DOS's character limit on the length of a command line.
Switches or file names in the file may be separated by any amount of white space space, tab, line break ; there is no limit on the size of the file. Takes the next argument as a file name as usual, but takes all remaining arguments even if they have the syntactic form of switches and defines the name ARGUMENTS in userdict not systemdict as an array of those strings, before running the file. When Ghostscript finishes executing the file, it exits back to the shell.
On some systems, Ghostscript may read the input one character at a time, which is useful for programs such as ghostview that generate input for Ghostscript dynamically and watch for some response, but can slow processing.
However, ' - ' is equivalent on most systems. Interprets arguments as PostScript code up to the next argument that begins with " - " followed by a non-digit, or with " ".
For example, if the file quit. Each argument must be valid PostScript, either individual tokens as defined by the token operator, or a string containing valid PostScript.
Since this is the default behavior, -f is useful only for terminating the list of tokens for the -c switch. File searching Note that by "library files" here we mean all the files identified using the search rule under " How Ghostscript finds files " above: Ghostscript's own initialization files, fonts, and files named on the command line.
This is now the default. The value must be a valid PostScript token as defined by the token operator. If the token is a non-literal name, it must be true, false, or null. It is recommeded that this is used only for simple values -- use -c above for complex values such as procedures, arrays or dictionaries. Note that these values are defined before other names in systemdict, so any name that that conflicts with one usually in systemdict will be replaced by the normal definition during the interpreter initialization.
This is different from -d. The string takes a parameter definition in something very close to postscript format. This allows more complex structures to be passed in than is possible with -d or -s. Parameter switches -d and -s As noted above, -d and -s define initial values for PostScript names. Their use is highly recommended for producing high quality rasterizations. The subsampling box size n should be 4 for optimum output, but smaller values can be used for faster rendering.
Antialiasing is enabled separately for text and graphics content. Allowed values are 1, 2 or 4. Subpixels are a smaller raster grid which is used internally for text antialiasing. It controls grid fitting of True Type fonts Sometimes referred to as "hinting", but strictly speaking the latter is a feature of Type 1 fonts.
Setting this to 2 enables automatic grid fitting for True Type glyphs. The value 0 disables grid fitting. The default value is 2. For more information see the description of the user parameter GridFitTT. If accurate colors are desired, it is recommended that an ICC workflow be used. Useful only on very slow systems where color accuracy is less important. This switch is primarily useful for PDF creation using the pdfwrite device when retaining the color spaces from the original document is important.
ICC profiles are sometimes embedded by applications to convey the exact input color space allowing better color fidelity. Normally, these operators are not accessible from Postscript jobs, being primarily intended to be called by the PDF interpreter. It is important that these operators are used correctly, especially the order in which they are called, otherwise unintended, even undefined behavior may result. These psuedo operators are not a part of the official Postscript specification.
These psuedo operators are required for some files from QuarkXPress. However some files from Corel 9 and Illustrator 88 do not operate properly if these operators are present. DoPS has in fact been deprecated for some time. Also the "PS" operator that was removed from the 1. Use of this option is NOT recommended in security-conscious applications, as it increases the scope for malicious code.
Note: in releases 7. This occurs for text fill and text stroke operations. PDF output created with this setting will be updated to be drawn with gray values of 0. Type 3 fonts, which are sometimes used for graphics, are not affected by this parameter. This may be useful when printing documents on a printer that can handle their requested paper size but whose default is some other size.
The pages are scaled and arranged on the current PageSize "master" page according the the option. Default value is. It's meaning is similar to GenericResourceDir. Interaction-related parameters -dBATCH Causes Ghostscript to exit after processing all files named on the command line, rather than going into an interactive loop reading PostScript commands. Equivalent to putting -c quit at the end of the command line. This may be useful on PC displays that get confused if a program attempts to write text to the console while the display is in a graphics mode.
Normally one should use this along with -dBATCH when producing output on a printer or to a file; it also may be desirable for applications where another program is "driving" Ghostscript.
This allows piping input directly into Ghostscript, as long as the data doesn't refer to currentfile. This is currently necessary when redirecting device output to standard output. This may be useful if input is coming from a pipe. This is usually useful only when running PostScript code whose purpose is to compute something rather than to produce an output image.
This switch instructs all devices to ignore a request to print multiple copies, giving more consistent behaviour. Refer to the SavedPages document for details. This is useful when converting an EPS file to a bitmap.
You then start a new PostScirpt program which begins by requesting a specific media size, then uses the scale and translate operators to move to the correct position on the media, and then executes the first EPS file either by inclusion of the content, or by using the run operator.
Assuming you have used the eps2write device in Ghostscript, the resulting file will be a new EPS file which embodies the content of the individual EPS files, scaled and placed as you wish. How are we doing? Please help us improve Stack Overflow. Take our short survey.
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