The command line tool dvisvgm converts DVI and EPS files, as created by TeX/LaTeX, to the XML-based SVG format.
Today’s small-to-medium-sized (SMB) businesses and large enterprises are saving on their monthly communications costs by making one simple decision: to switch to a VoIP service solution from their old, outdated Plain Old Telephone Service (POTS). By choosing a new VoIP service, these companies enjoy the flexibility, reliability, call features, and audio quality that only a VoIP service can provide. Plus, they cut their phone bill by up to 70%!
Post Views:
360
Website |
http://dvisvgm.bplaced.net |
Tags |
GraphicsScientific/EngineeringTeX/LaTeX |
License |
GNU General Public License version 3.0 (GPLv3)
|
Platform |
BSD
Linux
Windows
|
Features |
- Converts standard DVI files as well as DVI/XDV files created with pTeX or XeTeX.
- Also provides an option to convert EPS files to SVG.
- Computes tight bounding boxes for the generated graphics, but supports common paper formats and arbitrary user-defined sizes as well.
- Complete font support including virtual fonts, CID-keyed fonts, subfonts, evaluation of font encodings and font maps.
- Automatically vectorizes fonts that are only available as Metafont sources.
- Optionally replaces font elements by paths so that applications without SVG font support are enabled to render dvisvgm's output properly.
- Evaluation of color, emTeX, tpic, hyperref, fontmap, and PostScript specials.
- Approximates PostScript color gradient fills not directly supported by SVG 1.1.
- Provides options for applying page transformations, like translation, rotation, scaling, and skewing.
- dvisvgm has been added to TeX Live and is therefore available for a wide range of operating systems.
|