[R] Re: Copying a device (former: Legend text -- discrepancy ...)
Prof Brian Ripley
ripley at stats.ox.ac.uk
Mon Jan 19 08:39:58 CET 2004
On Sun, 18 Jan 2004, Itay Furman wrote:
>
> On Thu, 15 Jan 2004, Prof Brian Ripley wrote:
>
> > The short answer is not to copy the device, but to replot on the new
> > device. That is the advice given in MASS, for example.
> >
>
> But these device-copy functions could have been quite handy --
> especially after a long sequence of plotting commands that are
> done interactively.
Yes, and that is part of the statement I pointed you to.
> > When you copy a device, you replay the device list and hence the lines and
> > text are placed at the positions calculated using the font metrics of the
> > first device and not the second. dev.copy2eps does not try to adjust the
> > pointsize of the postscript device, and provided the fonts match you
> > should just be able to adjust the pointsize in this case.
> >
>
> OK, so I tried various things and the best I could come up with
> is replacing [My X11() width and height defaults are 7]
> dev.copy2eps(file="test.eps", paper="letter")
> with
> dev.copy2eps(file="test.eps", paper="letter",
> width=8, height=8)
So you ignored the advice I gave about `pointsize'!
> Let's see if I understood what I did above:
> the physical size of the X11 and PS fonts is different.
> Therefore, instead of changing the fontsize we re-scale the plot.
> (This is what is implied by the various printouts I have made.)
> If so, is there a way to reduce the font size, instead of
> increasing the plot size?
Yes, and I have already given you a reference to it and told you in the
email.
> (To avoid the plot extending beyond the physical page, for
> example.)
>
> If the only way is to change the EPS device dimensions how could
> I do it in a more robust way?
> Is, e.g., 'width=some.factor*par("din")[1]' a sensible way?
> Is there a better way?
> Could I pre-determine some.factor?
>
>
> > You do need to be suspicious of on-screen viewers and indeed of
> > ghostscript, for they are often not pixel-perfect and ghostscript does
> > font substitution (it does not have Helvetica). I would always test by
> > printing on a postscript printer.
> >
>
> Screen and print rendering were the same.
--
Brian D. Ripley, ripley at stats.ox.ac.uk
Professor of Applied Statistics, http://www.stats.ox.ac.uk/~ripley/
University of Oxford, Tel: +44 1865 272861 (self)
1 South Parks Road, +44 1865 272866 (PA)
Oxford OX1 3TG, UK Fax: +44 1865 272595
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