[R] pdf device: rasterize portions of the plot to reduce file size
baptiste auguie
ba208 at exeter.ac.uk
Thu Nov 20 17:00:51 CET 2008
Thanks for your comment. I would typically follow this approach too,
but I'm wondering whether one could find a more sophisticated
solution. Ideally, I'd like to be able to select the text that is
annotating the figure. There are very few cases where I can see a real
need for raster text, therefore I like to avoid resorting to it.
Using the versatile grid system, I can envisage two ways to implement
this,
i) generate a bitmap of the graph without any annotation (removing a
custom list of grob), and include the resulting image in a pdf file
containing only the annotations on top. I think grid could manage
perfectly accurate positioning between the image and its annotations.
ii) generate a sub-sampled version of the image part of the graph
before creating the pdf file (I'm thinking of the adimpro package, for
instance). However, I don't think this approach would work for a graph
that contains very many lines or other high-level grobs.
I'm probably missing some important points to consider as I have no
familiarity with the internals of R graphics engine / devices.
baptiste
On 20 Nov 2008, at 11:41, Stefan Evert wrote:
>
>> With N=1000, this approach produces a hefty pdf file of ~29MB, while
>> the png file with default resolution is only 72kB. It is clear that
>> I don't want to include the pdf figure in a manuscript, as most pdf
>> readers (let alone the printer) will painfully stall when scrolling
>> down the document. The png file has a good enough resolution (this
>> could be tuned anyway) as far as the levelplot is concerned, however
>> the text and labels are evidently converted to bitmap. I would like
>> to ask whether there are some alternative ways to combine the "best
>> of both worlds" in R, that is to create a pdf file with part of the
>> output being an embedded bitmap (the levelplot in this case). Xfig,
>> as I recall, has a way to produce two separate files for this kind
>> of purpose: one containing the graphical information stripped of
>> annotations, the other the labels and axes to be processed by TeX.
>
> What I usually do in this situation is to produce very high-resolution
> bitmaps (2000 x 2000 pixels and possibly even more). The .png files
> for these will still be much smaller than your 30MB .pdf, and if you
> don't need best quality, you can probably also convert them to .jpg
> format. Most viewers should be able to display large bitmap images
> fast and in good quality. This seems to be the only way to include
> plots reliably in Microsoft Word documents ...
>
> I'm not sure about the anti-aliasing options of R's png() driver, but
> you could always generate an even higher-resolution bitmap and then
> scale down with standard image processing software (ImageMagick, GIMP,
> xv, ...).
>
> My favourite solution is to generate a .pdf or .eps file, even if this
> is very large, and then convert to a hi-res bitmap image with
> "pstoimg" from the latex2html package. Useful command-line options
> are:
>
> pstoimg -type png -depth 24 -antialias -scale 2 plot.eps
>
> Use the -scale option to generate the desired bitmap size.
>
>
> Best regards,
> Stefan Evert
>
> [ stefan.evert at uos.de | http://purl.org/stefan.evert ]
>
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_____________________________
Baptiste Auguié
School of Physics
University of Exeter
Stocker Road,
Exeter, Devon,
EX4 4QL, UK
Phone: +44 1392 264187
http://newton.ex.ac.uk/research/emag
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