[texhax] Achieving the optimum quality of rendering

William Adams will.adams at frycomm.com
Mon Mar 3 23:11:17 CET 2014


Using Adobe Acrobat to Distill from .ps to .pdf will afford more
options and control and be more in-line w/ what commercial printers
want / expect, but there's no reason not to just make good quality
.pdf files for inclusion into your pages, and then to use pdflatex and
go straight to .pdf.



On 3/3/14, Dr A K Hannaby <keith_hannaby at mathshelp.com> wrote:
> Tug
>
> I am writing a book on mathematics using the TechnicCenter with MiKTeX 2.9
> AMSBOOK and running under Windows 7.
>
>
>
> As I write, I build (compile) the current .tex file as dvi - because it
> renders reasonably and is quite quick.
>
> I have named all my figures without specifying the file extension;  both
> eps
> and pdf versions of each figure exist in the appropriate folder.
>
>
>
> In the final version, I would like the best possible quality of rendering
> and I believe that to be a pdf file.
>
> My two questions are, first.
>
> which of the options:
>
> (i)                      Latex => DVI (not this one)
>
> (ii)                    Latex => DVI => PDF
>
> (iii)                  Latex => PDF
>
> (iv)                  Latex => PS => PDF
>
> should I use, and second.
>
> is the final quality dependent on the software already present on my PC?
>
> To put it another way.  would I benefit, for example, by having the latest
> version of Adobe Acrobat or whatever on my PC in the final instance?
>
> Regards
>
> Keith
>
>
>
>
>
>



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