postscript package:grDevices R Documentation _P_o_s_t_S_c_r_i_p_t _G_r_a_p_h_i_c_s _D_e_s_c_r_i_p_t_i_o_n: 'postscript' starts the graphics device driver for producing PostScript graphics. _U_s_a_g_e: postscript(file = ifelse(onefile, "Rplots.ps", "Rplot%03d.ps"), onefile, family, title, fonts, encoding, bg, fg, width, height, horizontal, pointsize, paper, pagecentre, print.it, command, colormodel, useKerning) _A_r_g_u_m_e_n_t_s: file: a character string giving the name of the file. If it is '""', the output is piped to the command given by the argument 'command'. If it is of the form '"|cmd"', the output is piped to the command given by 'cmd'. For use with 'onefile = FALSE' give a 'printf' format such as '"Rplot%03d.ps"' (the default in that case). The string should not otherwise contain a '%': if it is really necessary, use '%%' in the string for '%' in the file name. A single integer format matching the regular expression '"%[#0 +=-]*[0-9.]*[diouxX]"' is allowed. onefile: logical: if true (the default) allow multiple figures in one file. If false, generate a file name containing the page number for each page and use an EPSF header and no 'DocumentMedia' comment. Defaults to the 'TRUE'. family: the initial font family to be used, normally as a character string. See the section 'Families'. Defaults to '"Helvetica"'. title: title string to embed as the 'Title' comment in the file. Defaults to '"R Graphics Output"'. fonts: a character vector specifying additional R graphics font family names for font families whose declarations will be included in the PostScript file and are available for use with the device. See 'Families' below. Defaults to 'NULL'. encoding: the name of an encoding file. Defaults to '"default"'. The latter is interpreted as '"ISOLatin1.enc"' unless the locale is recognized as corresponding to a language using ISO 8859-{5,7,13,15} or KOI8-{R,U}. The file is looked for in the 'enc' directory of package 'grDevices' if the path does not contain a path separator. An extension '".enc"' can be omitted. bg: the initial background color to be used. If '"transparent"' (or any other non-opaque colour), no background is painted. Defaults to '"transparent"'. fg: the initial foreground color to be used. Defaults to '"black"'. width, height: the width and height of the graphics region in inches. Default to t'0'. If 'paper != "special"' and 'width' or 'height' is less than '0.1' or too large to give a total margin of 0.5 inch, it is reset to the corresponding paper dimension minus 0.5. horizontal: the orientation of the printed image, a logical. Defaults to true, that is landscape orientation on paper sizes with width less than height. pointsize: the default point size to be used. Strictly speaking, in bp, that is 1/72 of an inch, but approximately in points. Defaults to '12'. paper: the size of paper in the printer. The choices are '"a4"', '"letter"' (or '"us"'), '"legal"' and '"executive"' (and these can be capitalized). Also, '"special"' can be used, when arguments 'width' and 'height' specify the paper size. A further choice is '"default"' (the default): If this is selected, the papersize is taken from the option '"papersize"' if that is set and to '"a4"' if it is unset or empty. pagecentre: logical: should the device region be centred on the page? Defaults to true. print.it: logical: should the file be printed when the device is closed? (This only applies if 'file' is a real file name.) Defaults to false. command: the command to be used for 'printing'. Defaults to '"default"', the value of option '"printcmd"'. The length limit is '2*PATH_MAX', typically 8096 bytes. colormodel: a character string describing the color model: currently allowed values as '"rgb"', '"rgb-nogray"', '"gray"' and '"cmyk"'. Defaults to '"rgb"'. useKerning: logical. Should kerning corrections be included in setting text and calculating string widths? Defaults to 'TRUE'. _D_e_t_a_i_l_s: All arguments except 'file' default to values given by 'ps.options()'. The ultimate defaults are quoted in the arguments section. 'postscript' opens the file 'file' and the PostScript commands needed to plot any graphics requested are written to that file. This file can then be printed on a suitable device to obtain hard copy. The 'file' argument is interpreted as a C integer format as used by 'sprintf', with integer argument the page number. The default gives files 'Rplot001.ps', ..., 'Rplot999.ps', 'Rplot1000.ps', .... The postscript produced for a single R plot is EPS (_Encapsulated PostScript_) compatible, and can be included into other documents, e.g., into LaTeX, using '\includegraphics{}'. For use in this way you will probably want to use 'setEPS()' to set the defaults as 'horizontal = FALSE, onefile = FALSE, paper = "special"'. Note that the bounding box is for the _device_ region: if you find the white space around the plot region excessive, reduce the margins of the figure region via 'par(mar=)'. Most of the PostScript prologue used is taken from the R character vector '.ps.prolog'. This is marked in the output, and can be changed by changing that vector. (This is only advisable for PostScript experts: the standard version is in 'namespace:grDevices'.) A PostScript device has a default family, which can be set by the user via 'family'. If other font families are to be used when drawing to the PostScript device, these must be declared when the device is created via 'fonts'; the font family names for this argument are R graphics font family names (see the documentation for 'postscriptFonts'). Line widths as controlled by 'par(lwd=)' are in multiples of 1/96 inch: multiples less than 1 are allowed. 'pch="."' with 'cex = 1' corresponds to a square of side 1/72 inch, which is also the 'pixel' size assumed for graphics parameters such as '"cra"'. When the background colour is fully transparent (as is the initial default value), the PostScript produced does not paint the background. Almost all PostScript viewers will use a white canvas so the visual effect is if the background were white. This will not be the case when printing onto coloured paper, though. _F_a_m_i_l_i_e_s: Font families are collections of fonts covering the five font faces, (conventionally plain, bold, italic, bold-italic and symbol) selected by the graphics parameter 'par(font=)' or the grid parameter 'gpar(fontface=)'. Font families can be specified either as an an initial/default font family for the device via the 'family' argument or after the device is opened by the graphics parameter 'par(family=)' or the grid parameter 'gpar(fontfamily=)'. Families which will be used in addition to the initial family must be specified in the 'fonts' argument when the device is opened. Font families are declared via a call to 'postscriptFonts'. The argument 'family' specifies the initial/default font family to be used. In normal use it is one of '"AvantGarde"', '"Bookman"', '"Courier"', '"Helvetica"', '"Helvetica-Narrow"', '"NewCenturySchoolbook"', '"Palatino"' or '"Times"', and refers to the standard Adobe PostScript fonts families of those names which are included (or cloned) in all common PostScript devices. Many PostScript emulators (including those based on 'ghostscript') use the URW equivalents of these fonts, which are '"URWGothic"', '"URWBookman"', '"NimbusMon"', '"NimbusSan"', '"NimbusSanCond"', '"CenturySch"', '"URWPalladio"' and '"NimbusRom"' respectively. If your PostScript device is using URW fonts, you will obtain access to more characters and more appropriate metrics by using these names. To make these easier to remember, '"URWHelvetica" == "NimbusSan"' and '"URWTimes" == "NimbusRom"' are also supported. Another type of family makes use of CID-keyed fonts for East Asian languages - see 'postscriptFonts'. The 'family' argument is normally a character string naming a font family, but family objects generated by 'Type1Font' and 'CIDFont' are also accepted. For compatibility with earlier versions of R, the initial family can also be specified as a vector of four or five afm files. Note that R does not embed the font(s) used in the PostScript output: see 'embedFonts' for a utility to help do so. Viewers and embedding applications frequently substitute fonts for those specified in the family, and the substitute will often have slightly different font metrics. 'useKerning=TRUE' spaces the letters in the string using kerning corrections for the intended family: this may look uglier than 'useKerning=FALSE'. _E_n_c_o_d_i_n_g_s: Encodings describe which glyphs are used to display the character codes (in the range 0-255). Most commonly R uses ISOLatin1 encoding, and the examples for 'text' are in that encoding. However, the encoding used on machines running R may well be different, and by using the 'encoding' argument the glyphs can be matched to encoding in use. This suffices for European and Cyrillic languages, but not for CJK languages. For the latter, composite CID fonts are used. These fonts are useful for other languages: for example they may contain Greek glyphs. (The rest of this section applies only when CID fonts are not used.) None of this will matter if only ASCII characters (codes 32-126) are used as all the encodings (except '"TeXtext"') agree over that range. Some encodings are supersets of ISOLatin1, too. However, if accented and special characters do not come out as you expect, you may need to change the encoding. Some other encodings are supplied with R: '"WinAnsi.enc"' and '"MacRoman.enc"' correspond to the encodings normally used on Windows and Classic Mac OS (at least by Adobe), and '"PDFDoc.enc"' is the first 256 characters of the Unicode encoding, the standard for PDF. There are also encodings '"ISOLatin2.enc"', '"CP1250.enc"', '"ISOLatin7.enc"' (ISO 8859-13), '"CP1257.enc"', and '"ISOLatin9.enc"' (ISO 8859-15), '"Cyrillic.enc"' (ISO 8859-5), '"KOI8-R.enc"', '"KOI8-U.enc"', '"CP1251.enc"', '"Greek.enc"' (ISO 8859-7) and '"CP1253.enc"'. Note that many glyphs in these encodings are not in the fonts corresponding to the standard families. (The Adobe ones for all but Courier, Helvetica and Times cover little more than Latin-1, whereas the URW ones also cover Latin-2, Latin-7, Latin-9 and Cyrillic but no Greek. The Adobe exceptions cover the Latin character sets, but not the Euro.) If you specify the encoding, it is your responsibility to ensure that the PostScript font contains the glyphs used. One issue here is the Euro symbol which is in the WinAnsi and MacRoman encodings but may well not be in the PostScript fonts. (It is in the URW variants; it is not in the supplied Adobe Font Metric files.) There is an exception. Character 45 ('"-"') is always set as minus (its value in Adobe ISOLatin1) even though it is hyphen in the other encodings. Hyphen is available as character 173 (octal 0255) in all the Latin encodings, Cyrillic and Greek. (This can be entered as '"\uad"' in a UTF-8 locale.) There are some discrepancies in accounts of glyphs 39 and 96: the supplied encodings (except CP1250 and CP1251) treat these as 'quoteright' and 'quoteleft' (rather than 'quotesingle'/'acute' and 'grave' respectively), as they are in the Adobe documentation. _T_e_X _f_o_n_t_s: TeX has traditionally made use of fonts such as Computer Modern which are encoded rather differently, in a 7-bit encoding. This encoding can be specified by 'encoding = "TeXtext.enc"', taking care that the ASCII characters '< > \ _ { }' are not available in those fonts. There are supplied families '"ComputerModern"' and '"ComputerModernItalic"' which use this encoding, and which are only supported for 'postscript' (and not 'pdf'). They are intended to use with the Type 1 versions of the TeX CM fonts. It will normally be possible to include such output in TeX or LaTeX provided it is processed with 'dvips -Ppfb -j0' or the equivalent on your system. ('-j0' turns off font subsetting.) When 'family = "ComputerModern"' is used, the italic/bold-italic fonts used are slanted fonts ('cmsl10' and 'cmbxsl10'). To use text italic fonts instead, set 'family = "ComputerModernItalic"'. These families use the TeX math italic and symbol fonts for a comprehensive but incomplete coverage of the glyphs covered by the Adobe symbol font in other families. This is achieved by special-casing the postscript code generated from the supplied 'CM_symbol_10.afm'. _C_o_l_o_r _m_o_d_e_l_s: The default color model is RGB, with pure gray colors expressed as greyscales. Color model '"rgb-nogray"' uses only RGB, model '"cmyk"' only CMYK, and model '"gray"' only greyscales (and selecting any other colour is an error). Nothing in R specifies the interpretation of the RGB or CMYK color spaces, and the simplest possible conversion to CMYK is used (). _P_r_i_n_t_i_n_g: A postscript plot can be printed via 'postscript' in two ways. 1. Setting 'print.it = TRUE' causes the command given in argument 'command' to be called with argument '"file"' when the device is closed. Note that the plot file is not deleted unless 'command' arranges to delete it. 2. 'file=""' or 'file="|cmd"' can be used to print using a pipe on systems that support 'popen'. Failure to open the command will probably be reported to the terminal but not to 'popen', in which case close the device by 'dev.off' immediately. _C_o_n_v_e_n_t_i_o_n_s: This section describes the implementation of the conventions for graphics devices set out in the "R Internals Manual". * The default device size is 7 inches square. * Font sizes are in big points. * The default font family is Helvetica. * Line widths are as a multiple of 1/96 inch, with no minimum. * Circle of any radius are allowed. * Colours are interpreted by the viewing/printing application. _N_o_t_e: If you see problems with postscript output, do remember that the problem is much more likely to be in your viewer than in R. Try another viewer if possible. Symptoms for which the viewer has been at fault are apparent grids on image plots (turn off graphics anti-aliasing in your viewer if you can) and missing or incorrect glyphs in text (viewers silently doing font substitution). Unfortunately the default viewers on most Linux and Mac OS X systems have these problems, and no obvious way to turn off graphics anti-aliasing. _A_u_t_h_o_r(_s): Support for Computer Modern fonts is based on a contribution by Brian D'Urso durso@hussle.harvard.edu. _R_e_f_e_r_e_n_c_e_s: Becker, R. A., Chambers, J. M. and Wilks, A. R. (1988) _The New S Language_. Wadsworth & Brooks/Cole. _S_e_e _A_l_s_o: 'postscriptFonts', 'Devices', and 'check.options' which is called from both 'ps.options' and 'postscript'. 'cairo_ps' for another device that can produce PostScript. More details of font families and encodings and especially handling text in a non-Latin-1 encoding and embedding fonts can be found in Paul Murrell and Brian Ripley (2006) Non-standard fonts in PostScript and PDF graphics. _R News_, 6(2):41-47. . _E_x_a_m_p_l_e_s: require(graphics) ## Not run: # open the file "foo.ps" for graphics output postscript("foo.ps") # produce the desired graph(s) dev.off() # turn off the postscript device postscript("|lp -dlw") # produce the desired graph(s) dev.off() # plot will appear on printer # for URW PostScript devices postscript("foo.ps", family = "NimbusSan") ## for inclusion in Computer Modern TeX documents, perhaps postscript("cm_test.eps", width = 4.0, height = 3.0, horizontal = FALSE, onefile = FALSE, paper = "special", family = "ComputerModern", encoding = "TeXtext.enc") ## The resultant postscript file can be used by dvips -Ppfb -j0. ## To test out encodings, you can use TestChars <- function(encoding="ISOLatin1", family="URWHelvetica") { postscript(encoding=encoding, family=family) par(pty="s") plot(c(-1,16), c(-1,16), type="n", xlab="", ylab="", xaxs="i", yaxs="i") title(paste("Centred chars in encoding", encoding)) grid(17, 17, lty=1) for(i in c(32:255)) { x <- i %% 16 y <- i %/% 16 points(x, y, pch=i) } dev.off() } ## there will be many warnings. We use URW to get a complete enough ## set of font metrics. TestChars() TestChars("ISOLatin2") TestChars("WinAnsi") ## End(Not run)