postscript
starts the graphics device driver for producing
PostScript graphics.
postscript(file = if(onefile) "Rplots.ps" else "Rplot%03d.ps", onefile, family, title, fonts, encoding, bg, fg, width, height, horizontal, pointsize, paper, pagecentre, print.it, command, colormodel, useKerning, fillOddEven)
""
, 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.
Tilde expansion (see path.expand
) is done.
DocumentMedia
comment. Defaults to TRUE
."Helvetica"
.Title
comment in the
file. Defaults to "R Graphics Output"
.NULL
."default"
. The latter is interpreted as
unix
"ISOLatin1.enc" unless the locale is recognized as
corresponding to a language using ISO 8859-{2,5,7,13,15} or KOI8-{R,U}.
windows
"CP1250.enc" (Central European), "CP1251.enc"
(Cyrillic),
"CP1253.enc"
(Greek) or "CP1257.enc"
(Baltic) if one
of those codepages is in use, otherwise "WinAnsi.enc"
(codepage 1252).
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.
"transparent"
(or any other non-opaque colour), no background
is painted. Defaults to "transparent"
."black"
.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, the
graphics region is reset to the corresponding paper dimension minus 0.5.
12
."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.file
is a real file name.)
Defaults to false."default"
, the value of option "printcmd"
. The
length limit is 2*PATH_MAX
,
unix
typically 8096 bytes.
windows
520 bytes.
"srgb"
, "srgb+gray"
,
"rgb"
, "rgb-nogray"
, "gray"
(or "grey")
and
"cmyk"
. Defaults to "srgb"
. See section
Color models.TRUE
.polygon
for details. Default FALSE
.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
.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 East Asian 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.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."srgb"
) is sRGB. The alternative "srgb+gray"
uses sRGB for colors, but with pure
gray colors (including black and white) expressed as greyscales (which
results in smaller files and can be advantageous with some printer
drivers). Conversely, its files can be rendered much slower on some
viewers, and there can be a noticeable discontinuity in color
gradients involving gray or white. Other possibilities are "gray"
(or "grey"
) which used
only greyscales (and converts other colours to a luminance), and
"cmyk"
. The simplest possible conversion from sRGB to CMYK is
used
(https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/CMYK_color_model#Mapping_RGB_to_CMYK),
and raster images are output in RGB. Color models provided for backwards compatibility are "rgb"
)
(which is RGB+gray) and "rgb-nogray"
which use uncalibrated RGB
(as used in R prior to 2.13.0). These result in slightly smaller
files which may render faster, but do rely on the viewer being
properly calibrated.postscript
in two ways.
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. file = ""
or file = "|cmd"
can be used to print
using a pipe. Failure to open the command will probably be reported
to the terminal but not to R, in which case close the
device by dev.off
immediately.
"printcmd"
is empty and will give an error if
print.it = TRUE
is used. Suitable commands to spool a PostScript
file to a printer can be found in RedMon suite available from
http://www.cs.wisc.edu/~ghost/index.html. The command will be
run in a minimized window. GSView 4.x provides gsprint.exe
which may be more convenient (it requires Ghostscript version 6.50
or later).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.
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. https://www.r-project.org/doc/Rnews/Rnews_2006-2.pdf.
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
# unix
# postscript("|lp -dlw")
# # produce the desired graph(s)
# dev.off() # plot will appear on printer
# windows
# options(printcmd = 'redpr -P"\\printhost\lw"')
# postscript(file = tempfile("Rps."), print.it = TRUE)
# # produce the desired graph(s)
# dev.off() # send plot file to the printer
# ## alternative using GSView 4.x
# options(printcmd = '/GhostGum/gsview/gsprint -query')
#
# # 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)
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