


> the graphics and put them in an Adobe Illustrator file. > I am trying to Import some 2D vector graphics from a PDF. > I usually get this error when I try to export a graphic and it is not > opened and then saved in Illustrator, Mathematica can no longer open > Yes, Mathematica can import its own EPS files. The question becomes - whose problem is it, Adobe or Wolfram? There is probaby a line missing that the Mathematica implementation of EPS To really getĪt it, you would need to see what the difference between headers isīetween the two files "after" you have saved a copy with Illustrator. I hope that this is sufficient for you to get at the data. Preview, postscript level 2 and import into Mathematica with Save the document with Illustrator with a TIFF black and white Mathematica after I've touched up the graphic with Illustrator. And come to think of it, I usually never go back to Generated file with Mathematica and at first glance it seems there isĪ problem.

Subject: Re: Re: Re: Re: export import eps | illustrator | pstoedit.

Re: Re: Re: Re: export import eps | illustrator | pstoedit Services & Resources Wolfram Forums MathGroup Archive Finance, Statistics & Business Analysis.Wolfram Knowledgebase Curated computable knowledge powering Wolfram|Alpha. Wolfram Universal Deployment System Instant deployment across cloud, desktop, mobile, and more. ResourceFunction 'SVGImport' ByteArray imports the given byte array as contents of an SVG file. However, not all plotting functions are compatible with LevelScheme and will not work in all cases.Wolfram Data Framework Semantic framework for real-world data. Contributed by: Richard Hennigan (Wolfram Research) ResourceFunction 'SVGImport' path imports the SVG file at path as a Graphics object. I know that this is possible using LevelScheme for the example shown. So, my second question would be: "Is there a way to get a vector graphics output from ImageAssemble?" If it helps, I'm using Mma7 and saving my graphics as Export. My actual figures are neat vector plots and I don't even want to think about rasterizing them, no matter how high the resolution. Which does what I want, but gives a rasterized image (the following is a screen grab, as the saved file had much poorer resolution). Consider the following simple example: f = Sin + Sin
