I am looking for the best way to convert my JPEG files into EPS. I have to convert my image files to EPS to insert into my LaTeX files. Note that I am using dvipdfm to compile my LaTeX file into PDF and I am not using pdflatex.
The problem is that the actual size of the image changes under the conversion to EPS. Therefore, I have to use the "scale" option of the "includegraphics" command in LaTeX to get the image scale to its actual size. I have tried Gimp, Jpeg2ps and ImageMagick Convert to convert my JPEG files into EPS files. However, each of these converters produces an EPS file whose actual size is different from the actual size of the original JPEG file.
I'd like to know if anyone knows of a way to convert JPEG files to EPS files which preserves the original dimensions of the image. Such a dimension-preserving converter would relieve us from scaling the image in the LaTeX file manually.
My LaTeX file (include-image.tex) is the following:
\documentclass{article}
\usepackage[dvipdfm]{graphicx}
\begin{document}
\begin{figure}
\includegraphics{image.eps}
\end{figure}
\end{document}
And, I use the following Makefile to produce the pdf:
include-image.pdf: include-image.dvi
dvipdfm include-image.dvi
include-image.dvi: include-image.tex
latex include-image.tex
pdflatex" Is there a good reason for this? The day I switched topdflatexwas the day LaTeX graphics stopped being problematic for me! – kquinn Jul 26 '09 at 9:28geometrypackage. – kquinn Jul 26 '09 at 20:52