1

I'm trying to change the color from EPS files that contain only vectors (no rasters). Currently, I convert them to SVG, manipulate the colors, and convert them back to PDF or EPS with Inkscape. This works perfectly but doesn't allow me to apply CMYK coloring, only RGB. After investigating a little bit and finding answers like this or this I'm trying to override the /setcmykcolor function my EPS file uses. You can download it from here.

The EPS looks like this:

enter image description here

And I want to convert the color to CMYK = 0 1 1 0 so it looks like this:

enter image description here

In this case, the EPS file is black but it could be any other color. I tried adding this after %%BeginProlog which should override the /setcmykcolor to always apply 0 1 1 0 as the CMYK color:

/osetcmykcolor {/setcmykcolor} bind def /setcmykcolor {pop [0 1 1 0] osetcmykcolor} def

Or this:

/osetcmykcolor {/setcmykcolor} bind def /setcmykcolor {0 1 1 0 osetcmykcolor} def

But everything is still black. I know /setcmykcolor is the right function because using 0 1 1 0 setcmykcolor just before drawing the path makes it red. I went through postscript programming manuals but I'm having a hard time trying to figure out what's wrong here!

Any help would be greatly appreciated!

1
  • The slash looks wrong in {/setcmykcolor} bind def. I think that should be written without a slash there. Jun 17, 2020 at 9:54

1 Answer 1

1

If I start Ghostscript then do :

GS> /osetcmykcolor /setcmykcolor load def
GS> /setcmykcolor {pop pop pop pop 0 1 1 0 osetcmykcolor} bind def
GS> (color.eps) run

then the EPS is rendered in 'orange' as you expect.

Note that setcmykcolor takes 4 arguments so you have to pop all 4 (though this won't be causing a lack of colour, it's just leaving junk on the stack).

Editing the EPS file:

%!PS-Adobe-3.0 EPSF-3.0
%%BoundingBox: 0 0 564 454
%%HiResBoundingBox: 0.00 0.00 564.00 453.20
%%Creator: GPL Ghostscript 921 (eps2write)
%%LanguageLevel: 2
%%CreationDate: D:20200616000003-03'00'
%%Pages: 1
%%EndComments
%%BeginProlog
/osetcmykcolor /setcmykcolor load def
/setcmykcolor {pop pop pop pop 0 1 1 0 osetcmykcolor} bind def
/DSC_OPDFREAD true def

and then running it with:

gs color1.eps

also produces orange text. So how are you testing it ?

3
  • Thank you so much KenS! Your code worked perfectly, as always you are postscript savior :)
    – Andres
    Jun 18, 2020 at 14:45
  • Do you know of any method to do the same thing with PDFs? I mean, replacing all colors with a single color?
    – Andres
    Jun 27, 2020 at 23:52
  • The short answer is 'you can't'. But that's not strictly true, there are ways, just not very good ones. With the current implementation of Ghostscript, which uses a PostScript program to render PDF files, you can achieve the same result but you have to redefine the operators before the PDF interpreter is loaded, which is during startup so you can't. What you would have to do is alter the PDF interpreter program. Its in ghostpdl/Resource/Init/pdf_*.ps you would need to modify the use of the colour operators in that program.
    – KenS
    Jun 28, 2020 at 8:19

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.