lyx_mirror/lib/scripts/svg2pstex.py
2017-09-10 17:02:58 +02:00

75 lines
2.4 KiB
Python

#!/usr/bin/env python
# -*- coding: utf-8 -*-
# file svg2pstex.py
# This file is part of LyX, the document processor.
# Licence details can be found in the file COPYING.
# author Daniel Gloger
# author Martin Vermeer
# author Jürgen Spitzmüller
# Full author contact details are available in file CREDITS
# This script converts an SVG image to two files that can be processed
# with latex into high quality DVI/PostScript. It requires Inkscape.
# Usage:
# python svg2pstex.py [inkscape_command] inputfile.svg outputfile.eps_tex
# This command generates
# 1. outputfile.eps -- the converted EPS file (text from SVG stripped)
# 2. outputfile.eps_tex -- a TeX file that can be included in your
# LaTeX document using '\input{outputfile.eps_text}'
#
# Note:
# Do not use this command as
# python svg2pstex.py [inkscape_command] inputfile.svg outputfile.pdf
# the real EPS file would be overwritten by a TeX file named outputfile.eps.
#
# This script converts an SVG image to something that latex can process
# into high quality PostScript.
import os, sys, re, subprocess
def runCommand(cmd):
''' Utility function:
run a command, quit if fails
'''
if subprocess.call(cmd) != 0:
print "Command '%s' fails." % cmd
sys.exit(1)
InkscapeCmd = "inkscape"
InputFile = ""
OutputFile = ""
# We expect two or three args: the names of the input and output files
# and optionally the inkscape command (with path if needed).
args = len(sys.argv)
if args == 3:
# Two args: input and output file only
InputFile, OutputFile = sys.argv[1:]
elif args == 4:
# Three args: first arg is inkscape command
InkscapeCmd, InputFile, OutputFile = sys.argv[1:]
else:
# Invalid number of args. Exit with error.
sys.exit(1)
# Fail silently if the file doesn't exist
if not os.path.isfile(InputFile):
sys.exit(0)
# Strip the extension from ${OutputFile}
OutBase = os.path.splitext(OutputFile)[0]
# Inkscape (as of 0.48) can output SVG images as an EPS file without text, ${OutBase}.eps,
# while outsourcing the text to a LaTeX file ${OutBase}.eps_tex which includes and overlays
# the EPS image and can be \input to LaTeX files. We rename the latter file to ${OutputFile}
# (although this is probably the name it already has).
runCommand([InkscapeCmd, '--file=%s' % (InputFile), '--export-eps=%s.eps' % (OutBase), '--export-latex'])
os.rename('%s.eps_tex' % OutBase, OutputFile)