dvisvgm man page on Cygwin
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DVISVGM(1) dvisvgm Manual DVISVGM(1)
NAME
dvisvgm - converts DVI files to the XML-based SVG format
SYNOPSIS
dvisvgm [ options ] file [.dvi]
DESCRIPTION
The command-line utility dvisvgm converts DVI files, as generated by
TeX/LaTeX, to the XML-based scalable vector graphics format SVG. Since
the current SVG standard 1.1 doesn’t specify multi-page graphics,
dvisvgm creates separate SVG files for each DVI page. Because of
compatibility reasons, only the first page is converted by default. In
order to select a different page or arbitrary page sequences, use
option -p which is described below.
dvisvgm should properly convert all pages that are made up of fonts and
rules only. However, the utility also supports a couple of DVI
extensions defined in terms of DVI specials. For a more detailed
overview, see section support of specials below.
As SVG is a vector based graphics format, dvisvgm tries to convert the
glyph outlines of all used fonts into scalable path descriptions. The
fastest way to do that is to extract the path information from PFB
(PostScript Type 1) files. So, if dvisvgm is able to find a PFB file
for a required font, it will read the necessary information from this
file.
TeX’s main source for font descriptions is Metafont though, which
produces bitmap output. That’s why not all obtainable TeX fonts are
available in PFB format. In these cases, dvisvgm tries to vectorize
Metafont’s output (GF fonts) by tracing the glyph bitmaps. The results
are not as perfect as most (manually optimized) PFB outlines but are
nonetheless really nice in most cases.
OPTIONS
-a, --trace-all=[retrace]
This option forces dvisvgm to trace not only the actually needed
glyphs but all glyphs of all bitmap fonts used in the DVI file.
Since the tracing results are stored in the font cache, all
following DVI conversions (without option --trace-all) where these
fonts are involved, will be much faster. By default, dvisvgm traces
only the actually needed glyphs, and adds them to the cache. The
boolean option retrace determines how to handle glyphs already
stored in the cache. By default, these glyphs are skipped. Setting
argument retrace to yes or true forces dvisvgm to trace the
corresponding bitmaps again.
Note
This option only takes affect if font caching is active. Thus,
--trace-all cannot be combined with option --cache=none.
-b, --bbox=fmt
Sets the bounding box of the generated graphic to the specified
format. The parameter fmt takes either one of the format specifiers
listed below, or a sequence of four comma- or whitespace-separated
length values x1, y1, x2 and y2. The latter define two diagonal
corners of the bounding box. Each length value consists of a
floating point number and an optional length unit (pt, bp, cm, mm,
in, or pc). If the unit is omitted, TeX points (pt) are assumed.
It’s also possible to give only one length value l. In this case,
the minimal bounding box is computed and enlarged by adding (-l,-l)
to the upper left and (l,l) to the lower right corner.
Alternatively, the following format specifiers are supported:
International DIN/ISO paper sizes
An, Bn, Cn, Dn, where n is a non-negative integer, e.g. A4 or
a4 for DIN/ISO A4 format (210mm × 297mm).
North American paper sizes
invoice, executive, legal, letter, ledger
Special bounding box sizes
dvi page size stored in the
DVI file
min computes the
minimal/tightest bounding
box
none no bounding box is
assigned
Page orientation
The default page orientation for DIN/ISO and American paper sizes
is portrait, i.e. width < height. Appending -landscape or simply
-l to the format string switches to landscape mode (width >
height). For symmetry reasons you can also explicitly add -portrait
or -p to indicate the default portrait format. Note that these
suffixes are part of the size string and not separate options.
Thus, they must directly follow the size specifier without
additional blanks. Furthermore, the orientation suffixes can’t be
used with dvi, min, and none.
Note
Option -b, --bbox only affects the bounding box and does not
transform the page content. Hence, if you choose a landscape
format, the page won’t be rotated.
-C, --cache[=dir]
To speed up the conversion process of bitmap fonts, dvisvgm saves
intermediate conversion information in cache files. By default,
these files are stored in $HOME/.dvisvgm/cache. If you prefer a
different location, use option --cache to overwrite the default.
Furthermore, it is also possible to disable the font caching
mechanism completely with option --cache=none. If argument dir is
omitted, dvisvgm prints the path of the default cache directory and
some information about the stored fonts. Additionally, outdated and
corrupted cache files are removed.
--color
Enables colorization of messages printed during the conversion
process. The colors can be customized via the environment variable
DVISVGM_COLORS. See the ENVIRONMENT section below for further
information.
-E, --eps
If this option is given, dvisvgm does not expect a DVI but an EPS
input file, and tries to convert it to SVG. In order to do so, a
single psfile special command is created and forwarded to the
PostScript special handler. This option is only available if
dvisvgm was built with PostScript support enabled, and requires
Ghostscript to be available. See option --libgs for further
information.
-e, --exact
If this option is given, dvisvgm computes the precise bounding box
of each character. By default, the values stored in a font’s TFM
file are used to determine a glyph’s extent. As these values are
intended to realize optimal character placements and are not
designed to represent the exact dimensions, they don’t necessarily
correspond with the bounds of the visual glyphs. Thus, width and/or
height of some glyphs may be larger than the respective TFM values.
As a result, this can lead to clipped characters at the bounds of
the SVG graphic. With option --exact, dvisvgm analyzes the actual
shape of each character and derives a usually tight bounding box.
-m, --fontmap=filenames
Loads and evaluates a single or multiple font map files. These
files are required to resolve font file names and encodings.
dvisvgm does not provide its own map file but tries to read
available ones coming with dvips or dvipdfm. If option --fonrmapm
is not given, dvisvgm looks for the default map files ps2pk.map,
dvipdfm.map, and psfonts.map (in this order). Otherwise, the listed
files are used. Multiple filenames must be separated by commas
without leading and/or trailing whitespace. The map files are
evaluated in the given order. By default, redefined mappings do not
replace previous ones. However, each filename can be preceded by an
optional mode specifier (+, -, or =) to change this behavior:
+mapfile
Only those entries in the given map file that don’t redefine a
font mapping are applied. That’s also the default mode if no
mode specifier is given.
-mapfile
Ensures that none of the font mappings defined in the given map
file are used, i.e. previously defined mappings for the
specified fonts are removed.
=mapfile
All mappings defined in the map file are applied. Previously
defined settings for the same font are replaced.
If the first filename in the filename sequence is preceded by a
mode specifier, dvisvgm loads the default font map (see above)
and applies the other map files afterwards. Otherwise, none of
default map files will be loaded automatically.
Examples: --fontmap=myfile1.map,+myfile2.map loads myfile1.map
followed by myfile2.map where all redefinitions of myfile2.map
are ignored. --fontmap==myfile1.map,-myfile2.map loads the
default map file followed by myfile1.map and myfile2.map where
all redefinitions of myfile1.map replace previous entries.
Afterwards, all definitions for the fonts given in myfile2.map
are removed again.
For further information about the map file formats, see the
manuals of dvips and dvipdfm.
-h, --help[=mode]
Prints a short summary of all available command-line options. The
optional mode parameter is an integer value between 0 and 2. It
selects the display variant of the help text. Mode 0 lists all
options divided into categories with section headers. This is also
the default if dvisvgm is called without parameters. Mode 1 lists
all options ordered by the short option name, while mode 2 sorts
the lines by the long option name.
--keep
Disables the removal of temporary files as created by Metafont
(usually .gf, .tfm, and .log files).
--libgs=filename
This option is only available if the Ghostscript library is not
directly linked to dvisvgm and if PostScript support was not
completely disabled during compilation. In this case, dvisvgm tries
to load the shared GS library dynamically during runtime. By
default, it expects the library’s name to be libgs.so (on Unix-like
systems) or gsdll32.dll/gsdll64.dll (Windows). Option --libgs can
be used to give a different name. Alternatively, it’s also possible
to set the GS library name by the environment variable LIBGS. The
latter has less precedence than the command-line option.
-l, --list-specials
Prints a list of registered special handlers and exits. Each
handler processes a set of special statements belonging to the same
category. In most cases, the categories are identified by the
prefix of the special statements. It’s usually a leading word
separated from the rest of the statement by a colon or a blank,
e.g. color or ps.
-M, --mag=factor
Sets the magnification factor applied in conjunction with Metafont
calls prior tracing the glyphs. The larger this value, the better
the tracing results. Nevertheless, large magnification values can
cause Metafont arithmetic errors due to number overflows. So, use
this option with care. The default setting usually produces nice
results.
--no-mktexmf
Suppresses the generation of missing font files. If dvisvgm can’t
find a font file through the kpathsea lookup mechanism, it calls
the external tools mktextfm or mktexmf by. This option disables
these calls.
-n, --no-fonts[=variant]
If this option is given, dvisvgm doesn’t create SVG font elements
but uses paths instead. The resulting SVG files tends to be larger
but concurrently more compatible with most applications that don’t
support SVG fonts yet. The optional argument variant selects the
method how to substitute fonts by paths. Variant 0 creates path and
use elements. Variant 1 creates path elements only. Option
--no-fonts implies --no-styles.
-c, --scale=sx[,sy]
Scales the page content horizontally by sx and vertically by sy.
This option is equivalent to -TSsx,sy.
-S, --no-specials[=names]
Disable processing of special commands embedded in the DVI file. If
no further parameter is given, all specials are ignored. To
selectively disable sets of specials, an optional comma-separated
list of names can be appended to this option. A name is the unique
identifier referencing the intended special handler. Option
--list-specials lists all currently available handlers and their
names. All unsupported special statements are silently ignored.
--no-styles
By default, dvisvgm creates CSS styles and class attributes to
reference fonts because it’s more compact than repeatedly set the
complete font information in each text element. However, if you
prefer direct font references, the default behavior can be disabled
with option --no-styles.
-o, --output=pattern
Sets the name pattern of the output file. Parameter pattern is a
string that may contain the variables %f and %p. %f stands for the
base name of the DVI file, i.e. the DVI filename without suffix,
and %p is the current page number. The default pattern is %f-%p.svg
if the DVI file consists of more than one page, and %f.svg
otherwise. That means, a DVI file foo.dvi is converted to foo.svg
if foo.dvi is a single-page document. Otherwise, multiple SVG files
foo-01.svg, foo-02.svg, etc. are produced. In Windows environments,
the percent sign indicates dereferenced environment variables, and
must therefore be protected by a second percent sign, e.g.
--output=%%f-%%p.
-p, --page=ranges
This option sets the pages to be processed. Parameter ranges
consists of a comma-separated list of single page numbers and/or
page ranges. A page range is a pair of numbers separated by a
hyphen, e.g. 5-12. Thus, a page sequence might look like this:
2-4,6,9-12,15. It doesn’t matter if a page is given more than once
or if page ranges overlap. dvisvgm always extracts the page numbers
in ascending order and converts them only once. In order to stay
compatible with previous versions, the default page sequence is 1.
dvisvgm therefore converts only the first page and not the whole
document in case option --page is omitted. Usually, page ranges
consist of two numbers denoting the first and last page to be
converted. If the conversion is to be started at page 1, or if it
should continue up to the last DVI page, the first or second range
number can be omitted, respectively. Example: --page=-10 converts
all pages up to page 10, --page=10- converts all pages starting
with page 10. Please consider that the page values don’t refer to
the page numbers printed on the page. Instead, the physical page
count is expected, where the first page always gets number 1.
-d, --precision=digits
Specifies the maximal number of decimal places applied to
floating-point attribute values. All attribute values written to
the generated SVG file(s) are rounded accordingly. The parameter
digits allows integer values from 0 to 6, where 0 enables the
automatic selection of significant decimal places. This is also the
default value if dvisvgm is called without option --precision.
-P, --progress[=delay]
Enables a simple progress indicator shown when time-consuming
operations like PostScript specials are processed. The indicator
doesn’t appear before the given delay (in seconds) has elapsed. The
default delay value is 0.5 seconds.
-r, --rotate=angle
Rotates the page content clockwise by angle degrees around the page
center. This option is equivalent to -TRangle.
-s, --stdout
Don’t write the SVG output to a file but redirect it to stdout.
-T, --transform=commands
Applies a sequence of transformations to the SVG content. Each
transformation is described by a command beginning with a capital
letter followed by a list of comma-separated parameters. Following
transformation commands are supported:
T tx[,ty]
Translates (moves) the page in direction of vector (tx,ty). If
ty is omitted, ty=0 is assumed. The expected unit length of tx
and ty are TeX points (1pt = 1/72.27in). However, there are
several constants defined to simplify the unit conversion (see
below).
S sx[,sy]
Scales the page horizontally by sx and vertically by sy. If sy
is omitted, sy=sx is assumed.
R angle[,x,y]
Rotates the page clockwise by angle degrees around point (x,y).
If the optional arguments x and y are omitted, the page will be
rotated around its center depending on the chosen page format.
When option -bnone is given, the rotation center is origin
(0,0).
KX angle
Skews the page along the x-axis by angle degrees. Argument
angle can take any value except 90+180k, where k is an integer.
KY angle
Skews the page along the y-axis by angle degrees. Argument
angle can take any value except 90+180k, where k is an integer.
FH [y]
Mirrors (flips) the page at the horizontal line through point
(0,y). Omitting the optional argument leads to y=h/2, where h
denotes the page height (see pre-defined constants below).
FV [x]
Mirrors (flips) the page at the vertical line through point
(x,0). Omitting the optional argument leads to x=w/2, where w
denotes the page width (see pre-defined constants below).
M m1,...,m6
Applies a transformation described by the 3×3 matrix
((m1,m2,m3),(m4,m5,m6),(0,0,1)), where the inner triples denote
the rows.
Note
All transformation commands of option -T, --transform are
applied in the order of their appearance. Multiple commands
can optionally be separated by spaces. In this case the
whole transformation string has to be enclosed in double
quotes. All parameters are expressions of floating point
type. You can either give plain numbers or arithmetic terms
combined by the operators + (addition), - (subtraction), *
(multiplication), / (division) or % (modulo) with common
associativity and precedence rules. Parentheses may be used
as well.
Additionally, some pre-defined constants are provided:
ux horizontal position of
upper left page corner in
TeX point units
uy vertical position of upper
left page corner in TeX
point units
h page height in TeX point
units (0 in case of
-bnone)
w page width in TeX point
units (0 in case of
-bnone)
Furthermore, you can use the length constants pt, mm, cm
and in, e.g. 2cm or 1.6in. Thus, option -TT1in,0R45 moves
the page content 1 inch to the right and rotates it by 45
degrees around the page center afterwards.
For single transformations you can also use options -c, -t
and -r. Note that the order in which these options are
given is not significant, i.e. you can’t use them to
describe transformation sequences. They are simply
independent shorthand options for common transformations.
-t, --translate=tx[,ty]
Translates (moves) the page content in direction of vector (tx,ty).
This option is equivalent to -TTtx,ty.
-v, --verbosity=level
Controls the type of messages printed during a dvisvgm run:
0 no message output
1 error messages only
2 warning messages only
4 informational messages
only
Note
By adding these values you can combine the categories. The
default level is 7, i.e. all messages are printed.
-V, --version[=extended]
Prints the version of dvisvgm and exits. If the optional argument
is set to yes, the version numbers of the linked libraries are
printed as well.
-z, --zip[=level]
Creates a compressed SVG file with suffix .svgz. The optional
argument specifies the compression level. Valid values are in the
range of 1 to 9 (default value is 9). Larger values cause better
compression results but take more computation time.
Caution
This option cannot be combined with -s, --stdout.
SUPPORT OF SPECIALS
dvisvgm supports several sets of special commands that can be used to
enrich DVI files with additional features, like color, graphics or
hyperlinks. The evaluation of special commands is delegated to various
handlers. Each handler is responsible for all special statements of the
same command set, i.e. commands beginning with the same prefix. To get
a list of actually provided special handlers, use option
--list-specials (see above).
bgcolor
Special statement for changing the background/page color. Since SVG
1.1 doesn’t support background colors, dvisvgm inserts a rectangle
of the chosen color. In the current version, this rectangle always
gets the size of the minimal bounding box. This command is part of
the color special set but is handled separately in order to let the
user turn it off. For an overview of the command syntax, see the
documentation of dvips, for instance.
color
Statements of this command set provide instructions to change the
text/paint color. For an overview of the exact syntax, see the
documentation of dvips, for instance.
dvisvgm
dvisvgm offers its own small set of specials. The following list
gives a brief overview.
dvisvgm:raw text
Adds an arbitrary sequence of characters to the SVG output.
dvisvgm does not perform any validation here, thus the user has
to ensure that the resulting SVG is still valid. Parameter text
may contain the macros {?x}, {?y}, and {?color} that are
expanded to the current x or y coordinate and the current
color, respectively. Also, macro {?nl} expands to a newline
character.
dvisvgm:img width height file
Creates an image element at the current graphic position
referencing the given file. JPEG, PNG, and SVG images can be
used here. However, dvisvgm does not check the file format or
the file name suffix. The lengths width and height must be
given as plain floating point numbers in TeX point units (1in =
72.27pt).
dvisvgm:bbox n[ew] name
Defines or resets a local bounding box called name. The name
may consist of letters and digits. While processing a DVI page,
dvisvgm continuously updates the (global) bounding box of the
current page in order to determine the minimal rectangle
containing all visible page components (characters, images,
drawing elements etc.) Additionally to the global bounding box,
the user can request an arbitrary number of named local
bounding boxes. Once defined, these boxes are updated together
with the global bounding box starting with the first character
that follows the definition. Thus, the local boxes can be used
to compute the extent of parts of the page. This is useful for
scenarios where the generated SVG file is post-processed. In
conjunction with special dvisvgm:raw, the macro {?bbox name}
expands to the four values x, y, w, and h (separated by spaces)
specifying the coordinates of the upper left corner, width, and
height of the local box name. If box name wasn’t previously
defined, all four values equal zero.
dvisvgm:bbox width height [depth]
Updates the bounding box of the current page by embedding a
virtual rectangle (x, y, width, height) where the lower left
corner is located at the current DVI drawing position (x,y). If
the optional parameter depth is specified, dvisvgm embeds a
second rectangle (x, y, width, -depth). The lengths width,
height and depth must be given as plain floating point numbers
in TeX point units (1in = 72.27pt). Depending on size and
position of the virtual rectangle, this command either enlarges
the overall bounding box or leaves it as is. It’s not possible
to reduce its extent. This special should be used in
conjunction with dvisvgm:raw in order to update the viewport of
the page properly.
dvisvgm:bbox a[bs] x1 y1 x2 y2
This variant of the bbox special updates the bounding box by
embedding a virtual rectangle (x1,y1,x2,y2). The points (x1,y1)
and (x2,y2) denote two diagonal corners of the rectangle given
in TeX point units.
dvisvgm:bbox f[ix] x1 y1 x2 y2
This variant of the bbox special assigns an absolute (final)
bounding box to the resulting SVG. After executing this
command, dvisvgm doesn’t further alter the bounding box
coordinates, except this special is called again later. The
points (x1,y1) and (x2,y2) denote two diagonal corners of the
rectangle given in TeX point units.
The following TeX snippet adds two raw SVG elements to the
output and updates the bounding box accordingly:
\special{dvisvgm:raw <circle cx='{?x}' cy='{?y}' r='10' stroke='black' fill='red'/>}
\special{dvisvgm:bbox 20 10 10}
\special{dvisvgm:raw <path d='M50 200 L10 250 H100 Z' stroke='black' fill='blue'/>}
\special{dvisvgm:bbox abs 10 200 100 250}
em
These specials were introduced with the emTeX distribution by
Eberhard Mattes. They provide line drawing statements, instructions
for embedding MSP, PCX, and BMP image files, as well as two PCL
commands. dvisvgm supports only the line drawing statements and
ignores all other em specials silently. A description of the
command syntax can be found in the DVI driver documentation coming
with emTeX (see CTAN).
pdf
pdfTeX and dvipdfmx introduced several special commands related to
the generation of PDF files. Currently, only two of them,
pdf:mapfile and pdf:mapline are supported by dvisvgm. These
specials allow modifying the font map tree during the processing of
DVI files. They are used by CTeX, for example. dvisvgm supports
both, the dvips and dvipdfm font map format. For further
information on the command syntax and semantics, see the
documentation of \pdfmapfile in the pdfTeX user manual.
ps
The famous DVI driver dvips introduced its own set of specials in
order to embed PostScript code into DVI files, which greatly
improves the capabilities of DVI documents. One aim of dvisvgm is
to completely evaluate all PostScript snippets and to convert a
large amount of it to SVG. However, in contrast to dvips, dvisvgm
uses floating point arithmetics to compute the precise position of
each graphic element, i.e. it doesn’t round the coordinates.
Therefore, the relative locations of the graphic elements may
slightly differ from those computed by dvips.
Since PostScript is a rather complex language, dvisvgm does not try
to implement its own PostScript interpreter but relies on
Ghostscript instead. If the Ghostscript library was not linked
while building dvisvgm, it is looked up and loaded dynamically
during runtime. In this case, dvisvgm looks for libgs.so on
Unix-like systems, and for gsdll32.dll or gsdll64.dll on Windows.
You can override these default file names with environment variable
LIBGS or the command-line option --libgs. The library must be
installed and reachable through the ld search path (*nix) or the
PATH environment variable (Windows). If it cannot be found, the
processing of PostScript specials is disabled. Use option
--list-specials to check whether PS support is available, i.e. the
entry ps is present.
tpic
The TPIC special set defines instructions for drawing simple
geometric objects. Some LaTeX packages, like eepic and tplot, use
these specials to describe graphics.
EXAMPLES
dvisvgm file
Converts the first page of file.dvi to file.svg.
dvisvgm -z file
Converts the first page of file.dvi to file.svgz with default
compression level 9.
dvisvgm -p5 -z3 -ba4-l -onewfile file
Converts the fifth page of file.dvi to newfile.svgz with compression
level 3. The bounding box is set to DIN/ISO A4 in landscape format.
dvisvgm --transform="R20,w/3,2h/5 T1cm,1cm S2,3" file
Converts the first page of file.dvi to file.svg where three
transformations are applied.
ENVIRONMENT
dvisvgm uses the kpathsea library for locating the files that it opens.
Hence, the environment variables described in the library’s
documentation influence the converter.
If dvisvgm was linked without the Ghostscript library, and if
PostScript support has not been disabled, the shared Ghostscript
library is looked up during runtime via dlopen(). The environment
variable LIBGS can be used to specify path and file name of the
library.
The pre-compiled Windows versions of dvisvgm require a working
installation of MiKTeX 2.9 or above. dvisvgm does not work together
with the portable edition of MiKTeX because it relies on MiKTeX’s COM
interface only accessible in a local installation. To enable the
evaluation of PostScript specials, the original Ghostscript DLL
gsdll32.dll must be present and reachable through the search path.
64-bit Windows builds require the 64-bit Ghostscript DLL gsdll64.dll.
Both DLLs come with the corresponding Ghostscript installers available
from www.ghostscript.com.
The environment variable DVISVGM_COLORS specifies the colors used to
highlight various parts of dvisvgm’s message output. It is only
evaluated if option --color is given. The value of DVISVGM_COLORS is a
list of colon-separated entries of the form gg=BF, where gg denotes one
of the color group indicators listed below, and BF are two hexadecimal
digits specifying the background (first digit) and foreground/text
color (second digit). The color color values are defined as follows:
0=black, 1=red, 2=green, 3=yellow, 4=blue, 5=magenta, 6=cyan, 7=gray,
8=bright red, 9=bright green, A=bright yellow, B=bright blue, C=bright
magenta, D=bright cyan, E=bright gray, F=white. Depending on the
terminal, the colors may differ. Rather than changing both the text and
background color, it’s also possible to change only one of them: An
asterisk (*) in place of a hexadecimal digit indicates the default text
or background color of the terminal.
All malformed entries in the list are silently ignored.
er error messages
wn warning messages
pn messages about page
numbers
ps page size messages
fw information about the
files written
sm state messages
tr messages of the glyph
tracer
pi progress indicator
Example: er=01:pi=*5 sets the colors of error messages (er) to red (1)
on black (0), and those of progress indicators (pi) to cyan (5) on
default background (*).
FILES
The location of the following files is determined by the kpathsea
library. To check the actual kpathsea configuration you can use the
kpsewhich utility.
*.enc Font encoding files
*.fgd Font glyph data files
(cache files created by
dvisvgm)
*.map Font map files
*.mf Metafont input files
*.pfb PostScript Type 1 font
files
*.pro PostScript header/prologue
files
*.tfm TeX font metric files
*.ttf TrueType font files
*.vf Virtual font files
SEE ALSO
tex(1), mf(1), mktexmf(1), grodvi(1), potrace(1), and the kpathsea
library info documentation.
RESOURCES
Project home page
http://dvisvgm.sourceforge.net
SourceForge project site
http://sourceforge.net/projects/dvisvgm
BUGS
Please report bugs using the bug tracker at Launchpad (see
https://launchpad.net/dvisvgm).
AUTHOR
Written by Martin Gieseking <martin.gieseking@uos.de>
COPYING
Copyright © 2005-2013 Martin Gieseking. Free use of this software is
granted under the terms of the GNU General Public License (GPL) version
3 or, (at your option) any later version.
dvisvgm 1.2 03/01/2013 DVISVGM(1)
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For those who want to learn more, the polarhome community provides shell access and support.
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