CTAN Comprehensive TeX Archive Network

CTAN update: dvisvgm

Date: January 21, 2016 3:11:15 PM CET
Martin Gieseking submitted an update to the dvisvgm package. Version number: 1.14.2 2016-01-20 License type: gpl3 Summary description: Convert DVI files to Scalable Vector Graphics format (SVG) Announcement text:
dvisvgm is a command-line utility that converts DVI and EPS files to SVG. The recent version 1.14.2 is bugfix release with the following changes: * Fixed the handling of background color specials. Now they affect all succeeding pages until the next change occurs. * Fixed a potential memory issue. * Updated the bundled xxHash library to version 0.5.0. * Added xxHash to the output of --version=1. * Minor additions to the manpage. For further information including a more detailed list of changes, and pre-compiled binaries for Windows/MiKTeX, see the project page http://dvisvgm.bplaced.net.
This package is located at http://mirror.ctan.org/dviware/dvisvgm More information is at http://www.ctan.org/pkg/dvisvgm We are supported by the TeX Users Group http://www.tug.org . Please join a users group; see http://www.tug.org/usergroups.html .
Thanks for the upload. For the CTAN Team Erik Braun

dvisvgm – Convert DVI, EPS, and PDF files to Scalable Vector Graphics format (SVG)

Dvisvgm is a command line utility that converts DVI as well as EPS and PDF files to the XML-based Scalable Vector Graphics (SVG) format. It provides full font support including virtual fonts, font maps, and sub-fonts. If necessary, dvisvgm vectorizes ’s bitmap output in order to always create lossless scalable output. The embedded SVG fonts can optionally be replaced with graphics paths so that applications that do not support SVG fonts are enabled to render the graphics properly. Besides many other features, dvisvgm also supports color, em, tpic, papersize, PDF mapfile and PostScript specials. Users will need a working installation including the kpathsea library.

For more detailed information, see the project page.

Packagedvisvgm
Version3.2.2
Copyright2005–2024 Martin Gieseking
MaintainerMartin Gieseking

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