Current PDF Support

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Current PDF support

PDF Import

SVN version of Inkscape (to-be 0.46) uses poppler (0.5.4 and above) to import PDF files.

Implemented features: The new import extension can import paths, text, clippaths, masked or non-masked images, and softmasks. It supports pattern fills (XStep and YStep attributes are ignored) as well as linear and radial gradients (only those using sampled or exponential functions). Gradient meshes are imported, but they get converted to groups of small tiles (flat-colored paths) that approximate the mesh; the user can adjust the precision of this approximation.

Only one page can be imported. Users can preview pages and choose the one they need. This is because Inkscape doens't support multiple pages itself.

Use of Gnulibplot

A short way for converting files to import in Inkscape is to use gsview and the command "edit/convert to vector format" to convert any pdf to svg. Easy and fast to use. Incidentally, gsview invokes a command similar to "pstoedit -f plot-svg input-file output-file" and, after downloading and installing pstoedit, this command can be run on the command line without opening gsview.

PDF Export

PDF export is now supported by main program, using cairo backend (choose Cairo PDF in the save as file requester).

Before there was the need from external program : pdf_output.inx exports PDF files by first saving them as Postscript and use an external converter to creat PDFs, requiring ps2pdf (Installed separately, included in ghostscript)

Strengths: Depend of Cairo version.

Weaknesses: Depend of Cairo version.

Uncompressed PDF Output

At this time, it looks as if Inkscape only outputs uncompressed PDF output. Once you export a PDF, look at its file size. If it is too large for your application, then you have different options:

epstopdf

Export the exact same file to EPS (encapsulated postscript) and then use epstopdf to convert the file to PDF. This will make a compressed PDF.

Ghostscript

An other method utilizing Ghostscript[1] to compress pdfs. As an example see:
http://www.itechies.net/blog/archives/1764 (Ghostscript on Windows, English)
A little bit more extensive bash-scripts (therefore for Linux) also using ghostscript can be found here http://www.alfredklomp.com/programming/shrinkpdf/ (English)
http://blog.tenstral.net/2010/05/pdfs-verkleinern.html (German)
and here
https://dr-luthardt.de/linux.htm?tip=pdfshr (German)

Examples

As an illustration, my 72 page document went from 80 megabytes down to 3.1.

Current Postscript support

PS Import

ps_input.inx imports Postscript files by using two external conversion scripts:

Requirements:

Strengths:

Weaknesses:

PS Export

Inkscape has built-in support to write Postscript files.

Strengths:

  • Outputs nice readable Postscript

Weaknesses:

  • Doesn't support fill patterns and clipping, see bugs 1208874 and 1170322
  • Postscript doesn't support transparency and Inkscape doesn't emulate this, so they are just ignored, that is you get the color you would get with opacity:1

Current Adobe Illustrator support

The files used by Adobe Illustrator were earlier postscript files but are now Pdf files.

AI Import

Pre 9.0 AI files

Requirements:

  • ill2svg.pl requires perl

Strengths:

Weaknesses:

  • Only works on the old Postscript-based Adobe format
  • Code is sort of a hack
  • No maintainer exists for this code

9.0 and above AI files

SVN version of Inkscape (to-be 0.46) supports AI files based on PDF (9.0 and above) using same code as for PDF import. All supported features are equivalent to those in the PDF.

AI Export

ai_output.inx exports Illustrator files by first saving them as Postscript and use an external converter to creat AIs (PostScript based).

Requirements:

  • ps2ai.ps (requires gs)

Strengths:

Weaknesses: