Cathy,
Latex may not be understanding the Bounding Box specified by NCL
(although it is valid EPS format). You can run the following command
(assuming you have epstool)
epstool --copy -b inputfile.eps outputfile.eps
The resulting 'outputfile.eps' should have an explicit Bounding Box.
I usually use graphicx package under LaTeX..For instance, I scale/rotate
my plots using
\includegraphics[height=0.85\hsize, angle=-270]{./Figs/ssh_coarse.eps}
saji
Saji N. Hameed, Assistant Researcher,
IPRC-SOEST, 2525 Correa Road, Univ. of Hawaii,
Honolulu, HI 96822, U.S.A
http://iprc.soest.hawaii.edu/~saji
tel.: (808) 956 9534 , fax.: (808) 956 9425
> 
>   1. eps plots for publication (Cathryn Meyer)
> Hello NCL users,
> 
> I have been making several *.eps plots to use in a paper for
> publication.  These plots look find when I view them using 
> ghostscript,however when I attempt to transfer them into the 
> document they do not
> load successfully.  I can convert them using gv but then they are huge
> (like 3ft x 3ft) and only one small corner of the figure covers the 
> page.
> Is there some way to resize .eps plots once they are in a document, 
> or a
> way to get them to load into a LaTeX document without using gv?  
> What do
> some of you use for publication plots, if eps is known not to work?
> 
> Thanks,
> Cathy
> 
> -- 
> Cathryn Meyer
> Department of Geology and Geophysics
> Yale University
> cathryn.meyer@yale.edu
> (203)432-1959
> 
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