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DVIPNG(1)			 User commands			     DVIPNG(1)

NAME
       dvipng -	A DVI-to-PNG translator

SYNOPSIS
       dvipng [options]	filename

       dvipng [options]	[filename] -

DESCRIPTION
       This program makes PNG and/or GIF graphics from DVI files as obtained
       from TeX	and its	relatives.

       If GIF support is enabled, GIF output is	chosen by using	the dvigif
       binary or with the --gif	option.

       The benefits of dvipng/dvigif include

       *   Speed. It is	a very fast bitmap-rendering code for DVI files, which
	   makes  it  suitable	for generating large amounts of	images on-the-
	   fly,	as needed in preview-latex, WeBWorK and	others.

       *   It does not read the	postamble, so it can  be  started  before  TeX
	   finishes. There is a	--follow switch	that makes dvipng wait at end-
	   of-file  for	 further  output, unless it finds the POST marker that
	   indicates the end of	the DVI.

       *   Interactive query of	options. dvipng	can read options interactively
	   through stdin, and all options are usable. It is even  possible  to
	   change the input file through this interface.

       *   Supports  PK,  VF,  PostScript  Type1, and TrueType fonts, subfonts
	   (i.e., as used in CJK-LaTeX),  color	 specials,  and	 inclusion  of
	   PostScript, PNG, JPEG or GIF	images.

       *   and more...

OPTIONS
       Many  of	 the  parameterless  options  listed here can be turned	off by
       suffixing the option with a zero	(0); for instance, to  turn  off  page
       reversal, use -r0.  Such	options	are marked with	a trailing *.

       -   Read	 additional  options  from standard input after	processing the
	   command line.

       --help
	   Print a usage message and exit.

       --version
	   Print the version number and	exit.

       -bd num
       -bd color_spec
       -bd 'num	color_spec'
	   Set the pixel width of the transparent border  (default  0).	 Using
	   this	 option	 will  make  the  image	edges transparent, but it only
	   affects pixels with the background color. Giving a color_spec  will
	   set	the  fallback  color, to be used in viewers that cannot	handle
	   transparency	(the default is	the background color). The color  spec
	   should  be  in  TeX color \special syntax, e.g., 'rgb 1.0 0.0 0.0'.
	   Setting the fallback	color makes the	default	border width 1 px.

       --bdpi num
	   This	option only has	an effect when using bitmapped (PK) fonts. The
	   option sets the base	(Metafont)  resolution,	 both  horizontal  and
	   vertical, to	num dpi	(dots per inch). This option is	necessary when
	   manually  selecting	Metafont  mode	with  the  --mode  option (see
	   below).

       -bg color_spec
	   Choose background color for the images. This	option will be ignored
	   if there is a background color \special in the DVI. The color  spec
	   should  be  in  TeX color \special syntax, e.g., 'rgb 1.0 0.0 0.0'.
	   You can also	specify	'Transparent' or 'transparent' which will give
	   you a transparent  background  with	the  normal  background	 as  a
	   fallback  color. A capitalized 'Transparent'	will give a full-alpha
	   transparency, while an  all-lowercase  'transparent'	 will  give  a
	   simple    fully   transparent   background	with   non-transparent
	   antialiased pixels. The latter would	be suitable  for  viewers  who
	   cannot  cope	 with a	true alpha channel.  GIF images	do not support
	   full	alpha transparency, so in case of GIF  output,	both  variants
	   will	use the	latter behaviour.

       -d num
	   Set the debug flags,	showing	what dvipng (thinks it)	is doing. This
	   will	 work  unless  dvipng  has  been  compiled without the "DEBUG"
	   option (not recommended). Set the flags as you need them, use -d -1
	   as the first	option for maximum output.

       -D num
	   Set the output resolution, both horizontal and vertical, to num dpi
	   (dots per inch).

	   One may want	to adjust this to fit a	certain	text font size	(e.g.,
	   on  a  web  page), and for a	text font height of font_px pixels (in
	   Mozilla) the	correct	formula	is

		   <dpi> = <font_px> * 72.27 / 10 [px *	TeXpt/in / TeXpt]

	   The last division by	ten is due to the standard font	height 10pt in
	   your	document, if you use 12pt, divide by 12.  Unfortunately,  some
	   proprietary	browsers  have font height in pt (points), not pixels.
	   You have to rescale that to pixels,	using  the  screen  resolution
	   (default is usually 96 dpi) which means the formula is

		   <font_px> = <font_pt> * 96 /	72 [pt * px/in / (pt/in)]

	   On some high-res screens, the value is instead 120 dpi. Good	luck!

       --depth*
	   Report  the	depth  of the image. This only works reliably when the
	   LaTeX style preview.sty from	preview-latex is used with the	active
	   option.  It	reports	 the  number  of pixels	from the bottom	of the
	   image to the	baseline of the	image. This can	be used	 for  vertical
	   positioning	of  the	image in, e.g.,	web documents, where one would
	   use (Cascading StyleSheets 1)

		   <IMG	SRC="<filename.png>" STYLE="vertical-align: -<depth>px">

	   The depth is	a negative offset in this case,	so the minus  sign  is
	   necessary, and the unit is pixels (px).

       --dvinum*
	   Set	this  option  to  make	the output page	number be the TeX page
	   numbers rather than the physical page number. See the -o switch.

       -fg color_spec
	   Choose foreground color for the images. This	option will be ignored
	   if there is a foreground color \special in the DVI. The color  spec
	   should be in	TeX color \special syntax, e.g., 'rgb 1.0 0.0 0.0'.

       --follow*
	   Wait	for data at end-of-file. One of	the benefits of	dvipng is that
	   it  does  not  read	the postamble, so it can be started before TeX
	   finishes. This switch makes dvipng wait at end-of-file for  further
	   output,  unless  it finds the POST marker that indicates the	end of
	   the DVI. This is similar to tail -f but for DVI-to-PNG conversion.

       --freetype*
	   Enable/disable FreeType font	rendering (default on).	This option is
	   available if	the FreeType2 font library was present at  compilation
	   time.   If  this  is	 the case, dvipng will have direct support for
	   PostScript Type1 and	TrueType fonts internally, rather  than	 using
	   gsftopk for rendering the fonts. If you have	PostScript versions of
	   Computer  Modern  installed,	 there	will  be  no  need to generate
	   bitmapped (PK) variants on disk of  these.  Then,  you  can	render
	   images  at  different  (and unusual)	resolutions without cluttering
	   the disk with lots of  bitmapped  fonts.   One  reason  to  disable
	   FreeType  font  rendering  would be to generate identical output on
	   different platforms,	since FreeType uses the	 native	 renderer  and
	   therefore can give slightly different output	on each	platform.

       --gamma num
	   Control  the	interpolation of colors	in the greyscale anti-aliasing
	   color palette.  Default value is 1.0.  For 0	< num <	1,  the	 fonts
	   will	 be  lighter  (more like the background), and for num >	1, the
	   fonts will be darker	(more like the foreground).

       --gif*
	   The images are output in the	GIF format, if GIF support is enabled.
	   This	is the default for the	dvigif	binary,	 which	only  will  be
	   available  when  GIF	 support  is  enabled.	GIF images are palette
	   images (see the --palette option) and does not support  true	 alpha
	   channels (see the --bg option). See also the	--png option.

       --height*
	   Report  the	height of the image. This only works reliably when the
	   LaTeX style preview.sty from	preview-latex is used with the	active
	   option.  It	reports	the number of pixels from the top of the image
	   to the baseline of the image. The total  height  of	the  image  is
	   obtained  as	 the  sum  of  the  values  reported from --height and
	   --depth.

       -l [=]num
	   The last page printed will be the first one numbered	 num.  Default
	   is  the last	page in	the document.  If num is prefixed by an	equals
	   sign, then it (and the argument to the -p option, if	specified)  is
	   treated  as	a physical (absolute) page number, rather than a value
	   to compare with the TeX \count0 values  stored  in  the  DVI	 file.
	   Thus,  using	-l =9 will end with the	ninth page of the document, no
	   matter what the pages are actually numbered.

       --mode mode
	   This	option only has	an effect when using bitmapped (PK) fonts. Use
	   mode	as the Metafont	device name for	the PK fonts  (both  for  path
	   searching and font generation). This	needs to be augmented with the
	   base	 device	resolution, given with the --bdpi option. See the file
	   <ftp://ftp.tug.org/tex/modes.mf> for	a list of resolutions and mode
	   names for most devices.

       -M* This	option only has	an effect when using bitmapped (PK) fonts.  It
	   turns off automatic PK font generation (mktexpk).

       --nogs*
	   This	  switch  prohibits  the  internal  call  to  GhostScript  for
	   displaying PostScript specials. --nogs0 turns the call back on.

       --nogssafer*
	   Normally, if	GhostScript is used to render PostScript specials, the
	   GhostScript	interpreter  is	 run  with  the	 option	 -dSAFER.  The
	   --nogssafer	option	runs  GhostScript without -dSAFER. The -dSAFER
	   option  in  Ghostscript  disables  PostScript  operators  such   as
	   deletefile,	to prevent possibly malicious PostScript programs from
	   having any effect.

       --norawps*
	   Some	packages generate raw PostScript specials, even	 non-rendering
	   such	 specials.   This  switch  turns  off  the  internal  call  to
	   GhostScript intended	to  display  these  raw	 PostScript  specials.
	   --norawps0 turns the	call back on.

       -o name
	   Send	 output	 to  the file name. A single occurrence	of %d or %01d,
	   ...,	%09d will be exchanged for the physical	page number (this  can
	   be  changed,	 see the --dvinum switch). The default output filename
	   is file%d.png where the input DVI file was file.dvi.

       -O x-offset,y-offset
	   Move	the origin by x-offset,y-offset,  a  comma-separated  pair  of
	   dimensions  such  as	.1in,-.3cm.  The origin	of the page is shifted
	   from	the default position (of one inch down,	one inch to the	 right
	   from	the upper left corner of the paper) by this amount.

       -p [=]num
	   The	first page printed will	be the first one numbered num. Default
	   is the first	page in	the document.  If num is prefixed by an	equals
	   sign, then it (and the argument to the -l option, if	specified)  is
	   treated  as	a physical (absolute) page number, rather than a value
	   to compare with the TeX \count0 values  stored  in  the  DVI	 file.
	   Thus,  using	 -p =3 will start with the third page of the document,
	   no matter what the pages are	actually numbered.

       --palette*
	   When	an external  image  is	included,  dvipng  will	 automatically
	   switch  to  truecolor  mode,	to avoid unnecessary delay and quality
	   reduction, and enable the EPS translator to draw on	a  transparent
	   background  and  outside of the boundingbox.	This switch will force
	   palette (256-color) output and make dvipng revert to	opaque clipped
	   image inclusion. This will also override the	--truecolor switch  if
	   present.

       --picky*
	   No  images  are output when a warning occurs. Normally, dvipng will
	   output an image in spite of a warning, but there may	 be  something
	   missing  in	this  image. One reason	to use this option would be if
	   you have a more complete but	 slower	 fallback  converter.  Mainly,
	   this	 is  useful  for  failed figure	inclusion and unknown \special
	   occurrences,	but warnings will also occur for  missing  or  unknown
	   color specs and missing PK fonts.

       --png*
	   The	images	are  output in the PNG format. This is the default for
	   the dvipng binary. See also the --gif option.

       -pp firstpage-lastpage
	   Print pages firstpage through lastpage; but not quite equivalent to
	   -p firstpage	-l lastpage. For example, when rendering a book, there
	   may be several instances  of	 a  page  in  the  DVI	file  (one  in
	   "\frontmatter", one in "\mainmatter", and one in "\backmatter"). In
	   case	 of several pages matching, -pp	firstpage-lastpage will	render
	   all pages that matches the specified	range, while -p	 firstpage  -l
	   lastpage  will  render  the	pages  from  the  first	 occurrence of
	   firstpage to	 the  first  occurrence	 of  lastpage.	 This  is  the
	   (undocumented)  behaviour  of  dvips.  In  dvipng you can give both
	   kinds of options, in	which case you get all pages that matches  the
	   range  in  -pp  between  the	pages from -p to -l. Also multiple -pp
	   options accumulate, unlike -p and -l.  The -	separator can also  be
	   :.  Note  that  -pp	-1 will	be interpreted as "all pages up	to and
	   including 1", if you	want a page numbered -1	 (only	the  table  of
	   contents, say) put -pp -1--1, or more readable, -pp -1:-1.

       -q* Run quietly.	 Don't chatter about pages converted, etc. to standard
	   output; report no warnings (only errors) to standard	error.

       -Q num
	   Set	the quality to num. That is, choose the	number of antialiasing
	   levels for bitmapped	fonts (PK), to be num*num+1. The default value
	   is 4	which gives 17 levels of antialiasing  for  antialiased	 fonts
	   from	 these	two.  If  FreeType  is	available,  its	 rendering  is
	   unaffected by this option.

       -r* Toggle output of pages in reverse/forward order.  By	 default,  the
	   first page in the DVI is output first.

       --strict*
	   The	program	 exits	when  a	 warning occurs. Normally, dvipng will
	   output an image in spite of a warning, but there may	 be  something
	   missing  in	this  image. One reason	to use this option would be if
	   you have a more complete but	slower	fallback  converter.  See  the
	   --picky option above	for a list of when warnings occur.

       -T image_size
	   Set	the  image  size  to  image_size  which	can be either of bbox,
	   tight, or a comma-separated pair of dimensions hsize,vsize such  as
	   .1in,.3cm.  The  default is bbox which produces a PNG that includes
	   all ink put on the page and in addition the DVI origin, located 1in
	   from	the top	and 1in	from the left edge of the paper. This  usually
	   gives  whitespace  above and	to the left in the produced image. The
	   value tight will make dvipng	only include all ink put on the	 page,
	   producing neat images.

       --truecolor*
	   This	  will	make  dvipng  generate	truecolor  output.  Note  that
	   truecolor output is automatic if you	include	an external  image  in
	   your	 DVI,  e.g.,  via  a PostScript	special	(i.e., the graphics or
	   graphicx package). This  switch  is	overridden  by	the  --palette
	   switch.

       -v* Enable  verbose  operation. This will currently indicate what fonts
	   is used, in addition	to the usual output.

       --width*
	   Report the width of the image. See also --height and	--depth.

       -x num
	   This	option is deprecated; it should	not be used. It	is much	better
	   to select the output	resolution directly with the -D	 option.  This
	   option  sets	 the magnification ratio to num/1000 and overrides the
	   magnification specified in the DVI file.  Must be  between  10  and
	   100000.   It	 is  recommended  that you use standard	magstep	values
	   (1095, 1200,	1440, 1728, 2074, 2488,	 2986,	and  so	 on)  to  help
	   reduce  the	total number of	PK files generated.  num may be	a real
	   number, not an integer, for increased precision.

       -z num
	   Set the PNG compression level to num. This  option  is  enabled  if
	   your	libgd is new enough. The default compression level is 1, which
	   selects  maximum speed at the price of slightly larger PNGs.	For an
	   older libgd,	the hard-soldered value	5 is used.  The	 include  file
	   png.h says "Currently, valid	values range from 0 - 9, corresponding
	   directly  to	the zlib compression levels 0 -	9 (0 - no compression,
	   9 - "maximal" compression). Note that tests have  shown  that  zlib
	   compression	levels	3-6 usually perform as well as level 9 for PNG
	   images, and do considerably	fewer  calculations.  In  the  future,
	   these  values  may  not correspond directly to the zlib compression
	   levels."

NOTES
       The full	manual is accessible in	info format, on	most systems by	typing

	       info dvipng

COPYRIGHT
       This program is released	under the GNU Lesser  General  Public  License
       version	3,  see	 the  COPYING  file  in	 the  dvipng  distribution  or
       <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/gpl.html>.

       Copyright (c) 2002-2015,	2019 Jan-AAke Larsson

dvipng 1.18			  2025-02-02			     DVIPNG(1)

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