Question

Sorry, this may or may not be a programming question directly, but I am trying to resize screenshots with Imagemagick and Gimp to include in a Beamer presentation, but it comes out even blurrier than the resizing done by LaTeX.

For instance, in Beamer I might have a command to rescale the image \includegraphics[width=.5\textwidth]{fig.png}. Using something like

\begin{frame}
\message{width = \the\textwidth}
\message{height = \the\textheight}
\end{frame}

I have gotten the \textwidth and \textheight parameters in points (345.69548, 261.92444). So I have a script (in Python) that sends a system call to Imagemagick:

'convert %s -resize %.6f@ resized_%s' % (f,a,f)

where a is calculated as \textwidth*\textheight*0.5**2 and f is the file name. When I then go back into my Beamer presentation and include the resized figure, \includegraphics{resized_fig.png}, the size looks approximately correct but it's super-blurry. I also tried resizing in Gimp (using the GUI) but no luck either... help? Thanks...

Was it helpful?

Solution

If you want to preserve pixel sharpness, i.e. do not scale and interpolate pixels, but represent them as small squares, I suggest this approach:

  1. Convert you PNG image to EPS/PDF with sam2p.

  2. Include converted EPS or PDF in your document as usual. Every pixel will be just a small rectangular box, it will look crisp and sharp, and will scale without interpolation.

For example, let's assume we have a small raster image, that we want to show:

10×10

We can convert it to vector PDF with this command:

sam2p 10x10.png PDF: 10x10.pdf

Now as we have a vector version (where every pixel is a rectangular), we can include it in whatever LaTeX document and scale freely. All pixels will scale, but will not be interpolated.

For example,

\documentclass[12pt]{article}
\usepackage[papersize={4cm,4cm},margin=2pt]{geometry}
\usepackage{graphicx}

\begin{document}
\includegraphics[width=0.8\linewidth]{10x10.pdf}
\end{document}

This will look like this:

10×10 scaled without interpolation

Drawbacks:

  • PDF version of the image is likely to be several times bigger than its original PNG version.
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