You need only to put that string into your texmaker (or any other program) rule for ps2pdf: 'C:/Program Files/gs/gs8.64/bin/gswin32c.exe' -sDEVICEpdfwrite -o. Alternatively, you can involve ghostscripts ps2pdf by using gsview32c.exe.
#PS TO PDF MIKTEX WINDOWS#
I'd personally use the vanilla Windows binary rather than a modified version supplied under MingW or whatever Linux shell you are using. I make MikTeX installation without 2.9 and it worked.
that the problem is in the conversion from PS to EPS. version are clear when viewed on the screen using GhostView so I suspect. EPS graphics in the final PDF look very fuzzy. file for a presentation I have to make next week.
#PS TO PDF MIKTEX FULL#
You need to either add the isntall directory to the $PATH or supply a full path to the executable. I am having some difficulty using the Prosper package to generate a PDF. MiKTeX 2.6 runs on Windows Vista, Windows XP, Windows 2000, Windows Me. Note that the Ghostscript installer doesn't add the installation directory to the $PATH environment variable so if you just open a Windows command shell and type 'gswin32c' it won't be found. dvi file to the desired final format (usually. So you want one of gswin32, gswin32c, gswin64 or gswin64c. Well, the executable on Windows isn't called 'gs', it's called gswin followed by either 32 or 64 for the word size and then c if it's the command line (as opposed to windowed) version. Oh I see, you are actually using Windows. LuaTeX cannot include PostScript or Encapsulated PostScript ( EPS ) graphics files first convert them to PDF using miktex-epstopdf (1). I'd drop the -q (quiet) switch as well, at least while trying to solve a problem, suppressing messages could be hiding something useful. In PDF mode, LuaTeX can natively handle the PDF, JPG, JBIG2, and PNG graphics formats. Try and find the Ghostscript executable and run that directly. Ps To Pdf Miktex, search pdf acrobat adobe word expect format pages bundles dip, the qi book of, change book type to dvd-rom. It's odd that 'ps2pdf' which is just a script to run Ghostscript would work, whereas a simple 'gs' would not. This is the approach covered here, although some of it might be applicable to other ones. The one I use is to produce a PostScript file, using dvips, and then convert that to PDF using Acrobat Distiller or GhostScript's ps2pdf command. You can use the -view to bypass the intermediate HTML file.
An HTML viewer is started to view the page. mthelp creates an HTML page which contains a short description of the package together with links to all documentation files.
#PS TO PDF MIKTEX INSTALL#
You appear to be running a non-standard version of Ghostscript, judging by the startup banner, if I were you I would install and use a standard version of Ghostscript, even if you have to build it yourself. There are several ways of producing PDF output from LaTeX/TeX files. mthelp is a utility to look up MiKTeX related documentation. If 'something else' has the output file open then it won't be possible to write to it. If its not installed already, open the MikTeX Package Manager and install the latexmk package. The file that can't be opened is the output file, so if it exists, that would be a potential problem.