I wish to save a scatter plot comprising approx. 2 million points in order to include it in a LaTeX document.
Using 'pdf(...)' produces a file of size about 20 MB, which is useless. Using 'cairo_pdf(...)' produces a smaller file, around 3 MB. This is still too large. Not only that the document will be too large, but also PDF viewers choke on this. Moreover, Cairo has problems with text: by default text looks ugly, like scaled bitmaps. After hours of trying different settings, I discovered that choosing a different font family can help, e.g.: 'par(family="Mono")'. This gives good-looking text. Yet, the problem with the file size remains. There exists the hint to produdc EPS instead and then convert to PDF using 'epstopdf'. The resulting PDF files are slightly smaller, but still too large, and PDF viewers still don't like it. So I gave PNG a try. PNG files are much smaller and PDF viewers have no trouble with them. However, fonts look ugly. The same trick that worked for Cairo PDF has no effect for PNG. When I view the PNGs with a dedicated viewer like 'qiv', even the fonts look good. But not when included in LaTeX; I simply use '\includegraphics{...}' and run the document through 'pdflatex'. I tried both, creating PNG with 'png(...)' and converting from PDF to PNG using 'convert' from ImageMagick. So my questions are: - Is there a way to produce sufficiently lean PDFs directly in R, even when the plot comprises several million points? - How to produce a PNG that still looks nice when included in a LaTeX PDF document? Any hints will be greatly appreciated. Thank you Lasse
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