Actually, quite a few journals do ask for .tiff (or, often, also .eps)
only (as part of their webpage instructions) but my experience has been
that many take .pdf without a lot of fuss.
The OP could try and see if pdf will fly. If not, then (s)he can go
for TIFF images. If this is at the journal
On 5/1/2013 2:49 PM, Frank Harrell wrote:
> Why do you need TIFF? I've never seen a science journal that claims they
> want TIFF figure submissions who are really serious about that. This is a
> very wasteful format. Most journals want PDF.
> Frank
>
There are likely many, but a quick Google is
Why do you need TIFF? I've never seen a science journal that claims they
want TIFF figure submissions who are really serious about that. This is a
very wasteful format. Most journals want PDF.
Frank
Aldo wrote
> I am trying to create a high resolution tiff. It is not working.
>
> I am on Windo
I am trying to create a high resolution tiff. It is not working.
I am on Windows XP 32-bit
R 3.0.0
Code input:
tiff(file="test.tiff",width=6.83,height=6.83,units="in", res=1200)
Return Message:
Error in tiff(file = "test.tiff", width = 6.83, height = 6.83, units =
"in", :
unable to start tif
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