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Actually, Roger...
There are binary and ASCII options for saving EPS (Encapsulated PostScript) documents which many Postscript-producing programs offer (most common example: Adobe Acrobat), which place bitmap images in raw binary form within the EPS document, so the resulting EPS is "mixed-mode" text and binary. A human can still read the pure Postscript vector code, while the binary portion of the file has lots of "out of range for ASCII" characters, as you'd expect to see.
Posted by: Yen_z   Posted on: 01/13/05 You are currently: a Guest | Members login | Terms of Use

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Easy technically, but still needs thought  bjcollin | 01/13/05
Not the only problem.  doe_z | 01/13/05
Why not have both?  Argot | 01/13/05
not enough  gsbtech | 01/13/05
To the next level then  bjcollin | 01/13/05
Oooh, too late!  Roger Ramjet | 01/13/05
Actually, Roger...  Yen_z | 01/13/05
Alternatives to binary XML  Argot | 01/13/05
ASN.1 has been around for a million years and translates back and fore  hipparchus2000 | 01/13/05
Simple Solution to XML Compression  mike@... | 01/14/05
XML Compression  jpshade@... | 01/14/05
ASN.1  ivap@... | 01/14/05
Adding a new protocol  dlenoir@... | 01/14/05

What do you think?

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