On 10/1/99, 12:29 AM +0100, Michael Lapsley wrote:
The experience of preparing a Powerpoint talk from the same material was much less satisfactory, however.
Why bother PowerPointing it at all? If you already have the thesis in LaTeX and the graphics in EPS, try using seminar.sty. It's a wonderful style sheet for delivering talks. You can download all the LaTeX files necessary to run seminar.sty in one convenient ZIP file, from ftp://ctan.tug.org/tex-archive/macros/latex/contrib/other/seminar/inputs.zip or ``.tar.gz" in the appropriate place. While that's not an answer to your request for graphics output capabilities in R, it might help you circumvent the question altogether. --Steve Stephen R. Laniel | "I've got a match: Carnegie Mellon University | Your embrace and my collapse." laniel at cmu.edu | --They Might Be Giants -.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.- r-help mailing list -- Read http://www.ci.tuwien.ac.at/~hornik/R/R-FAQ.html Send "info", "help", or "[un]subscribe" (in the "body", not the subject !) To: r-help-request at stat.math.ethz.ch _._._._._._._._._._._._._._._._._._._._._._._._._._._._._._._._._._._._._._._._