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I know its the printing step that is the culprit, but I don't know how to fix
it. I printed some images from xv and they look like crap compared to what I
see on the screen. AFAIK screen resolution is always 72 dpi regardless of
how big the monitor is.
Mike
Thomas Charron wrote:
> In article <3A105C74.B558AA0F@scripps.edu>, "Michael DiDonato"
> <did### [at] scrippsedu> wrote:
> > Is there a way to specify the resolution of the images created by
> > POV-RAY? I have created a couple of molecular graphics which look great
> > on screen but when they are printed, they contain jaggies even though
> > they were antialiazed.
>
> I think the printer is more at fault then the image at that point..
>
> > Furthermore, when I open the TGA file in xv (or any other graphics
> > program) it says the resolution is 72dpi. I would like this to be at
> > least 600dpi. Is there a way to specify this in POV-Ray?
>
> DPI is really a *bad* term. You see, where is there a reference to an
> 'inch' in a digital image? I'd imaging that xv is figuring out the size
> of the image, compared to the size of your screen. I mean think about
> it.. Do my images magically have a higher DPI when displayed on a higher
> resolution monitor?
>
> > Any help is appreciated.
>
> What application are you using the print these images? What printing
> system are you going thru? And best of all, what printer are you using?
> Remember, just becouse a printer can print at 600 DPI doesn't mean the
> application is giving it information at this level..
>
> DPI is simply the number of pixels in one inch.
--
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Michael DiDonato, PhD
The Scripps Research Institute
Department of Molecular Biology
Maildrop MB4
10550 North Torrey Pines Road
La Jolla, CA, 92037
Tel: (858) 784-9261
FAX: (858) 784-2277
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