From jason@village.njit.edu Mon Feb 10 14:28:59 1997
Return-Path: <jason@village.njit.edu>
Received: from shasha.cs.nyu.edu by MERV.CS.NYU.EDU (4.1/1.30)
	id AA23539; Mon, 10 Feb 97 14:28:58 EST
Received: from njitgw.njit.edu by shasha.cs.nyu.edu (SMI-8.6/1.20)
	id OAA25311; Mon, 10 Feb 1997 14:29:03 -0500
Received: from village (village.njit.edu [128.235.33.106]) by njitgw.njit.edu (8.6.11/8.6.9) with SMTP id OAA07807 for <shasha@shasha.cs.nyu.edu>; Mon, 10 Feb 1997 14:28:51 -0500
Received: by village (5.x/SMI-SVR4)
	id AA14033; Mon, 10 Feb 1997 14:17:02 -0500
Date: Mon, 10 Feb 1997 14:17:02 -0500
From: jason@village.njit.edu (Dr. Jason Tsong-Li Wang)
Message-Id: <9702101917.AA14033@village>
To: shasha@shasha.cs.nyu.edu
Subject: Re: eps file
Status: R
Content-Length: 722

Dennis,
In xfig, when one clicks on Export, one can see
a pull down menu, in which they list encapsulated
postscript option. Clicking on that option produces
an eps file.
To my knowledge, the difference between eps and ps
is that the former has a bounding box, whereas the latter doesn't.
eps is supported by latex, and therefore does not need
any extra macro (e.g. \include{psfig}).
Tsong-Li

>From shasha@shasha.cs.nyu.edu Sun Feb  9 19:14 EST 1997
Date: Sun, 9 Feb 1997 19:26:12 -0500
>From: shasha@shasha.cs.nyu.edu (Dennis Shasha)
To: jason@village.njit.edu, wang@shasha.cs.nyu.edu
Subject: eps file

Dear Tsong-Li,
I notice that you don't use psfig in this version.
How do you create an eps file?
Thanks,
Dennis





