The optional width and height arguments to the
@image
command (see the previous section) specify the size to
scale the image to. They are ignored for Info output. If neither is
specified, the image is presented in its natural size (given in the
file); if only one is specified, the other is scaled proportionately;
and if both are specified, both are respected, thus possibly distorting
the original image by changing its aspect ratio.
The width and height may be specified using any valid TeX dimension, namely:
For example, the following will scale a file ridt.eps
to one
inch vertically, with the width scaled proportionately:
@image{ridt,,1in}
For @image
to work with TeX, the file epsf.tex
must be
installed somewhere that TeX can find it. (The standard location is
texmf
/tex/generic/dvips/epsf.tex
, where texmf is a
root of your TeX directory tree.) This file is included in the
Texinfo distribution and is also available from
ftp://tug.org/tex/epsf.tex, among other places.
@image
can be used within a line as well as for displayed
figures. Therefore, if you intend it to be displayed, be sure to leave
a blank line before the command, or the output will run into the
preceding text.