And I could just use Windows Paint! It’s actually not that bad. Now, this is a jpeg, but I do have a PostScript version too. I just want to change the dates from ‘3 and 4′ to ’29 and 30’ because the one on 3 and 4 sold out and we’re scheduling another one. The designer works in InDesign, but I don’t have access to that. Here is my image: The image I want to update Having said that, the non-native (Cairo) import into SVG seems to work better than the native one. Various command line switches can be used to tune the results. $ find /path/to/parent/folder -name "*.svg" -exec /cygdrive/c/Program\ Files/Inkscape/bin/inkscape.exe -export-dpi=72 -export-type=png \ So we can use find to walk the file hierarchy and inkscape to convert things when we find them. Or I can specify a type and it will use the old file name with a new extension: $ /cygdrive/c/Program\ Files/Inkscape/bin/inkscape.exe -export-dpi=72 -export-type=png filename.svg I can see how to use Inkscape from the command line: $ /cygdrive/c/Program\ Files/Inkscape/bin/inkscape.exe -helpĪnd I see that I can ask it to export to a file type, and it will guess the output format based on the output file extension. I can see what PNG files I already have: $ find. I can see a list of all my SVG files, after I cd to the parent directory. So Cygwin gives me all the useful Linux/UNIX command line tools, and the one that we’re going to work with now is find. It has a Windows install of Inkscape in (in Cygwin notation): /cygdrive/c/Program Files/Inkscape/bin/inkscape.exe I have a Windows machine with Cygwin on it.
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