SVG to Keynote
Wow, this was surprisingly hard. I have fallen in love with Keynote, Apple's presentation software. It provides a number of features not available in other software I am familiar with. My favorite is Magic Move. You copy one object from one slide to the next, change it a little bit (change the text, move the picture, etc.) and Keynote will automatically animate the change. I love it.
However, as great as Keynote is, it was very difficult to get an SVG file converted to use in Keynote. Everything uses SVG, more or less, except the iWorks suite. Why, I don't know. There are three programs I tried to to get the file converted. They all said that they could do it. Two of them that was all they do. But, they weren't compatible with the version of Keynote that came with my Mac. I even bought a $4.99 app that didn't work. (I have already emailed the company asking for my money back.)
I then kept looking and found that Keynote uses a PDF like format for graphics. The blog recommended converting from SVG to PDF and importing that way. I remembered that Inkscape, my favorite vector image editor, can save in PDF format so I gave it a try. What do you know, it worked. And worked very well. Should Keynote support SVG? Maybe. But as long as PDF works well for it I am fine. At least now I am.
Thanks to this blog post for pointing me in the right direction.
However, as great as Keynote is, it was very difficult to get an SVG file converted to use in Keynote. Everything uses SVG, more or less, except the iWorks suite. Why, I don't know. There are three programs I tried to to get the file converted. They all said that they could do it. Two of them that was all they do. But, they weren't compatible with the version of Keynote that came with my Mac. I even bought a $4.99 app that didn't work. (I have already emailed the company asking for my money back.)
I then kept looking and found that Keynote uses a PDF like format for graphics. The blog recommended converting from SVG to PDF and importing that way. I remembered that Inkscape, my favorite vector image editor, can save in PDF format so I gave it a try. What do you know, it worked. And worked very well. Should Keynote support SVG? Maybe. But as long as PDF works well for it I am fine. At least now I am.
Thanks to this blog post for pointing me in the right direction.
Comments
svg2pdf: stable 0.1.3 (bottled)
Renders SVG images to a PDF file (using Cairo)
http://cairographics.org/
/usr/local/Cellar/svg2pdf/0.1.3 (8 files, 26.8K) *
Poured from bottle
From: https://github.com/Homebrew/homebrew-core/blob/master/Formula/svg2pdf.rb
==> Dependencies
Build: pkg-config ✔
Required: libsvg-cairo ✔
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