% File src/library/tools/man/find_gs_cmd.Rd % Part of the R package, http://www.R-project.org % Copyright 2008-2013 R Core Team % Distributed under GPL 2 or later \name{find_gs_cmd} \alias{find_gs_cmd} \title{ Find a GhostScript Executable } \description{ Find a GhostScript executable in a cross-platform way. } \usage{ find_gs_cmd(gs_cmd = "") } \arguments{ \item{gs_cmd}{The name, full or partial path of a GhostScript executable.} } \details{ The details differ by platform. On a Unix-alike, the GhostScript executable is usually called \command{gs}. The name (and possibly path) of the command is taken first from argument \code{gs_cmd} then from the environment variable \env{R_GSCMD} and default \code{gs}. This is then looked for on the system path and the value returned if a match is found. On Windows, the name of the command is taken from argument \code{gs_cmd} then from the environment variables \env{R_GSCMD} and \env{GSC}. If neither of those produces a suitable command name, \command{gswin64c} and \command{gswin32c} are tried in turn. In all cases the command is looked for on the system \env{PATH}, Note that on Windows (and some other OSes) there are separate GhostScript executables to display Postscript/PDF files and to manipulate them: this function looks for the latter. } \value{ A character string giving the full path to a GhostScript executable if one was found, otherwise an empty string. } \examples{\dontrun{ ## Suppose a Solaris system has GhostScript 9.00 on the path and ## 9.07 in /opt/csw/bin. Then one might set Sys.setenv(R_GSCMD = "/opt/csw/bin/gs") }}