The preview.sty style file: This style file is part of the preview-latex project with home page . The project page at offers downloads and anonymous CVS access for cutting edge versions. The entire package also is available from CTAN at location CTAN:support/preview-latex and separate README and INSTALL files exist for the complete distribution. While the primary focus of the package has been the support of editing in Emacs buffers augmented with preview images, its possible uses are not limited to that. The package extracts indicated pieces from a source file (typically displayed equations, figures and graphics) and typesets with their base point at the (1in,1in) magic location, shipping out the individual pieces on separate pages without any page markup, thus eligible for letting dvips -i -E create separate EPS files. If your ultimate goal is to produce bitmapped graphic files with GhostScript, a special option is provided that will set the PostScript pagesize on each page. In that way, a single pass through GhostScript is sufficient for generating all image files. It is easy to define what commands and constructs should be treated that way. To install the preview style file on its own without fetching the entire preview-latex package, run tex preview.ins If preview.ins happens to be missing, you can regenerate it by running tex docstrip on preview.dtx with the option `installer'. Running TeX on preview.ins will then extract further files: preview.drv which you can run through LaTeX in order to get the documentation for preview.sty, preview.sty itself, a bunch of option files with extension .def and a few configuration files with extension .cfg. In case your docstrip configuration has not already taken care of that, install the files with extension .sty, .def and .cfg to a location where LaTeX will be able to find them, generate the documentation and have fun. The license of the original file is the GPL which you'll find a copy of in the complete preview-latex distribution. The complete distribution will also unpack and install the respective LaTeX files with an autoconf-supported mechanism, so you might consider using that. David Kastrup