005> ASSIGN/GRAPH postscriptIn your directory we now have a PostScript file postscript.ps, containing the complete plot information written by the commands 006 and 007. Now, you can include this MIDAS PostScript file in our LATEX document, in this case using psfig, developed by Trevor Darrell (trevor@media.mit.edu). Here is how the LATEX text file with the included MIDAS plot then looks like.
MIDAS 006> PLOT/ROW image [@100,@150:@150,@250] 20.0,20.0
MIDAS 007> OVERPLOT/TABLE table #1
\documentstyle[11pt,psfig]{article} \begin{document} \section*{Abstract} We show a simple example of how one can include a PostScript figure, generated by MIDAS, into a existing \LaTeX document. \nopagebreak \begin{figure}[h] \centering{ \hspace*{-1.cm} \vbox{\psfig{figure=postscript.ps,width=10cm,height=5cm}}\par } \end{figure} \end{document}