macOS Ventura’s Preview app no longer lets you view PostScript files though you can still print them like before without having to download any apps.

macOS Ventura’s Preview drops PostScript file support

Following the release of the macOS Ventura software update on August 18, 2025, Apple in a newsupport documentannounced that its Preview app no longer supports vector files saved in the PostScript file format.

If your Mac runs the macOS Ventura 13.0 software or later (verify by choosingAbout This Macfrom the Apple menu), you won’t be able to open PostScript (.ps) and Encapsulated PostScript (.eps) files in Preview. The removal is on the system level.

The “macOS Ventura” name in white, set against the default wallpaper

For example, you also cannot preview a PostScript file by selecting it in the Finder and pressing the Space bar. And because the Preview app doesn’t support plugins, don’t hold your breath for third parties to add the missing PostScript support.

How to view PostScript files in macOS Ventura

For those who still deal with PostScript files, the company suggests downloading one of the App Store apps that can view or convert PostScript files. “You can still print .ps and .eps files by dragging them into your printer queue,” Apple notes.

As mentioned, viewing PostScript files in macOS Ventura requires a compatible third-party app such as Adobe Acrobat or Acrobat Distiller, Affinity Publisher or Designer and more. Free apps like the GIMP image editor can convert PostScript vector files into bitmap graphics.Read:How to view print job details in macOS

Thankfully, thepstopdfTerminal command still works.

Why has Apple done this?

Apple wouldn’t say why it removed PostScript support from the Preview app and the rest of macOS Ventura, but we can make informed guesses. On the technical side, Apple chips can certainly handle a vector file format from the 1980s.

This feels like a security move because PostScript files can include embedded scripts, which opens a new potentially dangerous attack vector. For those same reasons, Microsoft removed PostScript support from its Office suite in 2018.

The history of PostScript and why it’s no longer relevant

Even though PostScript is the first major vector file format and one of the oldest formats for storing images, service bureaus nowadays prefer PDFs.

A few decades earlier, however, PostScript was all the rage. Photoshop maker Adobe developed the PostScript format in the 1980s. Envisioned as a page description language, it was quickly adopted by the nascent electronic publishing industry.

Turning text and graphics into printed copies proved PostScript’s major draw. Because PostScript is a mathematical model for object drawing, items like fonts and vector illustrations don’t look blurred when scaled up.

Enter desktop publishing

When PostScript shipped with early Apple printers, suddenly every person with a Mac computer and a LaserWriter printer could produce and print professional-looking documents. Thus, desktop publishing was born.

PostScript usage has been on a steep decline in the past two decades because the ubiquitous PDF file format has slowly but surely become the new PostScript.

Even Adobe itself, the creator of PostScript, admits this. “Now that publishing directly to the web has overtaken print for all but the most dedicated publications, the PostScript file format isn’t as popular as it once was,” reads theAdobe website.

How to save documents in the PostScript format on macOS

macOS Ventura continues to support saving any documents from any app in the PostScript file format, right from within the Save As dialog box.

The document will be saved as a PostScript Level 2 file in ASCII format in the location of your choosing. You can print it by dragging the .ps file into the printer queue.

How to print PostScript files in macOS Ventura

To print one or more files saved in the PostScript (.ps) or Encapsulated PostScript (.eps) file format, simply drag them into the printer queue.

Most people will never encounter PostScript file. As we said, this vector and page description file format has been superseded by the more ubiquitous PDF format.