Post AhooUO0Nja2At76Xdg by doctormo@floss.social
(DIR) More posts by doctormo@floss.social
(DIR) Post #AhooUKOLAYp1gGHcQa by conejo@social.tinygo.org
2024-05-05T14:00:23Z
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Dear #OSS community, which is the right tool to create/design a "book" with lots of graphics (more like a comic)? #inkscape ? LaTeX ? forget the book and write markdown/web ?
(DIR) Post #AhooULLBdltScloc9Q by dragonarchitect@rubber.social
2024-05-05T14:17:35Z
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@conejo @DeltaWye I don't know if it's the right tool for the job, but you could also look at Krita as well. It's #OSS and part of the extensive KDE software suite as a standalone raster graphics editor.But if you're looking for vector graphics, Inkscape may still be the most featureful one I currently know of, although the UX is kind of atrocious, at least for my own simple use cases of SVG.
(DIR) Post #AhooUMOlhwLvuAUzNA by dragonarchitect@rubber.social
2024-05-05T14:27:06Z
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@conejo @DeltaWye Oh, I just got informed that Krita is a hybrid. It can do both raster and vector graphics, just like CSP.
(DIR) Post #AhooUNJ8KNRIiys0EC by conejo@social.tinygo.org
2024-05-05T14:31:27Z
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@dragonarchitect @DeltaWye nice , thanks, I already know a little bit of Inkscape, that's why it was the first thing it comes to my mind
(DIR) Post #AhooUO0Nja2At76Xdg by doctormo@floss.social
2024-05-05T18:47:28Z
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@conejo @dragonarchitect @DeltaWye Krita I'd say.I know @davidrevoy uses Krita and then uses inkscape for the text. This is (or at least was) in order to translate the comics, as extracting and replacing text in an svg (xml) is much easier than in krita files themselves.