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Revision 658 - (show annotations)
Tue Apr 11 08:22:48 2006 UTC (18 years, 10 months ago) by torsten
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Continued restructuring of the repository. Moved folder from skencil.org into the trunk folder.

1 <?xml version="1.0"?>
2 <!DOCTYPE faqlist SYSTEM "FAQ.dtd">
3 <faqlist><title>Frequently Asked Questions about Skencil</title>
4
5 <section><title>About Skencil</title>
6
7 <faq><title>What is Skencil?</title>
8 <body>
9 Skencil is an interactive vector drawing program for GNU/Linux and other
10 UNIX compatible systems. Skencil is implemented almost completely in
11 Python, a very high-level, object oriented, interpreted language, with
12 the rest written in C for speed.
13 </body>
14 </faq>
15
16 <faq><title>Why would I want to use Skencil? I have GIMP!</title>
17 <body>
18 <p>Skencil is a <em>vector drawing program</em>. That means a Skencil drawing
19 is made up of shapes like rectangles, ellipses and curves that can be
20 filled and stroked. Each object is represented by the mathematical
21 description of its shape, e.g. for a circle they're the coordinates of
22 the center point and the length of the radius. Because of this, vector
23 drawings can be scaled without quality loss and it's very easy to change
24 parts of a drawing.</p>
25
26 <p>GIMP, on the other hand, is an <em>image manipulation program</em>.
27 A GIMP image is made up of thousands of pixels and apart from layers has
28 no inner structure. This representation has the advantage that you can
29 easily have a lot of fine detail because each pixel can have a different
30 color, but after you e.g. have drawn a line, all you have is pixels. You
31 can't easily change the position or length or color of the line after
32 you've drawn it. Furthermore, a raster image is always designed with one
33 particular resolution in mind and scaling it often reduces its quality.</p>
34
35
36 <p>Both kinds of graphics programs have their strengths and weaknesses
37 and for some purposes an image manipulation program is the appropriate
38 tool while for others it's the vector drawing program and often you'll
39 need both.</p>
40 </body>
41 </faq>
42
43 <faq id="Webpage"><title>Where can I find out more about Skencil?</title>
44 <body>
45 The best place to go for information about Skencil is its web-page at
46 <a href="http://www.skencil.org/">http://www.skencil.org/</a>.
47 </body>
48 </faq>
49
50 <faq><title>Which Platforms does Skencil work on?</title>
51 <body>
52 <p>
53 The feedback I've got so far about other platforms indicates that Skencil
54 runs on these platforms too:
55 </p>
56
57 <itemize>
58 <item>GNU/Linux on i386, Alpha, m68k, PowerPC and Sparc</item>
59 <item>FreeBSD</item>
60 <item>Solaris 2.5.1, 2.6, 2.7</item>
61 <item>IRIX64 6.4</item>
62 <item>AIX</item>
63 </itemize>
64 </body>
65 </faq>
66
67 </section>
68
69 <section><title>Troubleshooting</title>
70
71 <faq>
72 <title>I get the error message "ImportError: No module named Image"</title>
73 <body>
74
75 <p>This message usually means that the Python Imaging Library (PIL) is not
76 installed on your system, so the solution is to install it.</p>
77
78 <p> URLs for the sources and rpms can be found on Skencil's web-page
79 (see FAQ <faqref id="Webpage"/>) and in the INSTALL file. Some Linux
80 distributions already contain a suitable version of PIL although in some
81 cases they're a bit buggy.</p>
82
83 <p>SuSE Linux 6.2, 6.3 and 6.4, for instance, have a PIL-package, but
84 it's slightly broken. The file /usr/lib/python1.5/site-packages/PIL.pth
85 is missing. To fix this, create that file with just the line 'PIL' in it
86 (without the quotes). (the purpose and syntax of *.pth files is
87 described in /usr/lib/python1.5/site.py)</p>
88
89 </body>
90 </faq>
91
92 <faq>
93 <title>The window resizes when I drag the mouse or change the selection</title>
94 <body>
95 The frequent resizes are caused by the changing texts in the status bar.
96 The best solution is to either use the "--geometry" command line option
97 to set the size of the main window or to put an entry like
98 "sketch.geometry: 900x680" into your .Xdefaults file.
99 </body>
100 </faq>
101
102
103 </section>
104
105
106 <section><title>Using Skencil</title>
107
108 <faq><title>How do I import a PostScript or EPS file?</title>
109 <body>
110
111 <p>That depends on what you want to do exactly.</p>
112
113 <p>If you want to embed an EPS file as a whole into a Skencil drawing,
114 just treat it like a raster image, i.e. use the menu command
115 Edit->Create->Load Image file or use the corresponding toolbar button
116 which is the rightmost one.</p>
117
118 <p>In this case, you get an EPS-object which Skencil displays with a
119 preview image rendered by ghostscript. It behaves very much like a
120 raster image, but when you output your drawing as a postscript file, the
121 EPS' postscript code is copied to the output file.</p>
122
123 <p>If you want to import your postscript file because you want to edit
124 its contents, to change fill colors for example, you can in some
125 circumstances use the normal file loading commands, i.e. File->Open or
126 File->Insert Document, to achieve this. It only works if the file is
127 actually an Illustrator file.</p>
128
129 <p> For other postscript files, have a look at <href
130 url="http://www.geocities.com/SiliconValley/Network/1958/pstoedit/"
131 >pstoedit</href>. It uses ghostscript to interpret arbitrary postscript
132 files and can write several vector file formats, including Skencil's own
133 sk-format.</p>
134 </body>
135 </faq>
136
137 <faq><title>How do I export a drawing as EPS?</title>
138 <body>
139 Just print into a file or use File->Save as PostScript in the menu.
140 Skencil always generates EPS files. You don't have to do anything
141 special.
142 </body>
143 </faq>
144
145 <faq><title>How do I close a curve or polygon?</title>
146 <body>
147 In edit mode, select both end points and invoke the menu command
148 Curve->Close Nodes.
149 </body>
150 </faq>
151
152 <faq><title>How do I rotate an object by a precise angle?</title>
153 <body>
154 Skencil doesn't have a dialog for this yet, but if you want to rotate it
155 by a multiple of 15 degrees, just hold control while rotating the object
156 interactively.
157 </body>
158 </faq>
159
160 <faq>
161 <title>Is there a command line tool to convert sk-files to PostScript?</title>
162 <body>
163 Skencil comes with a script called sk2ps that does just that. It's
164 automatically installed alongside Skencil and can even read all the file
165 formats Skencil can read.
166 </body>
167 </faq>
168
169 </section>
170
171 <section><title>Miscellaneous</title>
172
173 <faq id="FeatureRequest">
174 <title >Why doesn't Skencil have support for &lt;some cool feature&gt;?</title>
175 <body>
176 <p>Depending on what the feature in question is, there are several possible
177 answers.</p>
178
179 <p>The most common reason is simply that nobody has written it yet.
180 There are many useful features that Skencil should have, but currently
181 there's only one Programmer writing code and that severely limits what
182 gets implemented and how fast.</p>
183
184 <p>Of course, not every feature is useful or fits well with the goals
185 of the Skencil project. However, I hope to make Skencil flexible and
186 extensible enough to accommodate such features with plugins and user
187 scripts.</p>
188
189 <p>See also the FAQs about TrueType fonts (<faqref
190 id="TrueTypeFonts"/>) and text encodings (<faqref id="Encodings"/>)</p>
191 </body>
192 </faq>
193
194
195 <faq><title>Which font formats are supported?</title>
196 <body>
197 Currently, Skencil supports only Type 1 fonts.
198 </body>
199 </faq>
200
201
202 <faq id="TrueTypeFonts">
203 <title>Why doesn't Skencil support TrueType fonts?</title>
204 <body>
205 <p>Well, font-handling under Linux/Unix/X is pretty complex. Applications
206 have to do a lot of things themselves that should be provided by the
207 'system' (whatever that means). So it's simply a lot of work and I went
208 the easy route and support only Type1 fonts because X can render them
209 even without any special setup and printing them is no problem because
210 it's the native PostScript font format.</p>
211
212 <p> Now, with FreeType and XFree 4.0, supporting TrueType fonts will
213 become much easier and Skencil will support them one day.</p>
214
215 <p>You may also want to have a look at the CurveText extension or the
216 JapaneseText extension which let you create bezier objects based on
217 TrueType fonts. Both extensions are available through the <href
218 url="addon.html">add-on page</href></p>
219 </body>
220 </faq>
221
222 <faq id="Encodings">
223 <title>Can I input text in ISO-Latin-2 or some other encoding?</title>
224 <body>
225 <p>Unfortunately, no. At least not in the 0.6 stable releases.</p>
226
227 <p>Adding proper support for that would require a lot more work than I
228 want to do for 0.6.x. It would require changes to the way events are
229 handled, text objects would have to know about encodings and the
230 post-script output code as well, and it would require changes to the
231 file format.</p>
232
233 <p>That having been said, one of the goals of the current developer
234 series, 0.7, is better text support including better support for
235 encodings other than ISO-Latin-1. One of the first steps will probably
236 be to switch to unicode internally.</p>
237
238 <p>When I added text support to Skencil, I simply chose the most simple
239 way to handle encodings that would suffice for my needs and that's
240 Latin-1 and some support for font-specific encodings for symbol fonts. I
241 knew of course that this wouldn't be enough in the long run, especially
242 with respect to non-latin scripts and multi-byte character sets, but
243 having a simple implementation that works for many users is always
244 better than to have no usable code because the project gets bogged down
245 in a too complex design, IMO, especially in a Free Software project.</p>
246 </body>
247 </faq>
248
249 </section>
250
251 <section><title>Microsoft Windows specific issues</title>
252
253 <faq id="WindowsImportError">
254 <title>I get "ImportError: DLL load failed" error message when trying to start
255 the program</title>
256
257 <body>
258 <p>The error can be caused by missing DLL libraries or by wrong versions of
259 some DLL libraries on your system.</p>
260
261 <p>If the error message is e.g. "The specified procedure could not be found",
262 you propably have an old version of some GTK-related DLL in your system
263 directory. On Windows, DLLs are searched from system directories before PATH
264 directories. That's why a wrong version of a library can get loaded. To solve
265 the problem, move the offending DLL form the system directory to a non-system
266 directory on PATH.</p>
267
268 <p>DLL problems can usually be solved be examining PyGTK's gobject.pyd using
269 <href url="http://www.dependencywalker.com">Dependency Walker</href>.</p>
270
271 </body>
272 </faq>
273
274 </section>
275
276 </faqlist>
277
278
279

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