On Tuesday 23 April 2013 15:59:53 Kent A. Reed did opine:

> On 4/22/2013 10:40 PM, Gene Heskett wrote:
> > On Monday 22 April 2013 22:25:37 Kent A. Reed did opine:
> >> On 4/16/2013 7:23 PM, Gene Heskett wrote:
> >>> <clipping out the previous discussion about documenting LinuxCNC
> >>> configurations
> >>> 
> >>> There was a thingy that I assume worked, I installed it last fall,
> >>> but it had one fatal flaw.  It tried to make the whole diagram fit
> >>> on a single sheet of paper, when, in order to have been able to
> >>> read it with a magnifying glass, it would have had to be done in
> >>> multi-page poster style that would have likely used 54 to 100+
> >>> sheets of paper to be taped together before the text in one of the
> >>> teeny little logic boxes would have been big enough to read.
> >>> <...>
> >>> 
> >>> Looking on the lathes box, I find a ~/gene/src/RockHopper directory
> >>> that looks like one of those usual suspects, was that it?
> >>> 
> >>> Cheers, Gene
> >> 
> >> Sorry for coming to the party a week late. I've been very distracted
> >> lately.
> > 
> > Your lady's health?  My sympathies.  I hope she is better now.
> 
> No.
> 
> >> Me thinks you exaggerate the problem just a bit. The Rockhopper
> >> server creates a diagram in SVG. One could save* the diagram to file
> >> from the browser, open the saved file in Inkscape,
> > 
> > I didn't know it was svg.  Hitting ctl+ in the browser did not magnify
> > it enough to be useful so I assume it was spitting out postscript at
> > 72 dpi.
> 
> Unfortunately, the svg rendering engine in Firefox and Chrome doesn't
> support the magnification trick. I don't know if it ever will. There was
> a lot to like about Adobe's SVG Viewer plugin but Adobe killed the
> product 4 years ago.
> 
> >> and either go through
> >> machinations to print it in tiles
> > 
> > I like that idea, and will check it out, but now it will likely be
> > later next week as we're headed to NYS over the weekend, Thursday I'm
> > told.
> 
> Well, I gave alternatives because I think the required "machinations"
> are clumsy. I forget the search term I used to find instructions out
> there in Internet land, some mix of poster and svg I suppose.
> 
> > <...>
> > 
> >> you could modify the Rockhopper Python script
> >> so that in addition to creating the SVG file Graphviz would also
> >> create and save a PDF file for further use.
> > 
> > That would be useful only if the PS engine can be convinced to output
> > a 2400 dpi image before its compressed from the 2+ gigabytes of raw
> > data that would generate.  72 dpi won't cut it.
> 
> You're thinking of an uncompressed bitmap. The diagram is line art that
> is mostly white space. Compression techniques deal with that. As well,
> cranking the resolution up to 2400 dpi shouldn't be necessary.
> 
> For the example configuration file configs/sim/axis/axis.ini, the size
> of the halgraph.svg file saved from the browser is of order 50 KB. Open
> it in Inkscape and "save as" a PDF file with default settings (I forget
> exactly; something less than 100 dpi IIRC). The PDF file size is less
> than 25 KB. Open the PDF file in the Gnome Document Viewer. Zoom to 400
> percent and wait a while for the renderer to catch up. Result looks
> great. Unfortunately, the Document Viewer doesn't know how to print out
> tiled pages...let me rephrase that...I don't know how to make the
> Document Viewer print out tiled pages and as far as I know my printer
> driver doesn't support that function either.
> 
> Hope your trip goes well. To quote the old Hill Street Blues show,
> "let's be careful out there."
> 
> Regards,
> Kent
> 
Well, they took care of the recalls, but of course they have to go over it 
with their fine toothed comb, last time it was a leaking water pump they 
could replace for about $400, (no leak visible, and I haven't added a drop 
of coolant to it yet in 5 moths since that pronouncement of doom) this time 
the front brake pads are down to about 3mm thick.  The disks of course are 
rusty, so they want to replace it all, and then do the rear end another 10k 
down the log.

Gotta find something to help pay for the recalls don'tcha know. :(

I'll look at the pads when I get back, ATM its stopping on a dime, very 
quietly, and giving me back 9 cents change.  I asked if 44k miles was about 
right to do that and the mechanic said no, its usually in the later 30k 
range.  Good drivers are off the loud pedal far enough back they don't have 
to do stoppies at the next traffic light.  And now State Farm wants to put 
a computer tattle tale on it, claiming that will lower our rates.  Sure, 
and that one time a year that I give it a whole cup of good gulf to get out 
of the way of some idiot yakking on a cell phone else get hit, will cost me 
$200 year?  I think not.  That computer thingy might work 99% of the time, 
but it can't see the reason I did that, so screw'em.

Cheers, Gene
-- 
"There are four boxes to be used in defense of liberty:
 soap, ballot, jury, and ammo. Please use in that order."
-Ed Howdershelt (Author)
My web page: <http://coyoteden.dyndns-free.com:85/gene> is up!
My views 
<http://www.armchairpatriot.com/What%20Has%20America%20Become.shtml>
Truth never comes into the world but like a bastard, to the ignominy
of him that brought her birth.
                -- Milton
A pen in the hand of this president is far more
dangerous than 200 million guns in the hands of
         law-abiding citizens.

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