
Hi, I deal with a large number of books that include simple diagrammatic illustrations. I almost always include those as (.png, often 4 or 8 gray's only) images. Theoretically, you could also include such images as SVG (vector graphics), but creating those would be considerably more work -- even though the end result could be great. How to create SVG is up to you, you can use Inkscape, or Metapost, to name just a few options. Other formats are far less widely supported, often cannot be included in a HTML file, and thus less desirable. You could still include the sources you use to create SVG with your submission to PG. Jeroen. On 2020-09-13 19:55, ajhaines wrote:
Not sure what a "transcribed line graph" is, but the simplest way to handle any graphic is to treat it as an illustration.
Al
-----Original Message----- From: gutvol-d <gutvol-d-bounces@lists.pglaf.org> On Behalf Of Joseph Koshy Sent: September 13, 2020 2:11 AM To: gutvol-d@lists.pglaf.org Subject: [gutvol-d] Transcribing line graphs?
What's a good output format to use for transcribed line graphs?
Should I use Gnuplot syntax, or is there some other format that would be preferred?
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