So I went and cleaned up the icons, try out http://ffem.org/~anthonym/dia/BPMN-0.5.0.tar.gz
I'm going to go ahead and start the migration of these into the dia shapes and sheets directories. I know that Alan suggested a Business directory, but I think that the BPMN needs to be in there somewhere. Currently it's placed in a BPMN directory (if you install the tar above), and also currently in each of the shape file <name> tags it has "BPMN - [shape name]". Now, I believe the name is only used to tie the sheet and the shape together, but I could be wrong. Anyway, if I were to switch this to a Business sheet, but left the names containing BPMN would that make sense? Anyway, let me know, also if you have chance to look at the new icons and comment, let me know as well. -Anthony On Thu, Apr 14, 2005 at 10:48:15PM +0100, Alan Horkan wrote: > > On Thu, 14 Apr 2005 [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: > > > > > About a year ago, I created a shape set for drawing BPMN diagrams > > > > (http://www.bpmn.org/). I used it for a while and have had several > > > > people emailing me asking for it, so I thought I'd submit a patch > > > > to have it included in the core dia. > > Forgot to thank you for your generousity, so thanks. :) > > > > Modeling Notation (BPMN). I'm thinking it would be best to label the > > > sheet "Business" and only create a subsheet with the acronym BPNM later if > > > we need to distinguish it from some other types of business diagrams. > > > > > > Please do attach them to a bug report. I'd also be interested to see a > > > sample diagram (screenshot, png format preferably). > > > > > > Using google I found this screenshot of BPMN > > > http://www.bpmn.org/Samples/ebXML_Business_Process/ebXML%20Example.jpg > > > > Okay, I did a quick sample of http://www.bpmn.org/Samples/Chip%20Design.GIF > > and you can see it here http://ffem.org/~anthonym/dia/ChipDesign.png. This > > needs dia 0.94 in order to get backslash arrows and rounded corner > > zigzaglines. > > Looks good, no I take that back it looks great. In a way it is almost > recognisably "made in Dia", as we seem to use a fairly heavy lineweight > and produce larger diagrams. > > > > If you can provide the necessary makefiles and other work to make your > > > shape set translatable that will help speed things along too. Grab a > > > source code tarball and take a look at you the other sheets are done to > > > see what I mean. > > > > I'll get to this over the next few days. If you want to poke at the shape > > set before I get this done, I have a tar here > > Lars provided a line of sed scripting which I found very helpful in > streamlining the taks, I'll try and post it if I can find it again. > > > http://ffem.org/~anthonym/dia/BPMN-0.4.0.tar.gz > > All the icons that have something inside a circle look pretty good and > I'd add them as is and improve them later if you really want. > > I'd be tempted to cheat and make the rectangular objects a bit more > abstract and informative at the expense of not exactly matching the > proportion of the shapes when used. > > Some of the simpler icons could be improved relatively quickly by indexing > the colour and sharpening the grey to black. > > (I'm thinking antialiasing might have an effect on PNG out put but I'm > not so sure) > > > > > The question I have with this is, how do I get my PNGs to look > > > > as nice as those in the other shape sets? > > > > > > Tedious and meticulous hand editing. > > > I used the exported screenshtos only as a guide and essentially redrew > > > them one pixel at a time (using MSPaint of all things, only using other > > > software for the PNG conversion and addition of transparency). > > > > Hmm, I'll have to look around for some tools, I did notice gnome-iconedit > > which might allow me to touch them up. > > Last I checked no one was maintaining gnome-iconedit and it never got > ported to GTK2 (I was tempted to give it a try at one point but never > did). There is always the obvious choice if you need an "Image > Manipulation Program" but I've never particularly liked using it for pixel > by pixel editing. I've found some of the graphics tools in KDE aren't > half bad for this sort of thing. > > > Thanks for the quick feedback. > > I try to provide the speedy responses, Lars and Hans provide the more > detailed technical repsonses. I think we have a good system going :) > > Sincerely > > Alan Horkan > > Inkscape http://inkscape.org > Abiword http://www.abisource.com > Dia http://gnome.org/projects/dia/ > Open Clip Art http://OpenClipArt.org > > Alan's Diary http://advogato.org/person/AlanHorkan/ > > > P.S. Checked overture.com and you do work for the same Overture I was > thinking of. > _______________________________________________ > Dia-list mailing list > [email protected] > http://mail.gnome.org/mailman/listinfo/dia-list > FAQ at http://www.gnome.org/projects/dia/faq.html > Main page at http://www.gnome.org/projects/dia > -- ------------------------------------------------------------------------ Anthony Molinaro <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> _______________________________________________ Dia-list mailing list [email protected] http://mail.gnome.org/mailman/listinfo/dia-list FAQ at http://www.gnome.org/projects/dia/faq.html Main page at http://www.gnome.org/projects/dia
