Edited wiki page SVGImport through web user interface.
authorkyberneticist@gmail.com
Mon, 25 Jun 2012 13:03:47 +0000
changeset 232 a0ce457b93f2
parent 231 b5780c560285
child 233 1f18b0e7a80f
Edited wiki page SVGImport through web user interface.
SVGImport.wiki
--- a/SVGImport.wiki	Mon Jun 25 13:02:47 2012 +0000
+++ b/SVGImport.wiki	Mon Jun 25 13:03:47 2012 +0000
@@ -24,17 +24,17 @@
 
 4) Save and Quit
 
-6) Open in an editor and verify there is one path. change the path ID attribute to id="base" - this is to work around a bug in the current stable Inkscape extensions tool which was crashing it.  Make sure all those groups are removed.
+5) Open in an editor and verify there is one path. change the path ID attribute to id="base" - this is to work around a bug in the current stable Inkscape extensions tool which was crashing it.  Make sure all those groups are removed.
 
-7) open the file in Inkscape again, Click on the path again, then go to Extensions->Modify Path->Flatten Beziers and flatten out the curves to your taste. Default of 10 seems fine. 
+6) open the file in Inkscape again, Click on the path again, then go to Extensions->Modify Path->Flatten Beziers and flatten out the curves to your taste. Default of 10 seems fine. 
 
-8) Save and Quit again
+7) Save and Quit again
 
-9) Edit the file, and delete everything but the path data.  You should have a one-line file starting with something like  M1234.3 456.78L3298.3 9023.34 and so on.  The coordinates should now be rounded unless you plan to handle that yourself in some way.  Here is a vim one-liner to do it.
+8) Edit the file, and delete everything but the path data.  You should have a one-line file starting with something like  M1234.3 456.78L3298.3 9023.34 and so on.  The coordinates should now be rounded unless you plan to handle that yourself in some way.  Here is a vim one-liner to do it.
 {{{:s/[0-9][0-9.]*/\=float2nr(floor(submatch(0)*1))/g}}}
 If instead you have a format like M 1234.678,9875.323 2345.0,123.45  - you'll want to convert if you want to try the crude script in (10) - otherwise a smarter script would be needed.  Here's a Vim one-liner for that syntax {{{s/\(\d\) \(\d\)/\1 L\2/g}}}  and {{{s/,/ /g}}}
 
-10) Convert the path data.  Here is a crude script to do that.  Note this one uses a line size of 1 (that's the 0x01 business).
+9) Convert the path data.  Here is a crude script to do that.  Note this one uses a line size of 1 (that's the 0x01 business).
 If you want larger lines you can pick anything between 0x01 and 0x3F.  That's 16-636.  See the map format wiki page.
 {{{
 #!/usr/bin/perl
@@ -57,7 +57,7 @@
 }}}
 {{{script pointdata > hwpointdata}}}
 
-11) qCompress the data.
+10) qCompress the data.
 {{{g++ -I /usr/include/qt4 -I /usr/include/qt4/QtCore qcompress.cpp -lQtCore}}}
 {{{
 #include <QFile>
@@ -75,7 +75,7 @@
 }}}
 {{{./a.out hwpointdata hwpointdata.Z}}}
 
-12) Convert to base64 and you're done!
+11) Convert to base64 and you're done!
 
 {{{base64 -w0 hwpointdata.Z > mynewhedgewars.hwmap}}}