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    逝者如斯夫

    靜而思之
    數(shù)據(jù)加載中……

    ditaa

    ?

    ditaa is a small command-line utility written in Java, that can
    convert diagrams drawn using ascii art ('drawings' that contain
    characters that resemble lines like | / - ), into proper
    bitmap graphics. This is best illustrated by the following
    example -- which also illustrates the benefits of using ditaa in
    comparison to other methods :)

        +--------+   +-------+    +-------+
        |        | --+ ditaa +--> |       |
        |  Text  |   +-------+    |diagram|
        |Document|   |!magic!|    |       |
        |     sfjcvlm|   |       |    |       |
        +---+----+   +-------+    +-------+
            :                         ^
            |       Lots of work      |
            +-------------------------+
    
    After conversion using ditaa, the above
    file becomes:
    round 		corner demo

    ditaa interprets ascci art as a series of open and closed
    shapes, but it also uses special markup syntax to increase the
    possibilities of shapes and symbols that can be rendered.

    ditaa is open source and free software (free as in free
    speech), since it is released under the GPL license.

    BUT WHY? Does this thing have any real use?

    There are several reasons why I did this:

    1. Simply for hack value. I wanted to know if/how it could be
      done and how easily.
    2. Aesthetic reasons and legacy formats: there are
      several old FAQs with ascii diagrams lying out there. At this
      time and age ascii diagrams make my eyes hurt due to their
      ugliness. ditaa can be used to convert them to something
      nicer. Although ditaa would not be able to convert all of them
      (due to differences in drawing 'style' in each case), it could
      prove useful in the effort of modernising some of those
      documents without too much effort. I also know a lot of people
      that can make an ascii diagram easily, but when it gets to using
      a diagram program, they don't do very well. Maybe this utility
      could help them make good-looking diagrams easily/quickly.
    3. Embedding diagrams to text-only formats: There is a
      number of formats that are text-based (html, docbook, LaTeX,
      programming language comments), but when rendered by other
      software (browsers, interpreters, the javadoc tool etc), they
      can contain images as part of their content. If ditaa was
      intergrated with those tools (and I'm planning to do the javadoc
      bit myself soon), then you would have readable/editable diagrams
      within the text format itself, something that would make things
      much easier. ditaa syntax can currently be embedded to HTML.
    4. Reusability of "code": Suppose you make a diagram in
      ascii art and you render it with version 0.6b of ditaa. You keep
      the ascii diagram, and then version 0.8 comes out, which
      features some new cool effects. You re-render your old diagram
      with the new version of ditaa, and it looks better, with zero
      effort! In that sense ditaa is a diagram markup language, with
      very loose syntax.


    Download

    (((-intro-))) (((-download-))) (((-usage and syntax-))) (((-friends-))) (((-contact-)))

    The latest version of ditaa can be obtained from its SourceForge project page.

    You can checkout the code using:

    ???svn co https://ditaa.svn.sourceforge.net/svnroot/ditaa ditaa

    You can also browse the code online.


    Usage and syntax

    (((-intro-))) (((-download-))) (((-usage and syntax-))) (((-friends-))) (((-contact-)))

    Command line

    You need the latest Java runtimes (JRE) to use ditaa. The best
    anti-aliasing can be achieved using Java 1.5 or higher.

    To start from the command line, type (where XXX is the version number):

    java -jar ditaaXXX.jar

    You will be presented with the command-line options help:

     -A,--no-antialias          Turns anti-aliasing off.
     -d,--debug                 Renders the debug grid over the resulting
                                image.
     -E,--no-separation         Prevents the separation of common edges of
                                shapes. You can see the difference below:
    
    +---------+
    | cBLU    |
    |         |
    |    +----+
    |    |cPNK|
    |    |    |
    +----+----+
    			
    Before processingCommon edge
    separation (default)
    No separation
    (with the -E option)
     -e,--encoding <ENCODING>   The encoding of the input file.
     -h,--html                  In this case the input is an HTML file. The
                                contents of the <pre class="textdiagram"> tags
                                are rendered as diagrams and saved in the
                                images directory and a new HTML file is
                                produced with the appropriate <img> tags.
                                See the HTML section.
        --help                  Prints usage help.
     -o,--overwrite             If the filename of the destination image
                                already exists, an alternative name is chosen.
                                If the overwrite option is selected, the image
                                file is instead overwriten.
     -r,--round-corners         Causes all corners to be rendered as round
                                corners.
     -s,--scale <SCALE>         A natural number that determines the size of
                                the rendered image. The units are fractions of
                                the default size (2.5 renders 1.5 times bigger
                                than the default).
     -S,--no-shadows            Turns off the drop-shadow effect.
     -t,--tabs <TABS>           Tabs are normally interpreted as 8 spaces but
                                it is possible to change that using this
                                option. It is not advisable to use tabs in
                                your diagrams.
     -v,--verbose               Makes ditaa more verbose.
    

    Syntax

    Round corners

    If you use / and \ to connect corners, they are rendered as
    round corners:

    /--+
    |  |
    +--/
    		  
    round corner demo
    Before processingRendered

    Color

    Color codes can be used to add color to the diagrams. The
    syntax of color codes is

    cXXX

    where XXX is a hex number. The first digit of the number
    represents the red compoment of the color, the second digit
    represents green and the third blue (good ol' RGB). See below for
    an example of use of color codes:

    /----\ /----\
    |c33F| |cC02|
    |    | |    |
    \----/ \----/
    
    /----\ /----\
    |c1FF| |c1AB|
    |    | |    |
    \----/ \----/
    		  
    color demo
    Before processingRendered

    This can become a bit tedious after a while, so there are (only
    some for now) human readable color codes provided:

    Color codes
    /-------------+-------------\
    |cRED RED     |cBLU BLU     |
    +-------------+-------------+
    |cGRE GRE     |cPNK PNK     |
    +-------------+-------------+
    |cBLK BLK     |cYEL YEL     |
    \-------------+-------------/
    
    color code
    Before processingRendered

    As you can see above, if a colored shape contains any text, the
    color of the text is adjusted according to the underlying
    color. If the undelying color is dark, the text color is changed
    to white (from the default black).

    Note that color codes only apply if they are within closed
    shapes, and they have no effect anywhere outside.

    Tags

    ditaa recognises some tags that change the way a rectangular
    shape is rendered. All tags are between { and }. See the table below:

    NameOriginalRenderedComment
    Document
    +-----+
    |lbmqqgl  |
    |     |
    |     |
    +-----+
    		  
    Symbol representing a document.
    Storage
    +-----+
    |{s}  |
    |     |
    |     |
    +-----+
    		  
    Symbol representing a form of storage,
    like a
    database or a hard disk.
    Input/Output
    +-----+
    |{io} |
    |     |
    |     |
    +-----+
    		  
    Symbol representing input/output.

    Dashed lines

    Any lines that contain either at least one = (for horizontal
    lines) or at least one : (for vertical lines) are rendered as
    dashed lines. Only one of those characters can make a whole line
    dashed, so this feature "spreads". The rationale behind that is
    that you only have to change one character to switch from normal
    to dashed (and vice versa), rather than redrawing the whole
    line/shape. Special symbols (like document or storage symbols) can
    also be dashed. See below:

    ----+  /----\  +----+
        :  |    |  :    |
        |  |    |  |{s} |
        v  \-=--+  +----+
    
    Before processingRendered

    Point markers

    If * is encountered on a line (but not at the end of the
    line), it is rendered as a special marker, called the point
    marker (this feature is still experimental). See below:

    *----*
    |    |      /--*
    *    *      |
    |    |  -*--+
    *----*
    
    point marker demo
    Before processingRendered

    Text handling

    (This section is still being written)

    If the pattern ' o XXXXX' is encountered, where XXXXX is any
    text, the 'o' is interpreted and rendered as a bullet point. Note
    that there must be a space before the 'o' as well as after it. See
    below:

    /-----------------\
    | Things to do    |
    | cGRE            |
    | o Cut the grass |
    | o Buy jam       |
    | o Fix car       |
    | o Make website  |
    \-----------------/
    
    bullet point demo
    Before processingRendered

    ?

    HTML mode

    When ditaa is run using the --html option, the input
    is an HTML file. The contents of the <pre
    class="textdiagram">
    tags are rendered as diagrams and
    saved in the images directory and a new HTML file is
    produced with the appropriate <img> tags.

    If the id parameter is present in the
    <pre> tag, its value is used as the filename of the
    rendered png. Otherwise a filename of the form
    ditaa_diagram_X.png is used, where X is a
    number. Similarly, if there is no output filename specified, the
    converted html file is named in the form of
    xxxx_processed.html, where xxxx is the filename of the
    original file.

    In this mode, files that exist are not generated again, they
    are just skipped. You can force overwrite of the files using the
    --overwrite option.

    posted on 2013-11-03 15:21 ideame 閱讀(531) 評(píng)論(0)  編輯  收藏


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