diff --git a/penplotting/README.md b/penplotting/README.md index 7ed5e735..a700af52 100644 --- a/penplotting/README.md +++ b/penplotting/README.md @@ -112,7 +112,14 @@ The sketch in [plottable001.html](https://github.com/bbaudry/swart-studio/blob/m Once you are happy with your sketch, save it as an svg, for example [```pointille.svg```](https://github.com/bbaudry/swart-studio/blob/main/penplotting/pointille.svg). * Transform the svg to gcode with [Juicy-GCode](https://github.com/domoszlai/juicy-gcode). Check out the flavor.txt configuration file to fine-tune the generation of the gcode. Put the generated gcode in a file, for example [```pointille.gcode```](https://github.com/bbaudry/swart-studio/blob/main/penplotting/pointille.gcode) * Use [gcode-cli](https://github.com/hzeller/gcode-cli) to draw the sketch on the pen plotter, for example ```g-code-cli pointille.gcode``` - + +### With turtle LOGO + +turtle LOGO as high level API to generate gcode (not yet tried): +* +* + + ## Tools @@ -141,6 +148,7 @@ One has to use line fonts, starting with EMS and Hershey fonts. * [oskay/svg-fonts](https://gitlab.com/oskay/svg-fonts) contains the SVG code for EMS and Hershey fonts * [Andy1978/hf2gcode](https://github.com/Andy1978/hf2gcode) is an end-to-end tool from text to gcode + ## Misc * Version 1.0 of idraw was compatible with EBB commands, not version 2