text
stringlengths 0
4k
|
---|
][ |
It's important to remember that many RoundTables on GEnie (Such as the |
FAMILY and Personal Growth RoundTable) frown on the use of excessive |
ASCII art in regular topics. This is due to the fact that users who |
are visually impaired and use voice synthesizers have a heck of a time |
with this stuff... For instance, a blind user coming across the top |
Christmas miniature would hear, "lesser than, backslash, o, O, o, |
slash, greater than..." And that's only the FIRST ROW! Can you |
imagine how irritating that would be? |
Some voice synthesizers do not "pronounce" punctuation, but they do |
pause for many punctuation marks. For instance, if your little ASCII |
picture consists of a lot of periods and commas, the voice synthesizer |
will pause for each. If there's enough there, the user may think that |
he or she was discontinued. |
If you are on a RoundTable and you don't know what their policy is, |
it's best to preface any ASCII art with a warning phrase, placed a |
line above the actual art: "WARNING: ASCII Art to follow." And |
don't be offended if it's returned to you. There are many ASCII Art |
topics on GEnie, and your work is VERY welcome there. :) |
7. Big pictures, or "Bigger is better, right?" |
Though a large picture can be a little intimidating, it is often |
easier to do than a small picture. Large pictures give you room to |
add detail. If you are doing a picture on, say, ten lines, you don't |
have as much room to develop curves and angles. Your work has to be |
much more precise, and it's not always possible. On the other hand, |
on a large picture, you have much more room to develop not only curves |
and angles, but also shading and highlighting. |
Where do you start on a large picture? Well, first of all you'll |
probably want more than one "canvas" to work on. Just add another |
canvas or two on the end of the previous one so that you have plenty |
of room. Get rid of the excess lines between them with the |
"control-y" keysequence. |
Some ASCII artists consistently start with the eyes, if the picture |
HAS eyes. Personally, I start in a different place each time, but |
most often I start on what will give me the most problems. For |
instance, on the tiger I started with the nose. I'm not exactly sure |
WHY that nose was such a bugger (sorry, couldn't resist... :) but once |
I got that done, I figured I could finish the rest of the picture. |
Other times, when there isn't an area that I feel I need to start on, |
I might start at the very top, so that I can get a relative feel for |
the width and length of the picture. |
Once I've started the picture, I will most of the time go ahead and |
tap in the rest of the basic shape. Afterwards I'll go through and |
add the highlighting, shading, and other detail work that I want. |
Sometimes when you're sitting so close to the screen, tapping in the |
pictures, NOTHING you do looks right. If that's the case, stand back |
from the screen.... Or squint your eyes. Or if you wear glasses, take |
them off for a moment. Many times you'll see the picture "come |
together" when you try one of these little tricks. |
When you're finished, make sure you save your picture. You save your |
picture the same way you saved the canvas; hold down the control key, |
hit the K and then the W. When the screen comes up, give your picture |
a name. That way you can bring it up again whenever you'd like. |
8. ASCII Art protocol, or "Gee, this is neat, can I show my friends?" |
ASCII art IS neat, and it's great to get it in the mail. Kids (and |
the kid in all of us) enjoy watching it download, as the picture takes |
shape right before our eyes. Though I can only speak for myself, I |
don't mind at all when pictures are "shared" with others. Some of my |
pictures have been to many different countries, on many other |
continents, and that tickles me. Though tastes differ, appreciation |
of art is something everyone has in common, especially in such a fun, |
unexpected form as ASCII art. What I do ask, though, is that my name |
be left on the picture. If you KNOW the source of the art, include |
the artist's name. It's not enough to put in a line that says, "yes, |
it's stolen." |
There have been times in the past that I've received my OWN artwork |
back in e-mail to me, along with a note that says, "See, you're not |
the only one who can do this stuff..." Even more irritating is seeing |
my own picture with credit given to someone else. This stuff may not |
be as "important" as some great literary work, but ASCII artists DO |
spend an hour or more on each picture to make something that will give |
others pleasure. Give them credit. |
9. Printing up ASCII Art -- or "Eww. Why does this look so bad on paper?" |
Why is it when we print up this ASCII art it looks sort of squatty? |
One reason is that the "characters per inch" is different on the paper |
than it is on the screen. In old "typewriting" terms, "Pica" print is |
ten characters to the inch. "Elite" print is twelve characters to the |
inch. The screen is fairly close to "elite," the default pitch of |
many printers is closer to "pica." The printer will print the |
line character by character rather than inch at a time. The |
difference isn't much, but when the picture is six inches wide, that |
means when it's printed, it'll be seven and a half inches wide. Thus, |
the "squatty" look. To correct it, when you print out the work, |
change the default pitch to something that is closer to the size on |
the screen. If you play with it enough, it'll work out. |
Subsets and Splits
No community queries yet
The top public SQL queries from the community will appear here once available.