AsciiWriter: Difference between revisions

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* https://darc.au.dk/publications/peer-reviewed-newspaper#c40171
* https://darc.au.dk/publications/peer-reviewed-newspaper#c40171
* https://git.vvvvvvaria.org/mb/data-workers-publication
* https://git.vvvvvvaria.org/mb/data-workers-publication
* https://monoskop.org/media/text/tenen_2017_plain_text/


'''Gallery'''
'''Gallery'''
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File:Plaintext-partyline-varia.png|Plaintext Partyline, made by Varia/Manetta Berends, https://varia.zone/en/plaintext-partyline.html
File:Plaintext-partyline-varia.png|Plaintext Partyline, made by Varia/Manetta Berends, https://varia.zone/en/plaintext-partyline.html
File:Research refusal spread-cover.png|Peer-reviewed Newspaper Vol 10 No 1 (2021): RESEARCH REFUSAL, made by OSP/Gijs de Heij, https://darc.au.dk/publications/peer-reviewed-newspaper#c40171
File:Research refusal spread-cover.png|Peer-reviewed Newspaper Vol 10 No 1 (2021): RESEARCH REFUSAL, made by OSP/Gijs de Heij, https://darc.au.dk/publications/peer-reviewed-newspaper#c40171
File:Osp-gijs-de-heij-kask-workshop.png|KASK Open Design workshop, example for posters made with plain text, made by OSP/Gijs de Heij
File:Osp-gijs-de-heij-kask-workshop.png|KASK Open Design workshop, example for posters made with plain text, made by OSP/Gijs de Heij, https://gitlab.constantvzw.org/osp/workshop.odc2019
File:Data-workers.en.cover.png|Cover of the Data Workers publication, made by Manetta Berends for Algolit, https://www.algolit.net/index.php/Data_Workers_Publication
File:Data-workers.en.cover.png|Cover of the Data Workers publication, made by Manetta Berends for Algolit, https://www.algolit.net/index.php/Data_Workers_Publication
File:Data-workers-plain-text.png|Screenshot of the Data Workers publication previewed in plain text, made by Manetta Berends for Algolit, https://git.vvvvvvaria.org/mb/data-workers-publication
File:Data-workers-plain-text.png|Screenshot of the Data Workers publication previewed in plain text, made by Manetta Berends for Algolit, https://git.vvvvvvaria.org/mb/data-workers-publication
</gallery>
</gallery>
=Some thoughts=
AsciiWriter is a Python library that can be used to generate plain text graphics and lay outs. The tool is embedded in a network of practices, scripts and events around [https://osp.kitchen OSP] and [https://varia.zone Varia], in which plain text has been used to generate visuals and publications, such as the [https://www.algolit.net/index.php/Data_Workers_Publication Data Workers, an exhibition catalog for Algolit (March 2019)], a [https://gitlab.constantvzw.org/osp/workshop.odc2019 plaintext poster workshop at the Open Design Course at KASK (September 2019)], [https://varia.zone/en/plaintext-partyline.html Plaintext Partyline at Varia (April 2021)] and a [https://darc.au.dk/publications/peer-reviewed-newspaper#c40171 Peer-reviewed Newspaper made with asciiWriter (summer 2021)].
Turning AsciiWriter into an pip-installable Python library was actually also an exploration in itself, both Gijs de Heij and myself had never done that before, and we were curious to give it a try. What does it mean to turn a bunch of scripts that are stored in git repo's here and there into something that is installable Python library? Would other people use and transform it? Do we need to maintain this library?
During the radio conversation [[https://vvvvvvaria.org/archive/2022-10-publishing-partyline/publishing-partyline-radio-series-1-with-OSP-07-Sept-2022.ogg ''Standards and work arounds, with Open Source Publishing (OSP)''], initiated by Simon Browne and myself in the context of the [https://varia.zone/en/publishing-partyline.html Publishing Partyline], the notion of ''tools'' was central to understanding what impact tool-making has on a design or publishing practice. What is the difference between a tool and a set of scripts? Is the gesture of turning something into a tool a gesture of claiming ownership and authorship? When we discussed the html2print project of OSP during the radio conversation, Alex, Gijs, Doriane and Amélie explained how the project first emerged as an experiment, but then grew into an approach and ecosystem. Something like a boilerplate that invites you to adapt it, a collection of hacks, or a tool chain. They preferred to look at it as a collection of practices, rather than a solid/fixed tool.
The conversation with OSP is recorded and can be found  here].
<blockquote>
Matrix - matriz in Spanish, matris in Tagalog, the womb
The intimate nature of an organization is visible in the way
it holds information on its spreadsheets. To hold information
womblike, allowing nutritive forces to find their way to
what is being gestated. X, Y, axes to determine sex and maybe gender
chromosomally. When an X-Y matrix is populated with information
linearly, the possibility of curvature arises, of reading data
on multiple hair-pin turns, down a column, through a row, and inter-lineally in other directions. It is this turning of attention on multiple tangent points
that allows an anti-linear (?) reading. More than anti-linear,
I would say it's hyperlinear. The greater the multiplicity
of data points to turn on, the higher the possibility of
representing fluid life forms. Am thinking about a drawing
exercise I saw today on a meme account. It was an exercise
from 1910. The instructions were to draw a cat using only angular
lines.
Clara Balaguer, https://vvvvvvaria.org/plaintext-partyline/
</blockquote>




=Use asciiWriter=
=Use asciiWriter=
(Psst: this is incomplete documentation...)


== marks ==
== marks ==

Revision as of 15:33, 7 April 2023


About asciiWriter

A python library to draw with plain text in ASCII art style (but with Unicode).

Install

$ pip3 install asciiwriter

Links

Gallery


Some thoughts

AsciiWriter is a Python library that can be used to generate plain text graphics and lay outs. The tool is embedded in a network of practices, scripts and events around OSP and Varia, in which plain text has been used to generate visuals and publications, such as the Data Workers, an exhibition catalog for Algolit (March 2019), a plaintext poster workshop at the Open Design Course at KASK (September 2019), Plaintext Partyline at Varia (April 2021) and a Peer-reviewed Newspaper made with asciiWriter (summer 2021).

Turning AsciiWriter into an pip-installable Python library was actually also an exploration in itself, both Gijs de Heij and myself had never done that before, and we were curious to give it a try. What does it mean to turn a bunch of scripts that are stored in git repo's here and there into something that is installable Python library? Would other people use and transform it? Do we need to maintain this library?

During the radio conversation [Standards and work arounds, with Open Source Publishing (OSP), initiated by Simon Browne and myself in the context of the Publishing Partyline, the notion of tools was central to understanding what impact tool-making has on a design or publishing practice. What is the difference between a tool and a set of scripts? Is the gesture of turning something into a tool a gesture of claiming ownership and authorship? When we discussed the html2print project of OSP during the radio conversation, Alex, Gijs, Doriane and Amélie explained how the project first emerged as an experiment, but then grew into an approach and ecosystem. Something like a boilerplate that invites you to adapt it, a collection of hacks, or a tool chain. They preferred to look at it as a collection of practices, rather than a solid/fixed tool.

The conversation with OSP is recorded and can be found here].

Matrix - matriz in Spanish, matris in Tagalog, the womb The intimate nature of an organization is visible in the way it holds information on its spreadsheets. To hold information womblike, allowing nutritive forces to find their way to what is being gestated. X, Y, axes to determine sex and maybe gender chromosomally. When an X-Y matrix is populated with information linearly, the possibility of curvature arises, of reading data on multiple hair-pin turns, down a column, through a row, and inter-lineally in other directions. It is this turning of attention on multiple tangent points that allows an anti-linear (?) reading. More than anti-linear, I would say it's hyperlinear. The greater the multiplicity of data points to turn on, the higher the possibility of representing fluid life forms. Am thinking about a drawing exercise I saw today on a meme account. It was an exercise from 1910. The instructions were to draw a cat using only angular lines.

Clara Balaguer, https://vvvvvvaria.org/plaintext-partyline/


Use asciiWriter

(Psst: this is incomplete documentation...)

marks

With marks you can specify what kind of text you are passing on to asciiWriter.

random()

sentence(str)

text(str)

single(str)

space(str)

patterns

You can draw patterns with the following functions.

diagonal(x, y, width, height, mark, blank)

Draw a diagnal line from top left to bottom right.

cross(x, y, width, height, mark, blank)

Draw two diagonals.

horizontal(y)

Draw horizontal line at given Y position.

vertical(x)

Draw a vertical line at given X position.

sinus_vertical(period=0.2, amplitude=0.5, offset_t=0, offset=0)

Draw a sinus shape vertically.

sinus_horizontal(period=0.2, amplitude=0.5, offset_t=0, offset=0)

Draw a sinus shape horizontally.

image(path, threshold=128)

Put marks based on a mask. Requires Pillow to be installed.

$ pip3 install pillow

text

utils

wrap_single_line