Page Numbers: Yes X: 527 Y: 10.5"qj(635)\g Inter-Office Memorandumz18592l4445y762\f5bg To Griffin Users Date October 28, 1981z18592l4445d2998e21(0,65535)(1,4445)(5,11684)(6,14146)\f1g2f0t2 1t0 13t6 1f1t0 4f0t7 1t0 From Maureen Stone Location Palo Altoz18592l4445d2998y716e25\f1g4f0t2 1t0 13t6 1f1t0 8f0t7 1t0 Subject How to use Griffin Organization ISLz18592l4445d2998e25\f1g7f0t2 1t0 18t6 1f1t0 12f0t7 1t0 Filed on: [Indigo]Release>HowToUseGriffin.presse30(2116)\f1g What is Griffin?z18556e60j(1270)\f5bg Griffin is a stand-alone interactive illustrator for creating full-page color illustrations composed of lines, curves, filled areas, and captions. Illustrations are constructed on the screen using the mouse and menus, and can then be printed at high resolution on a color press printer such as the Puffin or Pimlico.z18556e18j\g To run Griffin, you must have an Alto II with at least 2 banks (128K) of memory and Mesa6 proms, a Dophin or a Dorado. Run the command file [Indigo]Release>NewGriffin.cm, which will retrieve the following files:z18556e12j\g Griffin.run: the illustrator itself.z18556l4268e6j\g Griffin.fonts: contains a selection of fonts.z18556l4268e6j\g ColorChart.griffin: contains a sample of all the Griffin colors.z18556l4268e6j\g Circle.griffin: contains a closed curve which approximates a circle.z18556l4268e6j\g To run Griffin, you must have Griffin.run on your disk, along with Griffin.fonts or at least one strike font (for the menus), and a current fonts.widths. To enter the illustrator, type:z18556e12j\g Griffin RETURNz18556l4268e6j\g8f1 6f0 To exit from Griffin, bug Quit' on the master menu. A menu will be displayed asking for confirmation (Yes' or No').z18556e12j\g Fontsz18556e30j\f5bg Fonts are chosen from a menu that lists all the fonts in Griffin.fonts. To add to this list, simply load the desired strike fonts onto your disk and start Griffin. Griffin will use the information in the strike font plus the information in fonts.widths to make new entries in Griffin.fonts. There is currently no way to delete fonts other than deleting Griffin.fonts and starting over.z18556e12j\g Griffin tries to make displayed and printed text strings look the same by using the information in fonts.widths to position text on the screen. The positioning parameters are set when the font is entered into Griffin.fonts. Therefore, it is important that you generate Griffin.fonts using the version of fonts.widths that matches your printer. In general, if printed captions are mispositioned, rebuilding Griffin.fonts with the correct version of fonts.widths should fix the problem. z18556e12j\g Color Griffinz18556e30j\f5bg There is a version of Griffin which will run on a Dorado with a color monitor. Color Griffin may be found on [Indigo]Color>Griffin.image. You can use the command file above to retrieve the auxillary files from [Indigo]Release>.z18556e12j\g Objectsz18556e30j\f5bg The basic graphical unit in Griffin is the object. Single objects may be grouped in a cluster, which behaves as a single object for most operations. The basic unit to be printed or saved is the illustration, which may be composed of any number of objects.z18556e18j\g43i7I37i8I101i13I There are three types of object in Griffin: shapes, captions, and control objects. Shapes consist of straight and curved lines, either singly or linked end-to-end into more complex figures, and may be either closed (end points linked) or open (end points not linked). Closed shapes may be filled with a solid color. Captions are composed of text typed from the keyboard, which may be rotated by any multiple of 90 degrees.z18556e12j\g85i6I56i6I57i6I24i4I76i8I Control objects that may appear on the Griffin screen include menus, control points, and the control grid. Control points are used in defining the geometry of shapes, and are placed and deleted with the mouse. The grid is provided as an aid in placing objects and control points precisely.z18556e12j\ig15I47i22I9i13I Every object has a geometry and a style. The geometry of shapes is defined by placing control points and fitting lines or curves through them. For captions, the geometry consists of an anchor position and a text string. Style attributes include such things as color, line thickness, font, etc. The style of an object can be changed without affecting the geometry, and vice versa.z18556e12j\g19i8I7i6I Objects have a definite order of overlap. A newly created object is always placed at the top; operations are available for explicitly changing and controlling the overlap order of the objects in an illustration. Filled shapes are opaque, obscuring those below them in the overlap order. Shapes that are not filled are transparent, except on the border.z18556e12j\g33i8I Menusz18556e30j\f5bg All Griffin commands are entered by menu selection. The keyboard is used only for typing captions and file names. Menu items are selected by clicking down over the desired item on the menu with any of the three mouse buttons. Outside of the menus, the three mouse buttons have different functions, described below under Mouse Operations'.z18556e18j\g Menus appear on top of the picture being drawn; they can be moved around to provide access to all parts of the picture. The master menu, always visible on the screen, controls the display of other menus used for various specialized purposes. Each item on the master menu is a toggle that can be turned on and off by repeated clicking with the mouse. Turning one of these toggles on causes the associated menu to appear on the screen; when the toggle is turned off, the menu vanishes. Some of the second-level menus in turn include toggles that control even more specialized submenus.z18556e12j\g125i12I141i6I294i9I Some menus, known as one-of-many menus, have the property that only one item on the menu may be selected at a time. Selecting any item on such a menu automatically deselects the previously selected item.z18556e12j\g21i18I z18556x0j\g The following table summarizes the various menus available in Griffin and the toggles that control them.z18556e12j\g Menu Toggle On menuz18556l4903e12j\g Master menu Always present - - - -z18556l4903e12j\g Edit menu Edit' Master menuz18556l4903e6j\g *Shape menu Edit' Master menuz18556l4903e6j\g *Spline type menu Spline Type' Edit menuz18556l4903e6j\g Object menu Objects' Master menuz18556l4903e6j\g File menu Files' Master menuz18556l4903e6j\g Transform menu Transform' Master menuz18556l4903e6j\g Overlap menu Overlap' Master menuz18556l4903e6j\g View menu View' Master menuz18556l4903e6j\g Style menu Style' Master menuz18556l4903e6j\g *Thickness menu Shape Style' Style menuz18556l4903e6j\g *Color control menu Shape Style' Style menuz18556l4903e6j\g *Line color menu Color Style' Style menuz18556l4903e6j\g *Area color menu Color Style' Style menuz18556l4903e6j\g *String rotation menu Text Style' Style menuz18556l4903e6j\g *Character rotation menu Text Style' Style menuz18556l4903e6j\g *Font menu Text Style' Style menuz18556l4903e6j\g *Anchoring menu Text Style' Style menuz18556l4903e6j\g *One-of-many menuz18556l4903e12j\g User Messagesz18556e24j\f5ig User messages (prompts, warnings, etc.) are displayed as a special menu containing the message in inverted video (white on black). Bugging this menu makes it disappear. It is always possible to continue running Griffin after the appearance of one of these messages.z18556e18j\g z18556x0j\g Mouse Operationsz18556e30j\f5bg16B Griffin uses each of the three mouse buttons for two different operations, depending on whether you hold down the SHIFT key while pressing the button. The following table summarizes the mouse operations:z18556e18j\g114f1 5f0 Mouse button: Left Middle Rightz18556l4903e12j Without SHIFT key Move object Place control point Select objectz18556l4268e12j With SHIFT key Copy object Delete control point Deselect objectz18556l4268e6j Draw-through -- All in rectangle Select/deselect (delete only) all in rectanglez18556l4268e6j Objects affected Shapes -- Shapes Captions Captions Clusters Clusters Control objects (move only)z18556l4268e6j Selecting and Deselecting Objectsz18556e24j\f5ig Many Griffin operations apply to one or more objects selected in the illustration. To select an object, bug it with the right mouse button; to deselect a selected object, bug it with the right button while holding down the SHIFT key. If the object is part of a cluster, the entire cluster is selected or deselected.z18556e18j\g53i8I163f1 5f0 Drawing diagonally through a rectangle (button down, move, button up) selects/deselects all objects entirely contained in the rectangle. If any object in a cluster would be selected/deselected in such a draw-through operation, the entire cluster is selected/deselected.z18556e12j\g Selection is indicated by a small square token displayed on each selected object. For shapes, the selection token is displayed at some point on the edge. For captions, it is displayed at the anchor point. If the object is completely obscured (either by overlying objects or by the selection token itself), the token appears as a slashed box. A selected cluster is indicated by a square token with a small letter c' in it, displayed on the topmost object (in overlap order) of the cluster.z18556e12j\g Move and Copyz18556e24j\f5ig Any Griffin object may be moved by pressing down the left mouse button over any point on the object, moving the mouse, and releasing the button at the new location. (A menu must be moved by its frame, the grey border surrounding the text.) The object is repositioned so that the point on the object that was under the down stroke of the mouse is moved to the location of the up stroke. If the object is part of a cluster, the entire cluster is moved as a unit. Holding down the SHIFT key during this operation causes a copy of the object (shape, cluster, or caption) to be placed at the indicated position, leaving the original object undisturbed. The copy is placed at the top of the overlap order; if the original object was selected before the copy operation, the selection transfers to the new copy.z18556e18j\g195i6I281f1 5f0 36i4I Placing and Deleting Control Pointsz18556e24j\f5ig Control points are displayed as small crosses. They are placed by clicking the middle mouse button and deleted by clicking the same button while holding down the SHIFT key. Drawing through a rectangle with the shifted middle button deletes all control points in the rectangle. All control points on the screen are ordered in the sequence in which they were placed. Any new control point goes after all the previous ones, and there is no way to change the order. There is currently no good way to determine the order of the existing control points other than to plot a curve through them.z18556e18j\ig14I149f1 5f0 Creating and Modifying Objectsz18556e30j\f5bg30B Shapes (graphical objects) are created and modified with the commands on the edit and shape menus, in conjunction with control points placed on the screen with the mouse. These menus are both controlled by the Edit' toggle on the master menu. Other attributes of the object to be created are specified on the various style menus (see Styles', below).z18556e18j\g77i4I4i13I222i11I Drawing Shapesz18556e24j\f5ig To create a graphical object, place a series of control points in order with the middle mouse button, make sure the desired style attributes have been selected, then bug Draw' or Close', for an open or closed shape, respectively. The type of shape to be drawn (straight-line or curved) is specified with the Line' or Curve' option on the shape menu. [For the aficionado, the menu item Spline Type' expands a one-of-many menu of various methods of curve fitting. These methods are explained in greater detail in the section Curve Fitting' at the end of this document.] The color control menu (see below) determines whether a closed object will be filled, outlined, or both.z18556e18j\g357f1 218f0 7i18I For linked objects with more than one link, place the control points for each link separately, select Line' or Curve' for that link, then bug Draw Link' for all but the last link. After placing the control points for the last link, bug Draw' or Close'. Back Link' is used to back up one link while editing.z18556e12j\g The special-purpose Box' command on the edit menu allows you to draw rectangles easily by placing just two control points, representing the endpoints of the rectangle's diagonal.z18556e12j\g Creating Captionsz18556e24j\f5ig To create a caption, place a control point, then type the caption. After the first character is typed, the control point will turn into a blinking caret. The backspace key backs up one character; the backword'' key (BW on the Alto II keyboard, top-blank on the Alto I keyboard) erases the last word of the caption; the DEL key erases the entire caption. Any mouse operation terminates the caption.z18556e18j\g220f1 2f0 101f1 3f0 Captions are displayed on the screen using the information in the file Fonts.Widths. Each character is positioned near as possible to where it would go on the printed page. Therefore, the caption will be displayed such that the total length relative to other objects in the picture is correct when the picture is printed. However, the character spacings on the display will look funny because of the difference between the fonts used on the printer and the fonts used on the alto. The characters should look fine when printed.z18556e18j\g z18556x0j\g Modifying Shapes and Captionsz18556e24j\f5ig To modify an object, select it, then bug Modify' on the edit menu. If more than one object is selected, the topmost selected object will be the one modified.z18556e18j\g For a shape object, Modify' erases the object (or the last link of a linked object) and leaves its control points visible. The current shape and color styles (see below) are set to the style of the object being modified. You may now add, delete, or move control points, just as though you were drawing the object for the first time.z18556e12j\g When you modify a caption, a caret appears at its end, as though you had just typed it in. The current text styles (see below) are set to the style of the caption being modified. You can then edit the caption in the normal way. z18556e12j\g Manipulating Objectsz18556e30j\f5bg The operations described in this section are used for object-level manipulations within an illustration. All of these operations appear on the object, view, and overlap menus, which are controlled, respectively, by the Objects', View', and Overlap' toggles on the master menu.z18556e18j\g144i13I5i14I Deleting Objectsz18556e30j\f5ig The Delete' command on the object menu deletes all objects currently selected. The last deletion can be canceled by bugging Undo'.z18556e18j\g Selecting/Deselecting the Entire Illustrationz18556e30j\f5ig For convenience, every object in the illustration can be selected or deselected by bugging Select All' or Deselect All' on the object menu. These operations apply only to objects on the current view (see Alternate View', below).z18556e18j\g Gridz18556e30j\f5ig A control grid is available to aid in precise placement of objects and control points. The display of the grid is controlled by the Grid' toggle on the view menu. The grid is displayed as a pair of horizontal and vertical axes, each of which can be moved independently. Whenever the grid is visible, all mouse operations (Move, Copy, Place and Delete control point), are rounded to the nearest grid point.z18556e18j\g2i12I z18556x0j\g Refreshing the Displayz18556e30j\f5ig Refresh' on the view menu erases and replots the display.z18556e18j\g Clustersz18556e30j\f5ig A cluster is a group of objects (shapes and captions) that are moved, copied, transformed, selected, and deselected together. That is, any of these operations performed on one item in the cluster is automatically applied to the entire cluster. A selected cluster is indicated by a single select token; however, every object in the cluster is considered selected.z18556e18j\g2i7I To create a cluster, select all the objects that are to be part of the cluster (possibly including other clusters), then bug Cluster' on the object menu. The user message New cluster made'' will appear. To unmake a cluster, select it and bug Uncluster'. The user message Cluster unmade'' will appear. There is only one level of clustering, so a cluster of clusters makes one large group. That is, Uncluster' applied to such a cluster results in a group of single objects, not a group of clusters.z18556e12j\g Changing the Overlap Orderz18556e30j\f5ig Objects have a definite order of overlap, whether or not they actually cover each other up. Objects are displayed and printed in bottom-to-top order. To change the position of an object in the overlap order, select the object and bug the desired item on the overlap menu: Top', Bottom', Up-One', or Down-One'. If more than one object is selected, they retain their relative positions as they move. For example, if five objects are selected and you bug Top', the selected objects will become the top five objects.z18556e18j\g Alternate Viewz18556e30j\f5ig Griffin allows you to work on two separate views within the same illustration. In effect, you have two separate pages to work on. The view you are currently working on is called the current view; the other is the alternate view. For example, you might create the background for a picture and place it on the alternate view, keeping only the foreground visible on your working view. This would speed up editing of the foreground by simplifying refresh operations. When the background and foreground were both completed, you would merge them into a single illustration. As another example, the alternate view might be used for selectively merging pieces of two different files. This could be done by reading each file into a separate view, then transferring objects from one view to the other.z18556e18j\g43i5I136i13I18i15I304i5I All operations work identically on both views. To change from one view to the other, bug Switch' on the view menu. This will erase the screen and display all objects on the other view. Control objects (menus, control points, and grid) are displayed in the same positions in either view.z18556e12j\g To transfer objects from one view to the other, select the objects to be transferred and bug Transfer' on the object menu. The selected objects are erased from the screen and transferred to the alternate view. Bugging Merge' on the view menu causes all objects currently on the alternate view to be transferred to the current view and displayed on the screen.z18556e12j\g Only objects that are visible on the current view are included when an illustration is written out on a press file. All objects on both views are included when the illustration is saved on a Griffin file.z18556e12j\g Transforming Objectsz18556e30j\f5bg Griffin offers a variety of transformations that may be applied to an object. All transformation operations appear on the transform menu, controlled by the Transform' toggle on the master menu. Only shape objects transform fully. For captions, only the anchor point is transformedz18556e18j\g28i15I80i15I To transform one or more objects, select the objects to be transformed, place the transformation control points (details below under the various transformations), and bug the appropriate item on the transform menu. The selected object(s) are erased, transformed, and redisplayed. If Use Copy' is selected on the transform menu, the original object is left undisturbed and a copy is created, placed on top in the overlap order, transformed as specified, and displayed. If the requested transformation would flatten the object in such a way that its original shape could not be recovered (for example, scaling it by zero), a warning message is displayed and the transformation is not performed.z18556e12j\g377i4I X or Y Scalingz18556e24j\f5ig For X or Y scaling (ScaleX', ScaleY'), two or three control points are required. The points are projected onto the specified dimension (the other dimension is ignored). If three points are placed, the object is transformed so that the distance from the first to the second control point along the specified dimension is scaled into the distance from the first to the third point. If only two points are placed, the overall size of the object in the specified dimension is scaled to the distance between the control points in that dimension. The first control point is used as the origin for the scaling operation.z18556e18j\g Full Scalingz18556e24j\f5ig For full scaling (Scale'), two or three points must placed. In effect, both X and Y scaling (see above) are done simultaneously with respect to these control points. For example, you can reduce the size of an object by a factor of 2 by placing the first two control points on a 45 degree diagonal, and the third on the same diagonal, midway between the first and the second. If only two control points are placed, they define the new bounding box of the object. The first control point is used as the origin for the scaling operation.z18556e18j\g Rotationz18556e24j\f5ig Rotation (Rotate') requires two or three control points. The first point is the center of rotation. If three points are placed, the object is rotated so that the direction from the first to the second control point is mapped into the direction from the first to the third point. If only two points are placed, they represent an absolute angle relative to the horizontal.z18556e18j\g Full Mapping (Scaling and Rotation)z18556e24j\f5ig For the full mapping transformation (Map'), two to six points may be placed. Two points specify a simple translation (move) to be applied to the selected object(s). Four points specify a mapping from the line defined by the first two points into the line defined by the third and fourth. Objects are scaled and rotated, but not deformed by this mapping. Three points may be used as a shorthand for the four-point map, in which the two lines are defined by the first and second points, and the first and third. For six points, the triangle defined by the first three points is mapped into the triangle defined by the second three. Five points are a shorthand for six points, with the two triangles defined by points one-two-three and one-four-five.z18556e18j\g Stylesz18556e30j\f5bg Every object in a Griffin illustration has a style that defines various attributes of the object's appearance when displayed or printed. Styles are specified with the style menu, controlled by the Style' toggle on the master menu. The Color Style', Shape Style', and Text Style' toggles on the style menu in turn control the display of specialized style submenus for setting the style attributes of an object.z18556e18j\g45i5I118i11I175i14I The style submenus remember'' their settings, even when they are not currently displayed on the screen. The state of all these menus together defines the current style, which is applied to any newly created object. All objects carry all style attributesfor example, every shape object has a font style. It is only possible to operate on the entire style for an object, not just one attribute. For instance, there is no way to change the color of several captions in one operation without also setting them all to the same font. z18556e12j\g157i14I To read the style of an object, bug Indicate' on the style menu. The current style is set to the style of the selected object, and all visible style submenus are updated accordingly. If more than one object is selected, the style of the topmost selected object becomes the current style.z18556e12j\g To change the style of an object, select the object, set the desired attributes on the style submenus, then bug Apply' on the style menu. All selected objects are given the current style, as defined by the current settings of the style submenus.z18556e12j\g Shape Stylesz18556e24j\f5ig Shape styles include line thickness and whether a closed object is filled, outlined, or both. They are specified with the thickness menu and the color control menu, both controlled by the Shape Style' toggle on the style menu. The line thickness (given in Alto pixels, where one pixel=32 micas) applies to all lines and outlines. All lines have round endpoints. Outlined objects are larger than unoutlined objects by half the thickness of the outline.z18556e18j\ig12I111i14I9i19I z18556x0j\g Color Stylesz18556e24j\f5ig Every Griffin object has two color attributes, one for the outline and another (applicable only to closed shapes) for area fill. These attributes are specified with the line color and area color menus, both controlled by the Color Style' toggle on the style menu.z18556e18j\g170i10I5i17I Griffin provides a palette'' of colors that are intended to be generally useful for all types of illustration. A color reference sheet is available on the file [Ibis]ColorChart.press. It is recommended that you keep a hardcopy of this color chart near your workstation for reference while using Griffin. [There will be varations in the colors between Puffin and Pimlico printers, especially black, browns, and dark reds.] All colors except black and white display as half-tone grey patterns. These patterns were chosen to give some indication of the brightness of the color, but are not unique. For example, red and green display as the same grey pattern.z18556e12j\g319f1 115f0 [Because of changes in the color chart since the first alpha-release, it is possible for a Griffin file to contain objects with color values that are not on the menu. These objects will display in a 50% grey pattern, and will continue to print in the same colors as when they were created. Indicate' applied to such an object will set the color menu to black, so the color cannot be copied.]z18556e12j\f1g Text Stylesz18556e24j\f5ig Text styles include font, anchoring position, and rotation. They are specified with the font, anchoring, string rotation, and character rotation menus, all of which are controlled by the Text Style' toggle on the style menu. Because text display is based on the hardcopy widths of the characters, the spacing of characters on the screen may appear a bit strange. However, the overall length of each caption is represented accurately, so that shapes and captions can be correctly aligned. z18556e18j\ig11I80i33I5i25I The font to be used for a caption is specified by selection on the font menu. This menu includes the names of all the fonts on your disk. To add to this list, simply load the desired strike fonts onto your disk and start Griffin. Griffin will use the information in the strike font plus the information in fonts.widths to make new entries in Griffin.fonts. There is currently no way to delete fonts other than deleting Griffin.fonts and starting over.z18556e12j\g Captions may be anchored at the left, right, or center by bugging the appropriate option on the anchoring menu. The designated anchor point is positioned over the control point when the caption is typed in. When a caption is selected, the select token appears at the anchor point.z18556e12j\g16i8I String rotation controls the direction in which the caption itself is orientedthat is, the direction in which characters are added as text is typed from the keyboard. The items 0 d', 90 d', 180 d', and 270 d' on the string rotation menu represent normal (right), up, left, and down, respectively.z18556e12j\ig15I36i15I Character rotation controls the direction in which the characters within the caption are oriented. The options on the character rotation menu have the same meanings as the corresponding items on the string rotation menu. Character rotations may require rotating a font. This takes several minutes (up to a significant part of an hour for very large fonts). Once the font is rotated, it is stored in the file Griffin.fonts, where it can be reused. Thus it is only time-consuming to use a rotated font the first time.z18556e12j\ig18I37i29I Of the 16 possible combinations of string and character rotation, only half are useful in practice. The 4 cases where the string rotation is the same as the character rotation, and the 4 cases where the string rotation equals the character direction plus 270 (producing a vertical column of characters), produce readable text. The other 8 cases are not generally useful.z18556e12j\g Filingz18556e30j\f5bg All filing operations are done with the file menu, controlled by the Files' toggle on the master menu. The file menu contains a list of file names, an empty slot, and the functions Press', Save', and Restore'. The list of file names includes all files on your disk with the extension .griffin'.z18556e18j\g40i10I58i1I192i Creating a Press Filez18556e24j\f5ig To make a press file of the current illustration, type the desired press file name (without an extension) into the empty slot on the file menu, or select one of the existing names on the menu; then bug Press'. The extension .press' is automatically appended to the name supplied, and a press file with that name is written containing the current illustration. This operation may take several minutes. Pictures with many lines and outlined areas will take the longest time to format.z18556e18j\g The press file will contain only those objects that are visible on the current view when the file is made. This does not include runtime objects (control points, menus, or grid), objects not on the current view, or objects that are completely off the screen. Objects that are partially on the screen will not print correctly in this version of Griffin.z18556e12j\g Saving a Griffin Filez18556e24j\f5ig To save the current illustration in editable form on a Griffin file, type the desired Griffin file name (without an extension) into the empty slot on the file menu, or select one of the existing names on the menu; then bug Save'. The extension .griffin' is automatically appended to the name supplied, and a Griffin file with that name is written containing the current illustration. If a file of the specified name already exists, a menu is displayed asking for confirmation (Yes' or No'), before overwriting the file.z18556e18j\g The Griffin file will contain all objects in the current illustration when the file is made. This does not include runtime objects (control points, menus, or grid), but does include objects not on the current view and objects that are completely off the screen. Only one illustration may be saved in each Griffin file.z18556e12j\g30i3I137i4I Reading a Griffin Filez18556e24j\f5ig To read in an illustration from a Griffin file for further editing, select the name of the desired file on the file menu; then bug Restore'. The extension .griffin' is automatically appended to the name selected, and the illustration stored on the Griffin file with that name is read in and displayed on the screen. Objects read from the Griffin file are added to (they do not replace) any objects already on the screen when the file is read.z18556e18j\g359i8I14i7I z18556x0j\g If Griffin Gets Fullz18556e30j\f5bg20B Griffin is a memory resident system. Even on the D-machines, it uses only as much memory as is available on an Alto. This means that there is a limit to the number of objects which can be in a Griffin picture. The number of objects depends on the type and complexity of the objects. As the system fills up, the response to mouse operations becomes slow. There seems to be a drastic slowdown just before the system becomes completely full. Once there is no more space to store objects the following message is displayed:z18556e18j\g Griffin is out of space. Save your file!z18556l4268e18j\g It is strongly recommended that the illustration be filed right away, before any more operations are performed. Once the illustration is safely filed, the picture can be edited, although no more objects can be added. The error message will be displayed each time the system is unable to get enough space to perform an operation. In general, save your big files often. While every effort is made to give you a chance to save your work once Griffin fills up, it is not always possible. z18556e18j\g If Griffin Breaksz18556e30j\f5bg17B When Griffin detects an error condition, it attempts to write a file GriffinError.Griffin' containing the picture you were working on at the time the error occured. Griffin will then exit to the Alto Executive and print the following message:z18556e18j\g // Griffin error. File GriffinError.Griffin writtenz18556l4268e6j\g Some errors may make it impossible to write the file, in which case Griffin will attempt to exit gracefully to the Alto Executive with the following message:z18556e12j\g // Fatal Griffin error. No file could be writtenz18556l4268e6j\g There is always the possibility of something catastrophic happening, which could cause the system to freeze up (cursor does not track the mouse) or even hit the dreaded boot lights. If this occurs, the boot button is your only recourse. Do not confuse some of Griffin's long pauses with fatal errors. Working pauses are indicated by the busy cursor (that funny object is a griffin), which will still track if you move the mouse. Long pauses are caused by such operations as writing files (several minutes, and you should hear the disk), generating press files (several minutes, plus the screen may break up a bit), and rotating fonts (up to an hour for large fonts).z18556e12j\g670b All errors, comments, criticism, plaudits, etc., should be directed to Stone.PA. Please include a pointer to GriffinError.Griffin if you have one, and a description of what you were doing when the system broke.z18556e12j\g Curve Fittingz18556e30j\f5bg This section describes the various curve fitting methods available in Griffin. In general, deciding what method of curve fitting to use is a matter of personal preference. It is not necesary to understand all five methods to use the illustrator. The default fitting method corresponds to the menu item Natural: Arc Length', and is adequate for most pictures. This section tries to give some description and guidelines for using the various methods. It isn't really as hard as it sounds. Experimentation is strongly encouraged.z18556e18j\g There are five methods of curve fitting available in Griffin. These include two types of natural spline (arc length and unit length), which smoothly connect a set of control points; a non-interpolating (does not draw through the control points) spline called a B-spline; an interpolating but only first-order continuous (less smooth) curve called a Catmull-Rom curve; and a very different type of curve called a Bezier curve, which uses the control points as end points (on the curve) and tangent points (off the curve) in an alternating fashion. There is a figure on [Indigo] Release>SplineSampler.press which shows the five curve types. This figure must be printed on a press printer.z18556e12j\g90i14I1i11I5i14I47i1I79i10I78i19I44i13I272i B-splines, Catmull-Rom curves, and Bezier curves are local curves. That is, a given section of the curve is affected only by the control points near that section. As a result, these curves are more symmetrical and more modifiable (since changes at one end don't affect the other end of a long curve) than natural splines. Each section of the curve is completely defined by four control points. For the B-spline and Catmull-Rom curves, moving one control point will affect four sections of the curve. For Bezier curves, movng one control point will affect only one or two sections of the curve.z18556e12j\g53i5I Natural splines and Catmull-Rom curves are defined by placing control points along the desired curve. The algorithm will draw a curve through the points. Think of these points as handles'' to control the slant of the curve at the end conditions. (The Catmull-Rom curve does not go through the first and last control points; by placing double points at the beginning and the end, you can make the curve continue out to the endpoints.) The two types of natural spline generate similar-looking curves, especially if the control points are evenly spaced. In general, the unit mesh version will give sharper turns at the control points. The Catmull-Rom curves, in comparison, look very square. However, because they are local curves, they may be easier to use for some shapes.z18556e12j\g The B-spline goes near all the control points but through none of them. It is defined by placing control points near the desired path; the curve follows the direction of the points, but does not pass through them. B-splines are local curves and are very smooth and symmetrical, but it is quite a bit harder to predict from the positions of the control points where the curve will fall. Placing the control points in some regular pattern using the grid will produce very attractive curves for borders or symmetrical shapes.z18556e12j\g18i4I91i4I41i9I Each section of a Bezier curve is defined by the end points plus two points off the curve (tangent points). The control points must be placed in the following order: end point, tangent point, tangent point, end point. The line from the first end point to the first tangent point is tangent to the curve (describes the slope or slant) at the end point. Similarly, the line from the second tangent point to the second end point is tangent to the curve at the second end point. If more than four control points are placed, the first four define the first section of curve, the fourth point plus the next three define the second section of curve, and so on. The sections are connected, but not smoothly. To make a smooth connection between sections, it is necessary to line up the tangents of the two sections. That is, there must be three control points in a line at the join point. Bezier curves are useful for drawing a short section of curve when the tangents at the end conditions are important (for example, a curve that points horizontally from the side of a box into the side of another box). Bezier curves can also be used to make symmetrical or repeated shapes with sharp breaks in them. z18556e12j\g49i10I32i14I Because Catmull-Rom curves and B-splines do not go through the first and last control points, these curves cannot be used in this version of Griffin to make objects with multiple links. Objects are also restricted to using only one method of curve fitting for the entire object. Thus it is illegal to change the curve-fitting method in the middle of a multiply-linked object.z18556e12j\g Griffin Menu Summarye30(896)\f5bg The following is a summary of all menus use in Griffin and their contentsz18556e18j(1270)\g Master menualways present on screen Edit: Toggle display of edit and shape menus Objects: Toggle display of object menu Style: Toggle display of style menu Files: Toggle display of file menu Transform: Toggle display of transform menu Overlap: Toggle display of overlap menu View: Toggle display of view menu Quit: Exit from system [displays confirmation menu]z18556l5539d4268e12j(0,6809)(1,65535)(5,65535)\g341i28I Edit menucontrolled by Edit' toggle on master menu Draw: Draw or complete open shape Close: Draw or complete closed shape Draw Link: Draw segment of linked object Modify: Edit object [erases object, leaving control points visible] Back Link: Edit last link [erases link, leaving control points visible] Box: Draw rectangle [requires 2 control points] Spline Type: Toggle display of spline type menuz18556l5539d4268e12j\g57G3g33G3g39G3g36G3g12i47I10G3g15i45I4G3g15i27I12G3g Shape menu (one-of-many)controlled by Edit' toggle on master menu Line: Draw object with straight lines Curve: Draw object with spline curvesz18556l5539d4268e12j\g72G3g37G3g Spline type menu (one-of-many)controlled by Spline Type' toggle on edit menu Natural: Arc Length: Natural splines, arc length parameterized [default] Natural: Unit Mesh: Natural splines, unit mesh parameterized [same as Draw] Bezier Curve: 4 points determine a curve which goes through the first and fourth point B-Spline: 4 points determine a curve which does not interpolate any point. Cannot be used in linked objects. Catmull-Rom Curves: 4 points determine a curve which goes through the second and third points. Cannot be used in linked objects.z18556l5539d4268e12j\g98G3g42i9I19G3g41i14I13G3g82G3g118G3g Object menucontrolled by Objects' toggle on master menu Delete: Deletes selected object(s) Undo: Cancel last deletion Select All: Select all objects Deselect All: Deselect all objects Cluster: Make selected objects into a cluster Uncluster: Break selected objects out of clusters Transfer: Move selected object(s) to alternate viewz18556l5539d4268e12j\g64G3g31G3g32G3g31G3g28G3g96G3g File menucontrolled by Files' toggle on master menu Press: Write press file Save File: Write Griffin file Restore: Read Griffin file Empty menu slot: [Used for supplying new file names] File name 1 File name 2 . . [Names of all .griffin' files on disk] . File name nz18556l5539d4268e12j(1,8079)\g59G3g26G3g26G3g33G3ig35I32i39I Transform menucontrolled by Transform' toggle on master menu Map: Map 1, 2, or 3 points into 1, 2, or 3 points. ScaleX: Scale in X dimension ScaleY: Scale in Y dimension Scale: Scale in both dimensions Rotate: Rotate around a point Use Copy: Apply transformation to copy [leaves original object undisturbed]z18556l5539d4268e12j(1,65535)\g66G3g52G3g27G3g26G3g31G3g30G3g29i36I Overlap menucontrolled by Overlap' toggle on master menu Top: Move to top of overlap order Bottom: Move to bottom of overlap order Up One: Move up one position in overlap order Down One: Move down one position in overlap orderz18556l5539d4268e12j\g62G3g37G3g39G3g46G3g View menucontrolled by View' toggle on master menu Refresh: Erase and repaint display Grid: Toggle display of control grid Merge: Merge all objects in alternate view into current view Switch: Switch to alternate viewz18556l5539d4268e12j\g62G3g30G3g36G3g60G3g Style menucontrolled by Style' toggle on master menu Indicate: Set current style to style of selected object Apply: Apply current style to selected object Color Style: Toggle display of line and area color menus Shape Style: Toggle display of thickness and color control menus Text Style: Toggle display of font, anchoring, string rotation, and character rotation menusz18556l5539d4268e12j\g65G3g51G3g50G3g55G3g62G3g Thickness menu (one-of-many)controlled by Shape Style' toggle on style menu 1: Set line thickness to 1 Alto pixel 2: Set line thickness to 2 Alto pixels 3: Set line thickness to 3 Alto pixels 4: Set line thickness to 4 Alto pixelsz18556l5539d4268e12j\g Color control menu (one-of-many)controlled by Shape Style' toggle on style menu Filled: Fill closed objects with current area color Outlined: Outline closed objects with current line color Both: Outline and fill closed objects with current line and area colorsz18556l5539d4268e12j\g88G3g52G3g51G3g Line color menu (one-of-many)controlled by Color Style' toggle on style menu Lines: [Inactive text] List of available color namesz18556l5539d4268e12j\g84G3ig15I Area color menu (one-of-many)controlled by Color Style' toggle on style menu Areas: [Inactive text] List of available color namesz18556l5539d4268e12j\g84G3ig15I Font menu (one-of-many)controlled by Text Style' toggle on style menu Font name 1 Font name 2 . . [Names of all fonts in Griffin.fonts] . Font name nz18556l5539d4268e12j(0,5536)\g99i39I Anchoring menu (one-of-many)controlled by Text Style' toggle on style menu Left: Anchor caption at left Centered: Anchor caption at center Right: Anchor caption at rightz18556l5539d4268e12j(0,6809)\g81G3g31G3g30G3g String rotation menu (one-of-many)controlled by Text Style' toggle on style menu 0 d: Caption reads from left to right 90 d: Caption reads from bottom to top 180 d: Caption reads from right to left 270 d: Caption reads from top to bottomz18556l5539d4268e12j\g86G3g37G3g38G3g38G3g Character rotation menu (one-of-many)controlled by Text Style' toggle on style menu 0 char d: Orient characters normally 90 char d: Orient characters facing top of page 180 char d: Orient characters upside-down 270 char d: Orient characters facing bottom of pagez18908l5539d4268e12j\g94G3g36G3g47G3g40G3g