| File: academy/faqs/faq_allison.txt | |
| http://www.ascii-art.de/info/faq_allison.txt | |
| From - Thu Jun 26 21:25:54 1997 | |
| From: cfbd@southern.co.nz (Colin Douthwaite) | |
| Newsgroups: alt.ascii-art,alt.ascii-art.animation,alt.binaries.pictures.ascii | |
| Subject: Ye Olde Ascii Art FAQ ( Bob Allison ) | |
| Date: 24 Jun 1997 19:04:34 GMT | |
| Message-ID: <5op5o2$qnu$5@mnementh.southern.co.nz> | |
| ********************** IMPORTANT NOTE ************************ | |
| This is a copy of the last Ascii Art FAQ posted before Bob | |
| Allison ( Scarecrow ) retired as Moderator of the newsgroup | |
| "rec.arts.ascii" in June 1996. | |
| There is no guarantee that any of the references to Archives, | |
| FTP Sites, Websites and Files are still valid. | |
| ******************************************************************** | |
| Summary: what ASCII art is - why and what it's used for - types of | |
| ASCII art how to use FTP, Gopher, WWW - how to save, | |
| 'uudecode' and uncompress copyright info - how to make big | |
| letters and gray scale pictures how to put an animation in | |
| your .plan - info on posting ASCII art how to make sigs - | |
| how to automatically add a sig to posts and email how to | |
| make and view ASCII art - where to get art and tools - more | |
| . . | |
| ' + ` . * . * ' | |
| . + . ' . ' . ` . . ' ) . + | |
| '. ' _______ ______ ______ ______ ______ ` ______ _______ _______ | |
| '. +. /______//______//_____//_____//_____/ . /_____//____ //_______ | |
| . . ` _______ _____ '___ + ___ '. ___ ______ _____/ / __ . ' | |
| ' : / ___ /.\___ \*/ / . / / * / / ' / __ // . __/. '/ / . | |
| . ' ./ /. / /_____) // /___ _/ /_ _/ /_ / / / // / \ \ '/ / ' | |
| + . /_/ '/_//______//_____//_____//_____/ './_/ /_//_/ * \_\' /_/ ' | |
| +___________________ . ___________________ ' ___________________ ' | |
| ' / / ./ /. / /' . | |
| * /__________________/' /__________________/ / _________ / . | |
| ' . : ` . + ' . * / / . ' / /. | |
| _______________ . ___________________ ' / / ` / / ' | |
| . / / '/ /. / / . + / / . * | |
| / __________/ ' . / _________ / / /'. /\/ / ( | |
| / / . / / . / / '/ /______/ / : `. | |
| / ( ' ' / / . + / /. / / . ' | |
| ___/ . ` /____/. /____/ /________________ / ` | |
| Version 4.9.2 April 9, 1996 \/ . | |
| . ' * . | |
| . ` . | |
| . | |
| ___ ___ _ _ ___ ___ _____ ___ ___ _ _ ___ | |
| | | / _ \| | | | __/ __!_ _!_ _/ _ \| \| / __! | |
| | | | (_) | |_| | _|\__ \ | | | | (_) | .` \__ \ | |
| | | \__\_\\___/!___!___/ !_! !___\___/!_|\_!___/ | |
| | | O _ ___ _ _ ______ ___ ____ | |
| | | /|\/ |_ _| \| | | ____! / _ \ / __ \ | |
| __! !__, / | | || .` | | | | | | | | | | | | |
| \ / \O / \ !___!_!\_! | |__ | !_! | | | | | | |
| \ / \/| _/___\_ _ ___ ___ | __! | _ | | | | | | |
| \ / | !_ _| |_| |_ _/ __! | | | | | | | | | | | |
| \ / / \ | | | _ || |\__ \ | | | | | | | !__! | | |
| Y _/ _\ !_! !_! !_!___!___/ !_! !_! !_! \___\_\ | |
| 1 What is ASCII art? | |
| 2 Why use ASCII art instead of a GIF? | |
| 3 What is ASCII art used for? | |
| 4 What are the different kinds of ASCII art? | |
| 5 What is the best way to view ASCII art? | |
| 6 How can I learn to make ASCII art? | |
| 7 Are there any ASCII tools? | |
| 8 Where can I get ASCII tools? | |
| 9 Where can I find ASCII art? | |
| 10 How do I use FTP, Gopher, World Wide Web, and FTP Mail Servers? | |
| 11 What does the Scarecrow recommend? | |
| 12 Is it OK to copy ASCII art? | |
| 13 How do I make those big letters? | |
| 14 Where can I get Figlet? | |
| 15 How can I make Gray Scale pictures? | |
| 16 Where can I get Gray Scale converters? | |
| 17 How can I make better Gray Scale conversions? | |
| 18 What do those filename extensions mean? | |
| 19 What is 'uuencoding'? | |
| 20 How do I save, 'uudecode' and uncompress a file? | |
| 21 How do I view animations and color images? | |
| 22 How do I put an animation in my plan? | |
| 23 How do I make a sig? | |
| 24 How do I have my sig automatically added to my posts and email? | |
| 25 What should I know about posting ASCII Art? | |
| 26 Where is this FAQ available? | |
| 27 Who made this FAQ? | |
| __________________________________________________________________________ | |
| ___ _ _ ____ _ _ ______ _____ ____ | |
| O ,/ _ \ | \ | | / ___! | | | | | ____! | __ \ / ___! | |
| /\/| !_! | | \| | | (___ | | /\ | | | !__ | !__) | | (___ | |
| / | _ | | . ` | \___ \ \ \/ \/ / | __! | _ / \___ \ O , | |
| /\ | | | | | |\ | ____) | \ /\ / | !____ | | \ \ ____) ||\/ | |
| /_/_ !_! !_! !_! \_! !_____/ \/ \/ !______! !_! \_\ !_____/ |/\_ | |
| 1 What is ASCII art? | |
| Standard ASCII art is made with characters, such as: | |
| 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 | |
| a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z | |
| A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z | |
| \ | - _ + % @ < ; ! = # . , : > ( ] / & $ ^ ' ` " ~ ) [ { } ? * | |
| These characters are part of the ASCII (as - kee, America Standard | |
| Code for Information Interchange) set. This part of the ASCII set, | |
| is called the 'printable set' (7 bits, characters 32 to 126). | |
| There's also non-standard ASCII art, which contain 'contral codes'. | |
| ASCII art is popular, with several ASCII art groups on the various | |
| information services. Before computers, ASCII art was made on typewriters, | |
| teletype machines (5 bit), and was created typographically. There are even | |
| tee-shirts with the :-) smiley. | |
| 2 Why use ASCII art instead of a GIF? | |
| ASCII art is used because: | |
| o Standard ASCII art is the only type of graphics easily transmitted | |
| and instantly viewable on any terminal, emulation, or | |
| communications software. | |
| o If you can view text, you can view ASCII art (as it is made up of | |
| standard text characters). No conversion or special software | |
| required to view. Non-standard ASCII art (8 bit with control | |
| codes) requires that the file be saved and "cat'd". See Questions | |
| 20 and 21. | |
| o ASCII art is compact, a few K, not 20, 50, 100 or more K! | |
| 3 What is ASCII art used for? | |
| ASCII art is used for many things, like: | |
| o EDUCATION - A periodic table or molecular model for example. | |
| o CROSS CULTURAL COMMUNICATION - Pictures are international. | |
| o BBS & SERVER SCREENS - Login and logoff screens, MUDs, promos, etc. | |
| o ENTERTAINMENT - Like a birthday 'card', holiday greetings, | |
| invitations, congradulatory messages, children's picture stories, | |
| etc. | |
| o VISUAL AID - Such as a wiring diagram, floor plan, illustrated | |
| instructions, or flow chart, to eliminate a long involved | |
| explanation with a graphic. | |
| 4 What are the different kinds of ASCII art? | |
| The first four use the standard printable set, and can be viewed | |
| anywhere, anytime, on any equipment. They are: | |
| o Line drawing - Such as the stickmen above. This type of image is | |
| made using characters for their shapes. | |
| o Lettering - Large and styled, like the title "ASCII ART FAQ" above. | |
| o Gray Scale picture - These create the illusion of gray shades by | |
| using characters for their light emitting value (assuming you are | |
| viewing light characters on a dark background). For example: | |
| $@B%8&WM#*oahkbdpqwmZO0QLCJUYXzcvunxrjft/\|()1{}[]?-_+~<>i!lI;:,"^`'. | |
| Lighter <- viewing light characters on a dark background -> Darker | |
| Darker <- viewing dark characters on a light background -> Lighter | |
| o 3-D images - They can be viewed by people with similar vision in | |
| both eyes. You try to focus as if you are looking at the back of | |
| the monitor. The image should pop into focus and create a 3-D | |
| illusion. Other 3-D images are viewed by putting your nose on the | |
| monitor glass. See ASCII Art Resources for info on where to get | |
| 3-D programs. | |
| Other forms of ASCII art using the standard printable set include | |
| the following four: | |
| o Geometric Article - Text is formed into interesting, meaningful shapes. | |
| o Picture Poem - A geometric article that is also a poem. See the | |
| swan in the examples in ASCII Art Resources and ASCII Art | |
| Reference (the Web version of the FAQ). | |
| o Page Making - Text and graphics are intermixed, as in a magazine. | |
| o Picture Story - A story told with accompanying ASCII pictures. | |
| Created using ASCII art page making techniques. | |
| There are also non-standard types of ASCII art which cannot be | |
| viewed immediately upon receiving. They contain 'control codes' for | |
| color or animation. They must be 'uuencoded' to be posted or | |
| emailed. For further information, see Question 19. | |
| The three types of non-standard ASCII art are: | |
| o Animation - You see an animated image produced by a sequence of | |
| changing ASCII pictures. Animation speed depends on the system | |
| you are on, and modem speed, if used. "ANSI" (American National | |
| Standards Institute) escape sequences can be found in ASCII Art | |
| Resources and ASCII Art Reference (the Web version of the FAQ). | |
| o Color Graphics - You can view color ASCII pics, if you have a | |
| color screen and ANSI color compatible software. Check to see if | |
| your software supports ANSI color, and how it is enabled. | |
| o Color Animation - For an example of color and animation together, | |
| take a look at the file called "Vortex" in the Scarecrow's FTP | |
| site. | |
| Examples are in ASCII Art Resources and ASCII Art Reference (the | |
| Web version of the FAQ). | |
| But wait, there are other kinds of ASCII art: | |
| o Overstrike Art - It contains carriage returns without line feeds | |
| at times. The print head can overstrike a line on the paper that | |
| has already been printed on. This allows for darkening, and for | |
| placing different characters at the same place on the paper. This | |
| kind of art is obviously only printed. | |
| o Srcoll Animation - This is an animation that is made to be viewed | |
| by scrolling down. The image plays out as the screen is redrawn | |
| with the next 'page' of the image. | |
| 5 What is the best way to view ASCII art? | |
| For best results in viewing ASCII art, try: | |
| o A 'non-proportional' font, also called a 'mono-spaced' font. This | |
| is a font that displays the same number of characters per inch, no | |
| matter what the actual width of the characters. If you are | |
| viewing with a mono-spaced font, the two lines below should appear | |
| the same length. | |
| iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii | |
| MMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMM | |
| If they don't look the same length, try another font. Names to | |
| look for on various systems include: Monaco, Courier, Courier New, | |
| Video Terminal, System, TTY, VT100, Screen, Terminal, FixedSys, | |
| Line Printer, etc. | |
| o A small, say, 9 point font, will help to increase the apparent | |
| resolution, and the illusion of gray scale images. | |
| o Viewing from a distance of a meter or more. | |
| o Using light characters on a dark background. Many ASCII pictures | |
| are meant to be viewed light on dark. This allows the artist more | |
| control over the light. Also, you see less glare than you would | |
| from a light background. | |
| And in some instances: | |
| o While most gray scale pics are made to be viewed light characters | |
| on a dark background, some will be made to view dark on light. | |
| This is because they are meant to be printed with dark ink on | |
| light paper. Use dark characters on a light background, or print | |
| them out. | |
| o While most ASCII pics are made to be viewed on a monitor that | |
| displays 80 characters across, some ASCII pics are wider, say, 81 | |
| to 132 characters across. They are meant to be printed. Use a | |
| small, say, 4 point type, and view dark on light, or print them | |
| out. | |
| o While mast ASCII art is either ready to view, 'cat' or print, you | |
| may find art that has been saved as a picture in a bitmap, EPS, | |
| GIF, or other binary format. These must be viewed or printed with | |
| the appropriate software. | |
| There are a few important things to remember when making, viewing, | |
| or talking about an ASCII art image. And they're obvious but almost | |
| always forgotten. | |
| o Even though different fonts may all be mono-spaced, they ARE | |
| different, and can make a picture LOOK different. Some artists | |
| may mention the font the picture was made with. | |
| o A font may be serif or sans-serif (serifs are the little feet on | |
| the characters). The ascenders and descenders may be straight or | |
| curved. And characters may be wide or narrow. | |
| o The weight, or heaviness of characters can vary. Serifs can make | |
| them look heavier. Often effected by weight inconsistencies are | |
| symbols like: # $ @ | |
| o Shapes can vary too: | |
| The more consistent shapes are: - / \ | |
| The more inconsistent shapes are: ~ ^ * & | ' [ ] < > 0 l y | |
| o Fonts from different countries may have different characters in them. | |
| Characters that may not appear in a font are: ^ ` # | { } ~ \ [ ] $ @ | |
| o Different systems display text differently. If you look at a | |
| picture on a terminal at a Unix site, and then bring it home and | |
| view it on a Mac, it will look different. On the Mac, it will be | |
| displayed shorter top to bottom. In other words, it will have a | |
| greater aspect ratio. Even though it contains the same number of | |
| lines. | |
| See ASCII Art Resources and ASCII Art Reference (the Web version | |
| of the FAQ) for an aspect ratio chart. | |
| 6 How can I learn to make ASCII art? | |
| Unfortunately, there aren't many text books on the subject. :-) A | |
| good way to learn is to study how an artist has made a picture. | |
| What characters are chosen. How are the characters laid out? How | |
| is a texture made? | |
| You can also modify existing art. Take a piece of art you think | |
| could be improved. Make a copy. Now work on it. When you are good | |
| at that, try to improve a really good pic. Diddle a GIF conversion. | |
| Then see if you can fix a damaged file. Now take some small pics | |
| and put them together into a big composite image. | |
| If you're working from scratch, the following may help you: | |
| o Decide what you want. Block out the sizes ond shapes of things so | |
| you can get the proportions right. Do it now, not later, you'll | |
| save work. | |
| o Add detail. Concentrate on the focal point and important parts of | |
| your drawing. ASCII art is low definition, so you'll have to make | |
| the pic big if you want detail or real smoothness. Take a tip | |
| from master cartoonists, just try to suggest things, don't try to | |
| replicate them. Too much detail can end up looking confusing. | |
| o One of the biggest helps is knowing how to shape things. For | |
| example, you can curve a horizontal line with just: _ - " | |
| _____-------"""""""--------_____-------""""""" | |
| o Slanting vertical lines is easy. These four line are all made | |
| with a few characters, like: / , _ - ' " | |
| / ,' ,-' ,_-'" | |
| / ,' ,-' ,_-'" | |
| / ,' ,-' ,_-'" | |
| / ,' ,-' ,_-'" | |
| / ,' ,-' ,_-'" | |
| / ,' ,-' ,_-'" | |
| o Then there's smoothing, also called "anti-aliasing". This is | |
| where special care is taken to use characters for their shapes. | |
| With this technique, you can smooth out a font, or an object like | |
| the one below. Notice how the sides on the object are curved | |
| using: d b ( ) Y | |
| XXXX d88b | |
| XXXXXXXX <- Turn this d888888b | |
| XXXXXXXXXX (88888888) | |
| XXXXXXXX Into this -> Y888888Y | |
| XXXX Y88Y | |
| Popular fills are: 8 M H | |
| o Use areas of characters for patterns, tones, and contrast. For | |
| example, in this flower, notice the density of the letters | |
| subtlely change to form the petals. I would like to see this | |
| colorized. | |
| . | |
| .@. . | |
| @m@,. .@ | |
| .@m%nm@,. .@m@ | |
| .@nvv%vnmm@,. .@mn%n@ | |
| .@mnvvv%vvnnmm@,. .@mmnv%vn@, | |
| @mmnnvvv%vvvvvnnmm@,. .@mmnnvvv%vvnm@ | |
| @mmnnvvvvv%vvvvvvnnmm@, ;;;@mmnnvvvvv%vvvnm@, | |
| `@mmnnvvvvvv%vvvvvnnmmm;;@mmnnvvvvvv%vvvvnmm@ | |
| `@mmmnnvvvvvv%vvvnnmmm;%mmnnvvvvvv%vvvvnnmm@ | |
| `@m%v%v%v%v%v;%;%;%;%;%;%;%%%vv%vvvvnnnmm@ | |
| .,mm@@@@@mm%;;@@m@m@@m@@m@mm;;%%vvvnnnmm@;@,. | |
| .,@mmmmmmvv%%;;@@vmvvvvvvvvvmvm@@;;%%vvnnm@;%mmm@, | |
| .,@mmnnvvvvv%%;;@@vvvvv%%%%%%%vvvvmm@@;;%%mm@;%%nnnnm@, | |
| .,@mnnvv%v%v%v%%;;@mmvvvv%%;*;*;%%vvvvmmm@;;%m;%%v%v%v%vmm@,. | |
| ,@mnnvv%v%v%v%v%v%v%;;@@vvvv%%;*;*;*;%%vvvvm@@;;m%%%v%v%v%v%v%vnnm@, | |
| ` `@mnnvv%v%v%v%%;;@mvvvvv%%;;*;;%%vvvmmmm@;;%m;%%v%v%v%vmm@' ' | |
| `@mmnnvvvvv%%;;@@mvvvv%%%%%%%vvvvmm@@;;%%mm@;%%nnnnm@' | |
| `@mmmmmmvv%%;;@@mvvvvvvvvvvmmm@@;;%%mmnmm@;%mmm@' | |
| `mm@@@@@mm%;;@m@@m@m@m@@m@@;;%%vvvvvnmm@;@' | |
| ,@m%v%v%v%v%v;%;%;%;%;%;%;%;%vv%vvvvvnnmm@ | |
| .@mmnnvvvvvvv%vvvvnnmm%mmnnvvvvvvv%vvvvnnmm@ | |
| .@mmnnvvvvvv%vvvvvvnnmm'`@mmnnvvvvvv%vvvnnmm@ | |
| @mmnnvvvvv%vvvvvvnnmm@':%::`@mmnnvvvv%vvvnm@' | |
| @mmnnvvv%vvvvvnnmm@'`:::%%:::'`@mmnnvv%vvmm@ | |
| `@mnvvv%vvnnmm@' `:;%%;:' `@mvv%vm@' | |
| `@mnv%vnnm@' `;%;' `@n%n@ | |
| `@m%mm@' ;%;. `@m@ | |
| @m@' `;%; `@ | |
| `@' ;%;. ' Top portion of a | |
| ` `;%; picture by Susie Oviatt. | |
| Here are a few tips, that taken together, can make an instant | |
| ASCII artist out of anybody: | |
| o A quick way to make a pic is to photocopy a drawing onto plastic. | |
| Place the plastic over your monitor to act as a guide for placing | |
| characters. | |
| o Ease your work by making a file full of lines of spaces. Now copy | |
| that file. Open a copy and start working. You'll see that it's | |
| easier because you can now go where you want and replace the | |
| spaces with characters. You have eliminated endless space bar | |
| pressing. Remember to strip all trailing spaces when you're done. | |
| o Use a mouse to move more quickly from character to character and | |
| to delete bunches of characters and large numbers of lines. | |
| o To avoid variation in characters, weights, and shapes found between | |
| different fonts, use the following characters: | |
| / ! ( ) ? = + - _ : ; , . | |
| o Use 'block editing' if you can. Some software allows for a square | |
| or rectangular chunk of text to be cut, copied and pasted. | |
| o It may be better to work on your own computer (if it has more | |
| appropriate hardware and-ar software), and then upload it to your | |
| host. | |
| Also, see Jorn's "asciitech" file, available at Jorn's FTP site | |
| and Scarecrow's FTP, Gopher, WWW sites. | |
| 7 Are there any ASCII tools? | |
| Not many. The Emacs editor offers some help, if you know how to | |
| use it. There are a couple of bits of Emacs code in the Scarecrow's | |
| FTP site. EmacsMouseCode let's you draw with a mouse, and | |
| EmacsFigletCode let's you use Figlet within Emacs. | |
| Q-Edit and "vedit" are ASCII editors with block cut and paste. | |
| And TheDraw can do some ANSI tricks but is limited by RAM size. | |
| There are Unix and DOS scripts for flipping an ASCII pic (like | |
| "modasc" by Ric Hotchkiss). BBSdraw is available for the Amiga. So | |
| is CygnusEd, which allows column editing. And also the TPU editor | |
| for VAX. And then there's "mdraw.el" for GNU Emacs 19 under X, that | |
| lets you draw ASCII with a mouse. | |
| 8 Where can I get ASCII tools? | |
| You can get TheDraw at: | |
| -> Host: oak.oakland.edu | |
| Path: pub/msdos/screen | |
| File: tdraw463.zip | |
| URL: ftp://oak.oakland.edu/pub/msdos/screen/tdraw463.zip | |
| You can get "mdraw.el" at: | |
| -> Host: ftp.cse.psu.edu | |
| Path: pub/flee | |
| File: mdraw.el | |
| URL: ftp://ftp.cse.psu.edu/pub/flee/mdraw.el | |
| You can get Q-Edit at: | |
| -> Host: oak.oakland.edu | |
| Path: /pub/msdos/qedit | |
| URL: ftp://oak.oakland.edu/pub/msdos/qedit | |
| You can get Emacs Code at: | |
| -> Host: ftp.wwa.com | |
| Address: 198.49.174.1 | |
| Path: pub/Scarecrow/Info | |
| URL: ftp://ftp.wwa.com/pub/Scarecrow/Info | |
| 9 Where can I find ASCII art? | |
| You can FTP and Gopher ASCII art (single pics and archives of | |
| dozens or hundreds of images). FTP'ing is easy. Gophering is | |
| easier. See Question 10 for further info. ASCII art is available | |
| from many sites, including: | |
| o FTP Sites: | |
| Scarecrow's ASCII Art FTP | |
| -> Host: ftp.wwa.com | |
| Address: 198.49.174.1 | |
| Path: pub/Scarecrow | |
| URL: ftp://ftp.wwa.com/pub/Scarecrow | |
| Has Scarecrow's files, SAPs, animations, color, FAQs, Figlet, | |
| gray scale converters, 'how-to' files, and more. | |
| See Question 11 for a table of all the Scarecrow's files, showing | |
| file name, size (uncompressed), version, name it has at the | |
| Scarecrow's FTP site, and the subject line for email requests. | |
| -> Host: mordor.ind.wpi.edu | |
| Path: pub/ascii/art/pictures | |
| URL: ftp://mordor.ind.wpi.edu/pub/ascii/art/pictures | |
| Jorn's FTP site | |
| -> Host: ftp.mcs.com | |
| Path: mcsnet.users/jorn/ascii-art | |
| URL: ftp://ftp.mcs.com/mcsnet.users/jorn/ascii-art | |
| Has Scarecrow's files, plus other ASCII art files, and the | |
| technically oriented "asciitech.aa". | |
| Chris' FTP site | |
| -> Host: ftp.ncsu.edu | |
| Path: pub/ncsu/chking/Archive | |
| URL: ftp://ftp.ncsu.edu/pub/ncsu/chking/Archive | |
| Contains all the Scarecrow's files, all of Steve Sullivan's | |
| files, and Gifscii for many systems. | |
| -> Host: ftp.netcom.com | |
| Path: pub/vz/vzvz/asciiart | |
| URL: ftp://ftp.netcom.com/pub/vz/vzvz/asciiart | |
| -> Host: tuda.newcastle.ac.uk | |
| Path: pub/local/n1ka0/animation | |
| URL: ftp://tuda.newcastle.ac.uk/pub/local/n1ka0/animation | |
| Animations | |
| -> Host: mordor.ind.wpi.edu | |
| Path: pub/ascii/art/movies | |
| URL: ftp://mordor.ind.wpi.edu/pub/ascii/art/movies | |
| Animations | |
| -> Host: ftp.uwp.edu | |
| Path: pub/msdos/demos/ansi | |
| URL: ftp://ftp.uwp.edu/pub/msdos/demos/ansi | |
| Color graphics | |
| o Gopher Servers: | |
| ASCII Art Bazaar | |
| -> Host: twinbrook.cis.uab.edu | |
| Items: 11, 1 | |
| Over 12 megabytes, thousands of pieces in many categories. | |
| Scarecrow's ASCII Art Gopher | |
| -> Host: gopher.wwa.com | |
| Items: 3 | |
| URL: gopher://gopher.wwa.com/11/ascii | |
| Has Scarecrow's files, SAPs, animations, color, FAQs, | |
| Figlet, gray scale converters, 'how-to' files, and more. | |
| Everything the FTP site has is available from the Gopher, | |
| with friendlier menus. | |
| TTU Gopher | |
| -> Host: gopher.cs.ttu.edu | |
| Items: 7, 1 | |
| URL: | |
| gopher://gopher.cs.ttu.edu:70/11/Art%20and%20Images/ClipArt%20%28ASCII%29 | |
| Stanford Gopher | |
| -> Host: medmail.Stanford.EDU | |
| Items: 2, 1 | |
| URL: gopher://medmail.Stanford.EDU/11/other.stuff/pictures/ | |
| o World Wide Web: | |
| Scarecrow's WWW Link | |
| -> URL: http://miso.wwa.com/~boba/scarecrow.html | |
| Gateway to the wold of ASCII art, with links to everything. | |
| Chris' WWW Page | |
| -> URL: http://www2.ncsu.edu/unity/users/c/chking/HTML/HTMLs/ascii.html | |
| -> URL: ftp://ftp.netcom.com/pub/vz/vzvz/WWW/homepage.html | |
| o Mailing list: | |
| ASCII Art listserv list | |
| -> Address: listserv@ukcc.uky.edu | |
| Message: subscribe asciiart | |
| o FTP Mail Servers: | |
| -> Address: ftpmail@decwrl.dec.com | |
| Message: help | |
| -> Address: ftpmail@sunsite.unc.edu | |
| Message: help | |
| -> Address: bitftp@pucc.bitnet | |
| Message: help | |
| 10 How do I use FTP, Gopher, World Wide Web, and FTP Mail Servers? | |
| The following instructions are for most Unix based, live InterNet | |
| sites. If you are not on a live wire, you can still access FTP | |
| sites. See the section below on 'How to use FTP Mail Servers'. | |
| If you're on a commercial service, or other non-Unix based system, | |
| ask your sysadmin or service representative for information on | |
| obtaining files. If you are using InterNet software on your own | |
| computer via a PPP or SLIP connection, I assume you don't need my | |
| instructions. | |
| How to read a URL (Uniform Resource Locator): | |
| ftp://ftp.ncsu.edu/pub/ncsu/chking/Archive/Funnies | |
| |_| |__________| |_____________________| |_____| | |
| | | | | | |
| Connect Method Host Name Folder Path File Name | |
| Note: The connect method (the protocol> could also be "gopher" or | |
| "http" (http indicates a WWW page). Also, a URL my not have a file | |
| name at the end, but may just point to a folder. It may not even | |
| have a folder path, pointing only to a site. | |
| WWW URLs usually end with a file having a ".html" extension. And | |
| Web pages can also be stored on, and accessed from, FTP and Gopher | |
| sites. | |
| How to FTP: | |
| If you have FTP at your site, and you want to FTP over to say, | |
| Chris King's FTP site, you would, at the prompt: | |
| o Type: ftp ftp.ncsu.edu | |
| Notice that "ftp" was typed twice. The first is the command, the | |
| second is a port of the address. If you're already at an FTP | |
| prompt: | |
| Type: open ftp.ncsu.edu | |
| o When the connection opens, it'll ask for your name. This is | |
| 'anonymous FTP' so: | |
| Type: anonymous | |
| o When you're asked for a password: | |
| Type: Your email address | |
| You should be in. | |
| o Now, to 'Change Directory' to Chris' ASCII art folder: | |
| Type: cd pub/ncsu/chking/Archive | |
| o Now to list the folder's contents: | |
| Type: ls | |
| o Let's say you want a file called "Funnies", you would: | |
| Type: get Funnies | |
| The file will be transfered to the host you FTP'd from, in the folder | |
| you were in when you started that FTP session. | |
| o When you're done: | |
| Type: bye | |
| It will say goodbye and quit. | |
| You may have to decompress or uudecode the file first. See | |
| Question 20 on how to do that. Now you can view or download the | |
| file from your host. For how to view animations and color pics, see | |
| Question 21. | |
| Two helpful things. Type "cd .." to go back out of a folder. | |
| Type "pwd" ('Print Working Directory') to see where you are. | |
| How to Gopher: | |
| Gopher is easy. Say you want to check out the Bazaar. You would: | |
| o Type: gopher twinbrook.cis.uab.edu | |
| o Use the up and down arrow keys or number keys to pick the menu | |
| item you want. | |
| o Use the right arrow (or return key) to enter a selection, and the | |
| left arrow to back out. | |
| o In this case we pick "The Continuum", which is #11, and press the | |
| right arrow or return. | |
| o After we enter The Continuum, we see the ASCII Art Bazaar, so we | |
| pick it (it's #1) and press the right arrow or return. | |
| Once in the Bazaar, you can browse the menus and view the art on | |
| screen without having to download anything just to see it. | |
| How to use the World Wide Web: | |
| Using the World Wide Web is as easy as Gopher. For example, let's | |
| say you want to check out the Scarecrow's WWW Link, you would do the | |
| following on a live Net site using lynx: | |
| o Type: lynx http://miso.wwa.com/~boba/scarecrow.html | |
| o Use the up and down arrow keys to select what you want to see. | |
| o Use the right arrow (or return key) to enter a selection, and the | |
| left arrow to back out. | |
| You can do as with Gopher, but you can also access links to FTP, | |
| Gopher and WWW sites. For example, there are links that will take | |
| you to Chris King's Web archive of ASCII art, the Figlet server, the | |
| Bazaar, Joshua Bell's Star Trek ASCII art site, and practically | |
| everything in the ASCII art world. | |
| Important Note: You can use a Web browser to access FTP sites, to | |
| avoid logging in, and commands. For example, say you're using lynx, | |
| and you want to go to the Scarecrow's FTP site, you would type, at | |
| the prompt: | |
| lynx ftp://ftp.wwa.com/pub/Scarecrow | |
| As you can see, it's just "lynx" plus the URL for the site. You | |
| can do this with any FTP site, just type "lynx ftp://" plus the | |
| address/path, and you in like Flynn. | |
| Note: When using FTP, Gopher, WWW, or other live Net services, try | |
| to find files at sites that are close to you before accessing more | |
| distant locations. Also, try to use these services at off-peak | |
| hours, to not slow down the official operations of a school or | |
| business. And send a thank you note to the admins of sites you have | |
| used and benefitted from. | |
| How to use FTP Mail Servers: | |
| If you don't have FTP access, you can use an FTP Mail Server. | |
| There are a few listed in the answer to Question 9. To use them | |
| send a message to any of the listed addresses with "help" as the | |
| message. Here is an example of how to use ftpmail@decwrl.dec.com: | |
| o Address a message to: ftpmail@decwrl.dec.com | |
| o Leave the subject blank. | |
| In the message: | |
| o Type: connect ftp.wwa.com | |
| The hostname could be any available host. | |
| o Type: chdir pub/Scarecrow | |
| Changes directory (folder) to the Scarecrow's ASCII art folder. | |
| The folder name could be any existing folder. | |
| o Type: binary | |
| For programs and compressed files. | |
| OR | |
| Type: ascii | |
| For text files, uuencoded files, etc. | |
| o Type: get MORE | |
| Transfers the flie called "MORE" to your computer. The name could | |
| be the name of any existing file in that folder. | |
| o Type: quit | |
| o Send the email message | |
| Your message will be acknowledged. It will be given a number | |
| which you should save in case of a problem. Within a day or two you | |
| should recieve either a file or an error message. If you get an | |
| error, make sure the following are correct: host name, pathname, | |
| filename, commands, cAsE. | |
| 11 What does the Scarecrow recommend? | |
| The Scarecrow's recommendations: | |
| o If you're short on disk space, I would suggest you save this FAQ | |
| and get just those files containing the type(s) of art you are | |
| interested in. | |
| o If you have a bit more disk space, you may want to get the Best of | |
| the Scarecrow's ASCII Art Archive, and the ASCII Art Reference | |
| file. And select a number of files from Steve Sullivan's Small | |
| ASCII Pics. | |
| o If you have some disk space to spare, you should get all of the | |
| SAAAs, and the ASCII Art Resources file. You can also get all of | |
| Steve's Small ASCII Pics. Megabytes of art. With the SAAAs, AAR, | |
| and SAPs, you'll be an ASCII art expert and collector, instantly! | |
| Disk space is often limited, so store ASCII art compressed (it | |
| should compress 3:1). View it when it's compressed by typing: "zcat | |
| filename | more" for .Z and "gzcat filename | more" for .gz files. | |
| 12 Is it OK to copy ASCII art? | |
| ASCII art that is posted is considered copyrighted by the poster. | |
| But since the post goes around the world, and copyright laws vary, | |
| you'd have trouble enforcing it in some places. The correct thing | |
| to do is ask permission before using a piece. | |
| 13 How do I make those big letters? | |
| You can make lettering like the above subtitle "ANSWERS" by hand, | |
| or use a program called Figlet. With Figlet, the letters you type | |
| are automatically turned into big letters. Figlet stands for Frank, | |
| Ian and Glenn's LETters. ^ | |
| ^ ^ ^^^ | |
| Figlet is available for use on some host systems. If it is not, | |
| you can obtain Figlet and fonts from the sites listed in Question | |
| 14. There are about 100 fonts for use with Figlet. Figlet fonts | |
| have a .flf suffix. Figlet is currently in version 2.1, available | |
| for Unix, DOS, Amiga, and Atari ST. | |
| There are a number of examples of Figlet fonts in the ASCII Art | |
| Resources and ASCII Art Reference (the Web version of the FAQ). | |
| You'll also find info on Figlet utilities, methods of feeding Figlet | |
| output to files, modifying Figlet output, and a vi macro. | |
| Some other hosts have a program called "Banner" which performs a | |
| similar function. | |
| 14 Where can I get Figlet? | |
| You can get Figlet, fonts, and utilities from: | |
| o FTP Sites: | |
| Official Figlet Site | |
| -> Host: ftp.nicoh.com | |
| Path: pub/figlet | |
| URL: ftp://ftp.nicoh.com/pub/figlet | |
| Scarecrow's FTP Site | |
| -> Host: ftp.wwa.com | |
| Path: pub/Scarecrow/Figlet | |
| URL: ftp://ftp.wwa.com/pub/Scarecrow/Figlet | |
| Has Figlet, utilities, and all the fonts I've found. | |
| Also accessible through the Scarecrow's Gopher and WWW sites. | |
| If you have any Figlet fonts that are not on my site, please put | |
| them in my incoming FTP folder. Thank you. | |
| -> Host: ftp.netcom.com | |
| Path: pub/vz/vzvz/asciiart/fonts | |
| URL: ftp://ftp.netcom.com/pub/vz/vzvz/asciiart/fonts | |
| Fonts only. | |
| o Figlet WWW Server: | |
| -> URL: http://www.inf.utfsm.cl/cgi-bin/figlet | |
| o Figlet Mail Server: | |
| -> Address: figlet@ottime.chi.il.us | |
| Message: HELP | |
| o Figlet WWW Home Page: | |
| -> URL: http://math.uiuc.edu/~chappell/figlet | |
| o Figlet Mailing List: | |
| -> Address: listserv@vmd.cso.uiuc.edu | |
| Message: SUBSCRIBE FIGLET-L | |
| Receive fonts, update notes, and Figlet chat. Run by Ian Chai. | |
| 15 How can I make Gray Scale pictures? | |
| You can make them from scratch if you are a very good ASCII | |
| artist. An easier way is to use a converter program. There's | |
| ASCGIF, Gifscii (with versions for many systems), ANSIrez, | |
| "ansicv22", GIF2ANSI, and "gif2txt" for the PC. | |
| There's also the HyperCard stack called "asciipicter". It allows | |
| you to draw a picture, and convert it to ASCII art. This is for the | |
| Macintosh. | |
| These programs make an ASCII pic from any GIF (Graphics | |
| Interchange Format) image (or image you can convert to a GIF). Most | |
| converters require the GIF to be in 87a format. GIFs in 89a format, | |
| must be converted to 87a format first. | |
| The exception to the GIF converters is a bitmap converter for | |
| Windows called Pixel Characterizer (version 0.5) by Shi Y Chen. | |
| 16 Where can I get Gray Scale converters? | |
| You can get Gifscii for many systems, and the source code from: | |
| o FTP Sites: | |
| Chris' FTP site | |
| -> Host: ftp.ncsu.edu | |
| Path: pub/ncsu/chking/Archive | |
| URL: ftp://ftp.ncsu.edu/pub/ncsu/chking | |
| Scarecrow's FTP Site | |
| -> Host: ftp.wwa.com | |
| Path: pub/Scarecrow/Gifscii | |
| URL: ftp://ftp.wwa.com/pub/Scarecrow/Gifscii | |
| Also accessible through the Scarecrow's Gopher and WWW sites. | |
| Both Chris' and Scarcecrow's sites have Gifscii 2.2 for | |
| MSDOS, Unix (Sun), Macintosh, Amiga, Digital Alpha, | |
| Digital VAX, as well as the c-source code. Scarecrow's | |
| site also has "ansicv22.zip", "ansirez1.zip", and | |
| "asciipicter.sit.hqx" (HyperCard stack). | |
| You can get ASCGIF from: | |
| o FTP Sites: | |
| -> Host: usc.edu | |
| Path: archive/usenet/sources/comp.sources.misc/volume30/ascgif | |
| URL: ftp://usc.edu/archive/usenet/sources/comp.sources.misc/volume30/ascgif | |
| Scarecrow's FTP Site | |
| -> Host: ftp.wwa.com | |
| Path: pub/Scarecrow/Misc | |
| URL: ftp://ftp.wwa.com/pub/Scarecrow/Misc | |
| Also accessible through the Scarecrow's Gopher and WWW sites. | |
| -> Host: wuarchive.wustl.edu | |
| Path: usenet/comp.sources.misc/volume30/ascgif | |
| URL: ftp://wuarchive.wustl.edu/usenet/comp.sources.misc/volume30/ascgif | |
| You can get GIF2ANSI and "gif2txt" from: | |
| o BBS Sites: | |
| -> BBS: Exec-PC (414) 789-4210 | |
| File: GIF2ANSI.ZIP, in the "Mahoney MS-DOS" file collection. | |
| -> BBS: Aquila BBS (708) 820-8344] | |
| File: gif2txt.zip | |
| You can get the GDS GIF-JPEG to ANSI (for DOS) at: | |
| o FTP Sites: | |
| -> Host: ftp.netcom.com | |
| Path: pub/ph/photodex | |
| File: gds31d.zip | |
| URL: ftp://ftp.netcom.com/pub/ph/photodex/gds31d.zip | |
| -> Host: oak.oakland.edu | |
| Path: SimTel/msdos/graphics | |
| File: gds31d.zip | |
| URL: ftp://oak.oakland.edu/SimTel/msdos/graphics/gds31d.zip | |
| 17 How can I make better Gray Scale conversions? | |
| Most of us start out thinking that you just put a GIF into a | |
| converter program and out comes a perfect ASCII pic. Would you | |
| believe ... there are some things you can do to improve the chances | |
| of getting a good conversion. | |
| The following is not a complete list, but it is what I have | |
| learned in making many conversions: | |
| o Use an 8 bit gray scale or color image instead of a 2 bit B&W image. | |
| o Use an image with a wide, even distribution of tones. | |
| o Keep it simple, like a face or close-up of an object. | |
| o Avoid busy backgrounds. With exceptions, avoid bright backgrounds. | |
| o Use an image that is tightly cropped, without a lot of waste. | |
| o Be prepared to quickly run through a series of conversions. You | |
| will probably not like 9 to 11 out of 12. | |
| o It helps to do touch-up work on the converted picture. | |
| Concentrate on the focal points and important areas of the | |
| picture. | |
| 18 What do those filename extensions mean? | |
| A file may have some of the following elements in its name: | |
| File name (a file may Usually implies "uu" or "uue" for uuencode, | |
| have a different name ____ a color pic. __ "xx" or "xxe" for xxencode. | |
| after uudecoding). | | | | |
| | | | | |
| filename.vt.ansi.tar.Z.uu | |
| | | | | |
| Usally implies animation. ___| | |__ For Unix Compress, may also | |
| | be .gz, .zip, etc. A .zip | |
| Tape ARchive format may contain ______| file may contain more than | |
| more than one file. Must be 'untarred'. one file, must be 'unzipped'. | |
| For further information, on how to save, uncompress, untar, unzip, | |
| and view files, see Questions 20 and 21. | |
| 19 What is 'uuencoding'? | |
| Color graphics and animations must be processed to change the | |
| control codes to regular printable ASCII characters before they can | |
| be sent as text (which any information service can handle). This | |
| processing is called 'uuencoding'. | |
| The file is processed back again after it is received. This is | |
| called 'uudecoding'. See Question 20 on how to save and 'uudecode' | |
| a file, and Question 21 on how to view animations and color images. | |
| A uuencoded file may look like: | |
| permission mode _______ ______ file name to be given to decoded file | |
| | | | |
| begin line ____ begin 644 filename | |
| M;2XN+BXN+R\N+B\O+BXN+BXN+R\N+B\O+BXO+RXO+RXN+B\ON+B\O+BXN | |
| encoded data __ M"AM;-#LV2"`@("`@+R`@7`H;6S$[,3%("AM;,CLQ,4@@("`@<("\*&ULS | |
| ` | |
| end line ______ end | |
| 20 How do I save, 'uudecode' and uncompress a file? | |
| Type the name of the file where I have "filename". On a Unix | |
| system, the process is usually as easy as: | |
| To save a file: | |
| In most newsreaders, you: | |
| o Type: s filename (or a full pathname) | |
| In Elm: | |
| o Type: s | |
| You'll get a "save file to" prompt. | |
| o Type: filename (or a full pathname) | |
| In Pine: | |
| o Type: s | |
| You'll be asked for a folder name. Pine's 'folder' is a text file. | |
| o Type: filename (or a full pathname) | |
| To uudecode a file: | |
| o Type: uudecode filename | |
| This may change the resulting file's name. | |
| To uncompress a file: | |
| For a .Z (Unix compress) file: | |
| o Type: uncompress filename | |
| For a .gz (GZip) file: | |
| o Type: gunzip filename | |
| Sometimes a number of files will come packed together in a .zip or | |
| .tar file. You need to unzip or untar it. You will end up with a | |
| number of files. | |
| For a .zip file: | |
| o Type: unzip filename | |
| For a .tar file: | |
| o Type: tar -xvf filename | |
| To just read the contents of a .tar file: | |
| o Type: tar -tvf filename | |
| o On a DOS machine, to uncompress a .Z file, you'll need comp430d from: | |
| -> Host: oak.oakland.edu | |
| Path: pub/msdos/compress | |
| File: comp430d.zip | |
| URL: ftp://oak.oakland.edu/pub/msdos/compress/comp430d.zip | |
| To uuencode a file, use the following syntax at the prompt: | |
| The uuencode The file you Writes resulting uuencoded | |
| command. want to uuencode. file to the last filename. | |
| | | | | |
| uuencode filename filename > filename | |
| | | | |
| Name to be put on the 'begin' line of the Name of the file that will be | |
| resulting uuencoded file. This name will written to disk so as to not | |
| be given to the file when it is uudecoded. overwrite the original file. | |
| To compress a file: | |
| For Unix compress: | |
| o Type: compress filename | |
| For Gzip: | |
| o Type: gzip filename | |
| To zip compress a number of files into one .zip file, use the following | |
| syntax at the prompt: | |
| zip filename.zip filename1 filename2 filename3 | |
| | | |______|______| | |
| Command. Name for file. Files to be zipped, can be any number. | |
| For info on viewing animations and color images, see Question 21. | |
| 21 How do I view animations and color images? | |
| Type the name of the file where I have "filename". On a Unix | |
| system, the process is usually as easy as: | |
| To view an animation or color pic: | |
| o Type: cat filename | |
| You can view a compressed file without decompressing it. | |
| To view a .Z compressed file: | |
| o Type: zcat filename | |
| To view a .gz compressed file: | |
| o Type: gzcat filename | |
| To slow down an animation: | |
| o Type: cat -u filename | |
| Note: Host system speed, terminal speed, and modem speed all | |
| affect animation speed. To view color, you need a color screen and | |
| ANSI color capable software. | |
| See ASCII Art Resources and ASCII Art Reference (the Web version | |
| of the FAQ) for info on programs to slow animations, and how to view | |
| animations that you have downloaded to your PC or Amiga. | |
| 22 How do I put an animation in my plan? | |
| On most Unix systems: | |
| o Name the file you want to be used as: .plan | |
| o Put it in the top level of your home folder. | |
| o Make your home folder 'world readable' by typing: chmod 711 . | |
| o Make your plan world readable by typing: chmod 644 .plan | |
| It does not work with all finger commands. Many systems will | |
| munch anything except CR and LF. To test your 'planimation', finger | |
| your account with your full address, not just your login. For | |
| example, type "finger foo@bar.edu" and not "finger foo". | |
| Putting an animation in your plan is not universally recommended. | |
| 23 How do I make a sig? | |
| There are no rules for making sigs. Most sigs contain items like: | |
| o Name, nickname. | |
| o Email and mail addresses. | |
| o ASCII art pics, borders. | |
| o Work and school names, disclaimer. | |
| o Phone, fax, and pager numbers, PINs. | |
| o Quotes and jokes from the poster and other people. | |
| o Info about the poster's .plan, FTP site, WWW home page, PGP key. | |
| You might simply 'Figletize' your name, pop in your addy and a | |
| pic, and presto, instant sig: | |
| | 'Go Johnny Go' || ___| johnsmith@foo.bar.edu | |
| | | || / _) | | | |
| | _ __ __ \||/ __ __ `__ | __| __ | |
| \ | ( | | | | | /()\ | | | | | | | | | |
| ___/ ___/ _| _| _| _| \__/ _____/ _| _| _| _| __| _| _| | |
| If you're going to have your sig automatically included in your | |
| posts and email, remember that some systems only allow up to 4 lines | |
| in the sig. For info on how to have your sig automatically | |
| included, see Question 24. | |
| If you want to use a larger sig on systems that only allow 4 | |
| lines, you will have to insert it manually. On most Unix based | |
| systems, using pico editor, press control-r when you want to insert | |
| the sig, and then type the name (or full pathname) of the file to be | |
| inserted, using vi, ex, ed, the command is ":r <filename>", using | |
| emacs, it's control-x control-r <filename>. | |
| Speaking of sig length, there is a rule of thumb of 4 to 6 lines. | |
| Try to keep sigs around this length for posts, reserving the long | |
| ones for email, and post to the ASCII art groups. | |
| 24 How do I have my sig automatically added to my posts and email? | |
| On a Unix system, the process is usually as easy as: | |
| For posts: | |
| If you are using most newsreaders: | |
| o Name the file you want to be used as ".signature" | |
| o Put it in the top level of your home folder. | |
| Your news software should pick it up. Note: some systems are set | |
| up to allow only four lines in a posted sig. | |
| If you are using tin: | |
| o Make a folder in the top level of your home folder called ".Sig". | |
| o Fill it with sigs. | |
| The files in that folder will be used randomly by tin when | |
| selecting a sig for your post. You can call the folder something | |
| other than ".Sig", but you must change the 'signature path' line | |
| in your tinrc in your .tin folder. | |
| To have a file included above your random sig: | |
| o Make a file in the top level of your home folder called ".sigfixed". | |
| For email: | |
| o Name the file you want to be used as ".signature" | |
| o Put it in the top level of your home folder. | |
| If you have done this for the above use in news posts, you need | |
| to, in additon, do one of the following: | |
| If you're using Elm for your email, and elm doesn't pick up your sig: | |
| o You need to put the following in ypur elmrc: | |
| localsignature = ~/.signature | |
| remotesignature = ~/.signature | |
| If you don't have an elmrc yet: | |
| o Open Elm | |
| o Press the 'o' key to get to the options screen. | |
| o Press the '>' to save your configuration. | |
| o Press 'i' to go back to the index. | |
| o Quit. | |
| This will create the elmrc file in the .elm folder. | |
| If you're using Pine (with Pico) for your email: | |
| o Place the following in your .pinerc file: | |
| signature-file=~/.signature | |
| If you're using vm (in emacs) for your email: | |
| o Place the following in your .emacs file: | |
| (setq mail-signature t) | |
| Note about sig usage: Try to use short sigs for posts to | |
| newsgroups. If you have any long sigs, try to only use them for | |
| email and posts to the ASCII art groups. | |
| 25 What should I know about posting ASCII Art? | |
| You can post any of the following types of ASCII art to | |
| rec.arts.ascii or alt.ascii-art or alt.binaries.pictures.ascii | |
| groups: | |
| o All forms of ASCII art including: | |
| - Standard ASCII art (line pics, 3-D, oversize printer art, GIFs, etc). | |
| - Non-standard ASCII art (animations, color pics, color animations). | |
| o Discussion about pieces of art. | |
| o Requests for specific pieces of art, and their fulfillment. | |
| o Questions and answers covering: | |
| - Creating and viewing ASCII art. | |
| - Locating FTP sites for ASCII art and related files. | |
| o Dicussion about artists in the field. | |
| Animations can also be posted to alt.ascii-art.animation. 3-D art | |
| can also be posted to alt.3d. | |
| To make it easier for everybody, please put one of the following | |
| Subject IDs at the beginning of the subject line of your post: | |
| Line - Standard ASCII line art. Line pictures and large lettering. | |
| GIF - Gray scale image. | |
| Animation - Animation. Usually uuencoded. | |
| Color - ANSI Color image. Usually uuencoded. | |
| 3-D - Three dimensional art. | |
| Font - Alphabets and Figlet fonts. | |
| Binary - Binaries (software like Figlet and Gifscii). Usually uuencoded. | |
| Big - Wider than 80 columns and-or longer than 24 lines). | |
| Repost - Repost of a previously posted pic, not new art. | |
| Request - Request for a picture, Figletized name, sig, etc. | |
| Talk - General discussion, no pics included. | |
| Question - A question concerning any of the ASCII art topics. | |
| Answer - An answer to a question asked by a poster. | |
| Info - Web URLs, email addresses, Gopher and FTP sites, font lists,etc | |
| Announce - Announcements of events, new sites, Web pagse, etc. | |
| FAQ - Used for the weekly posting of Frequently Asked Questions | |
| If you are following up a post, please change the Subject ID to | |
| reflect the contents of the post. This way if you are fulfilling a | |
| request, change: | |
| Request: Marilyn Monroe | |
| TO | |
| GIF: Marilyn Monroe | |
| This allows readers the option of reading the group in a | |
| newsreader's selector, sorted by articles. They can then read only | |
| what is of interest to them, trusting the IDs to accurately identify | |
| the contents. Some people do not have the time (or money if they | |
| are paying by the hour or byte) to read everything in every group | |
| they like. | |
| Here are some guidelines: | |
| Posting to the ASCII groups: | |
| o If someone requests a picture only days after it has been posted, | |
| and you would like to fill that request, please email the picture | |
| to the person requesting it. It's better than reposting so soon. | |
| o Try to eliminate unnecessary blank space to the left of the pic, | |
| and trailing space to the right. This reduces waste. | |
| o If you're posting a collection of pics, try to keep each pic on | |
| its own lines (and separated from other pics by a couple of | |
| lines). | |
| o Replace tabs with spaces. Otherwise tab damage can occur. | |
| When following up an article: | |
| o Read all the articles in a thread before posting. Most | |
| newsreaders will let you re-read news you've already seen. | |
| o Decide whether it's better to post or email your message. | |
| o Check the attributions. | |
| o Try to keep quoted materials to a minimum. | |
| o Summarize where possible. | |
| o Change the Subject ID. | |
| Most general guidelines for posting apply here too: | |
| o Try to stay on topic (ASCII art). It's easy to get sidetracked | |
| into other things, especially when a cross-posted thread gets | |
| going. | |
| o If you disagree with someone, disagree with their words, don't | |
| flame them. | |
| o Ask permission before quoting somebody's email message. | |
| o Type your post in upper-and-lower case. ALL UPPER CASE IS HARD TO READ. | |
| o Cross-post an article instead of posting it separately to many | |
| newsgroups. You cross-post by adding group names to the | |
| "Newsgroups:" line in the header (if you are using the editor in a | |
| newsreader). Or by typing names when prompted in "Pnews". | |
| When you cross-post, only one copy is sent around. And only one | |
| copy is kept on each machine. And as a reader, you only see the | |
| cross-posted article once, no matter how many groups it was cross- | |
| posted to. | |
| If you're a new reader: | |
| o Read the ASCII groups for a week or two to familiarize yourself | |
| with them before posting. | |
| If you're a new user: | |
| o Familiarize yourself with newsgroups, their customs, terminology | |
| and abbreviations. Check out the guidelines, posted in the | |
| newsgroups news.announce.newusers and news.newusers.questions. | |
| One exception to the usual rules is the use of sigs. Because the | |
| groups rec.arts.ascii, alt.ascii-art and alt.binaries.pictures.ascii | |
| are about ASCII art, it is within the scope of these groups to post | |
| longer sigs. | |
| Be an Art Detective. | |
| Let's say you're reading another group, say, rec.nonsense, and | |
| while reading the posts, you see a pic or sig. You would like an | |
| easy way to show it to us on rec.arts.ascii, without saving it, | |
| quiting from rec.nonsense, going to rec.arts.ascii, starting a post, | |
| inserting the pic or sig, quiting your newsreader, deleting it, etc. | |
| It's easy to be an Art Detective. While in the original newsgroup: | |
| o Follow-up the article, making sure it is quoted. | |
| o Replace any newsgroups named in the "Newsgroups:" with "rec.arts.ascii". | |
| o Delete all extraneous materials from the post, leaving the pic or sig. | |
| o Add any commentary you think appropriate. | |
| o Send it. | |
| 26 Where is this FAQ available? | |
| Tha FAQ is available from newsgroups, FTP, Gopher, WWW, finger: | |
| o Newsgroups: | |
| rec.arts.ascii, | |
| alt.ascii-art, alt.binaries.pictures.ascii, alt.ascii-art.animation | |
| comp.graphics, news.answers, alt.answers, rec.answers, comp.answers | |
| o FTP Sites: | |
| -> Host: ftp.wwa.com | |
| Path: pub/Scarecrow | |
| File: FAQ | |
| URL: ftp://ftp.wwa.com/pub/Scarecrow/FAQ | |
| -> Host: rtfm.mit.edu | |
| Path: pub/usenet-by-group/rec.arts.ascii | |
| File: FAQ_-_ASCII_Art_Questions_&_Answers_(*.*_-_*_K) | |
| URL: ftp://rtfm.mit.edu/pub/usenet-by-group/rec.arts.ascii | |
| -> Host: src.doc.ic.ac.uk | |
| Path: pub/usenet/news.answers/rec.arts.ascii | |
| File: FAQ_-_ASCII_Art_Questions_&_Answers_(*.*_-_*_K) | |
| URL: ftp://src.doc.ic.ac.uk/pub/usenet/news.answers/rec.arts.ascii | |
| o Gopher Servers: | |
| -> Hast: gopher.wwa.com | |
| Items: 3, 3 | |
| -> Hast: jupiter.sun.csd.unb.ca | |
| Items: 10, 12, 1 | |
| -> Host: cc1.kuleuven.ac.be | |
| Items: 3, 3, 858 | |
| o World Wide Web: | |
| -> URL: http://miso.wwa.com/~boba/scarecrow.html | |
| Select: ASCII ART FAQ (this file) | |
| Select: ASCII Art Resources (text version with samples of everything) | |
| Select: ASCII Art Reference (Web version with links to everything) | |
| o Finger by typing the following at a prompt on mony sites: | |
| finger asciifaq@wwa.com (turn on text capture first) | |
| OR | |
| finger asciifaq@wwa.com | more (you can read it a page at a time) | |
| OR | |
| finger asciifaq@wwa.com > faq (saves it to a file called 'faq') | |
| 27 Who made this FAQ? | |
| It is made by your old friend, the Scarecrow. Materials for the | |
| ASCII ART FAQ, ASCII Art Resources and ASCII Art Reference (the Web | |
| version of the FAQ) were gratefully received from the following nice | |
| people: | |
| JORN BARGER _______________________ | |
| ROWAN CRAWFORD / \ | |
| NORMAND VEILLEUX | That's all folks! | | |
| GLEN A MILLER | See ASCII Art Resources | | |
| JUDY ANDERSON | and ASCII Art Reference | | |
| MICHAEL A GODIN | for many examples. | | |
| STEVEN M SULLIVAN \__ __________________/ | |
| LARS ARONSSON | / | |
| CHRIS PIRILLO |/ | |
| CHEVALIER / | |
| Q ALEX ZHAO | |
| DOV SHERMAN | |
| GREG GULIK | |
| A RICH | |
| C GROOM | |
| MATT RYAN | |
| FELIX LEE | |
| DAVE VRONA | |
| PAUL KLINE | |
| R L SAMUELL | |
| DANNI BAUER | |
| NICK RUSNOV | |
| DON BERTINO | |
| TODD D HALE | |
| JOHN PAYSON | |
| PAUL FAWCETT | |
| MATT MESSINA | |
| SUSIE OVIATT | |
| RICHARD KIRK | |
| SIMON BRADLEY | |
| PAUL FOERSTER | |
| RIC HOTCHKISS | |
| WINSTON SMITH | |
| O'NEIL PARKER | |
| GLENN CHAPPELL | |
| DANIEL HOLDREN | |
| DAVID CONNELLY | |
| OTTO J. MAKELA | |
| JOEL ROTHSCHILD | |
| BENJAMIN THOMAS | |
| BRIAN DEVENDORF | |
| EVAN M CORCORAN | |
| MEINDERT DE JONG | |
| MATT E THURSTON | |
| CHRISTOPHER KING | |
| JONATHAN PETERSON | |
| RUDRIK GREYSHADOW | |
| __________________________________________________________________________ | |
| Version: 4.9.2 | |
| Released: April 9, 1996 | |
| || | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | || | |
| END O F T H E A S C I I A R T FAQ | |
| || | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | || | |
| File: academy/faqs/faq_barger.txt | |
| http://www.ascii-art.de/info/faq_barger.txt | |
| From: cfbd@southern.co.nz (Colin Douthwaite) | |
| ============================================================================ | |
| ASCII ART FAQ by Jorn Barger 11 December 1993 | |
| ============================================================================ | |
| ASCII ART FAQ | |
| by Jorn Barger | |
| Purpose: to promote more creative use of the ASCII character set on | |
| Internet, especially for _page layout_ and _animation_, and the | |
| development and distribution of tools to facilitate this. | |
| Justification: Ascii art will continue to be the appropriate, | |
| populist technology for graphics on Internet, for some years to | |
| come... so we might as well get good at it! (There's still lots of | |
| untapped potential...) | |
| There's such a range of newsreading environments, that few of the | |
| ideas offered here will work the same for everyone. If we want to do | |
| this right, we need to get a sense of where these differences are | |
| most serious. (White-on-black displays vs b-on-w, for one...) | |
| ****************** | |
| Contents of FAQ: | |
| ****************** | |
| - Samples of page-layout and animation | |
| - The ASCII character set: problems and potential | |
| - The line-draw character palette | |
| - Line-draw ascii fonts | |
| - Esthetics: texture, gesture | |
| - Greyscale character palettes | |
| - ASCII anti-aliasing | |
| - An 'asciify' algorithm for anti-aliasing pbm bitmaps, with sample | |
| This last topic may have the most *practical* utility-- it should | |
| allow archives of GIFs and JPEGs to offer compact catalogs of | |
| thumbnails *in the form of simple text files*. | |
| Thruout the faq, I'll be raising questions about things I don't | |
| know, that I'd like to be able to answer in future updates. | |
| Feedback is *very* welcome. | |
| Here's some samples of ascii page-layout: | |
| 1 9 9 3 | |
| The central |"| | |
| bargraph shows >>>>>>>> |m| < =--------- | |
| the total |m| 1 This rightmost bargraph, | |
| number of |"| |m| < . turned sideways, shows | |
| newsgroups, | | < |m| 2 . the *distribution* of daily | |
| log 10 | | 9 |m| < . volume for all newsgroups. | |
| (groups_total) | | < |m| 3 ] (msgs_per_group) | |
| (~5000) | | < |m| < ] | |
| |m| 6 | | 4 ]] Here, most newsgroups are | |
| >>>>> |m| < | | < ]] still way under 100 msgs | |
| This leftmost |m| < | | 5 ]]]] per day. One group in ten | |
| bargraph is |m| 3 | | < ]]]]]]] tops this level. | |
| a logarithmic |m| < | | 6 =--------- | |
| display of |m| < |_| 0 100 200 | |
| total Usenet |m| 0 msgs/day/group | |
| readership, |_| | |
| (subs_total) 5000 groups | |
| (~1,000,000) 1 million readers | |
| 1 9 8 8 1 9 9 3 1 9 9 8: the nightmare? | |
| (wild guesses) | |
| |"| |"| |"| | |
| |m| < =--------- |m| < =--------- |m| < =--------- | |
| |m| 1 |m| 1 |m| 1 ] | |
| |"| |m| < |"| |m| < . |"| |m| < ]] | |
| | | < |m| 2 | | < |m| 2 . | | < |m| 2 ]] | |
| | | 9 |m| < . | | 9 |m| < . | | 9 |m| < ]] | |
| | | < | | 3 . | | < |m| 3 ] |m| < |m| 3 ]] | |
| | | < | | < . | | < |m| < ] |m| < |m| < ]]] | |
| | | 6 | | 4 ] |m| 6 | | 4 ]] |m| 6 |m| 4 ]]]] | |
| | | < | | < ] |m| < | | < ]] |m| < |m| < ]]]]]] | |
| |m| < | | 5 ]] |m| < | | 5 ]]]] |m| < | | 5 ]]]]]]]] | |
| |m| 3 | | < ]]]] |m| 3 | | < ]]]]]]] |m| 3 | | < ]]]]]]]]] | |
| |m| < | | 6 =--------- |m| < | | 6 =--------- |m| < | | 6 =--------- | |
| |m| < |_| 0 100 200 |m| < |_| 0 100 200 |m| < |_| 0 100 200 | |
| |m| 0 msgs/day/group |m| 0 |m| 0 | |
| |_| |_| |_| | |
| 500 groups 5000 groups 50,000 groups??? | |
| 100,000 readers 1 million readers 100 million readers | |
| Current editors/ word processors assume that you want your text | |
| elements to hug the left margin, effectively a 'sideways gravity' | |
| that must be carefully counteracted. It's easy to screw up (which | |
| the warlorders call 'tabdamage'). If your wp offers typeover-mode, | |
| that's likely to work better than insert-mode, for preventing | |
| tabdamage. | |
| Here's a primitive animation (that also illustrates the use of | |
| lineweight to simulate depth). The protagonist is just a circle | |
| with a heavy ascii lineweight, abstractly representing a character | |
| named Joy Hoy: | |
| _+m"m+_ | |
| Jp qh | |
| O O | |
| Yb dY | |
| "Y5m2Y" | |
| The faster your modem, the nicer this works: | |
| ========================================================================== | |
| . | |
| :: | |
| :: .. : | |
| . .::::.: :: | |
| - :. :':::::.:::: /-\_/-\_/-\_/-\_/-\_/-\_/-\_/ | |
| | :':'::.::::::.: - . , . . . | |
| | \- - :''::':'::: ... _/ | . . <^o^o^^o^> . . | |
| | ] \- -::'::'::.::/ | . <^o^^o^^o^^o^> , | |
| | : ..\:::':'::/ | . . <^^^^^^^^^^^^^^> . | |
| | ] : .. _ -=_ | , H.:. /.../..:H . . | |
| | ] : ./ \ | . . . I://.//./ /::I , | |
| | ] :/ \ | . H:.: /.//...:H .. | |
| | ] / / \ \ | :. I.:/.//.//..:I .: . | |
| _+m"m+_ | ]/ / \ | . , H:../// /./::H . .. | |
| Jp qh | / \ \ | ., . I./:/../// .:I , . , | |
| O O ___|/ / \ \|____;__H:. ////:/./:H_________ | |
| Yb dY | |
| "Y5m2Y" / | |
| __________________ / __________ | |
| _______"_____ =======_=======_===_===__________ | |
| ========================================================================== | |
| ========================================================================== | |
| . | |
| :: | |
| :: .. : | |
| . .::::.: :: | |
| - :. :':::::.:::: /-\_/-\_/-\_/-\_/-\_/-\_/-\_/ | |
| | :':'::.::::::.: - . , . . . | |
| | \- - :''::':'::: ... _/ | . . <^o^o^^o^> . . | |
| | ] \- -::'::'::.::/ | . <^o^^o^^o^^o^> , | |
| | : ..\:::':'::/ | . . <^^^^^^^^^^^^^^> . | |
| | ] : .. _ -=_ | , H.:.//... ..:H . . | |
| | ] : ./ \ | . . . I://.//. //::I , | |
| | ] :/ \ | . H:.://.//...:H .. | |
| ] / / \ \ | :. I.:/./ .//..:I .: . | |
| _+m"m+_ / / \ | . , H:../////./::H . .. | |
| Jp qh J888888888888h | ., . I./:/../ //.:I , . , | |
| ______ O O / 88 \\\ \ \ \ 88 |____;__H:.// //:/./:H_________ | |
| Yb dY 88 \\\\\\ \\\ \ 88 | |
| "Y5m2Y" / 8 \\\\\\\\\\ \\ 8 | |
| _________________ / J888888888888888888h __________ | |
| ______"______ 8OO8XX [YBNNDY] XX8OO8 ==_======_====_===__________ | |
| ========================================================================== | |
| ========================================================================== | |
| . | |
| :: | |
| :: .. : | |
| . .::::.: :: | |
| - :. :':::::.:::: /-\_/-\_/-\_/-\_/-\_/-\_/-\_/ | |
| | :':'::.::::::.: - . , . . . | |
| | \- - :''::':'::: ... _/ | . . <^o^o^^o^> . . | |
| | ] \- -::'::'::.::/ | . <^o^^o^^o^^o^> , | |
| | : ..\:::':'::/ | . . <^^^^^^^^^^^^^^> . | |
| | ] : .. _ -=_ | , H.:.//.../..:H . . | |
| | ] : ./ \ | . . . I: /.//.// ::I , | |
| | ] :/ [==] \ | . H:.://.//...:H .. | |
| | ] / / [d==b]\ \ | :. I.:/.//.//..:I .: . | |
| | ]/ / " " \ | . , H:.. ////./::H . .. | |
| | / _+m"m+_ \ \ | ., . I./:/..////.:I , . , | |
| __________|/ / Jp qh \ \|____;__H:./ ///:/./:H_________ | |
| O O | |
| / Yb dY | |
| _________________ / "Y5m2Y" __________ | |
| _______"_____ =======_=====_=====_===__________ | |
| ========================================================================== | |
| ========================================================================== | |
| . | |
| :: | |
| :: .. : | |
| . .::::.: :: | |
| - :. :':::::.:::: /-\_/-\_/-\_/-\_/-\_/-\_/-\_/ | |
| | :':'::.::::::.: - . , . . . | |
| | \- - :''::':'::: ... _/ | . . <^o^o^^o^> . . | |
| | ] \- -::'::'::.::/ | . <^o^^o^^o^^o^> , | |
| | : ..\:::':'::/ | . . <^^^^^^^^^^^^^^> . | |
| | ] : .. _ -=_ | , H.:.//.../..:H . . | |
| | ] : ./ w \ | . . . I://. /.///::I , | |
| | ] :/ \ | . H:.://.//...:H .. | |
| | ] / / \ \ | :. I.:/.//./ ..:I .: . | |
| | ]/ / \ ' . , H:../ ///./::H . .. | |
| | / \ _+m"m+_ . I./:/..////.:I , . , | |
| __________|/ / Jp qh __H:./// /:/./:H_________ | |
| O O | |
| / Yb dY | |
| _________________ / "Y5m2Y" __________ | |
| _______"_____ ___===_====_======_===__________ | |
| ========================================================================== | |
| ========================================================================== | |
| . | |
| :: | |
| :: .. : | |
| . .::::.: :: | |
| - :. :':::::.:::: /-\_/-\_/-\_/-\_/-\_/-\_/-\_/ | |
| | :':'::.::::::.: - . , . . . | |
| | \- - :''::':'::: ... _/ | . . <^o^o^^o^> . . | |
| | ] \- -::'::'::.::/ | . <^o^^o^^o^^o^> , | |
| | : ..\:::':'::/ | . . <^^^^^^^^^^^^^^> . | |
| | ] : .. _ -=_ | , H.:.//.../..:H . . | |
| | ] : ./ \ | . . . I:/ .//.// ::I , | |
| | ] :/ \ | . H:.://.//...:H .. | |
| | ] / / \ \ | :. I.:/.//.//.. ! .: . | |
| | ]/ / \ | . , H:../// _+m"m+_ . . | |
| | / \ \ | ., . I./:/.. Jp qh . , | |
| __________|/ / \ \|____;__H:./ // O O ____ | |
| Yb dY | |
| / "Y5m2Y" | |
| _________________ / __________ | |
| _______"_____ =======_===_=======_===__________ | |
| ========================================================================== | |
| ************************* | |
| The ASCII character set | |
| ************************* | |
| The American Standard Code for Information Interchange supplies a | |
| character-assignment for each number from zero to 127 (7F in | |
| hexadecimal). As I understand it, Internet protocols are optimized | |
| for this seven-bit range--if you're trying to ftp an eight-bit-wide | |
| file, you have to specially request 'binary' transmission. (So the | |
| opposite of binary, here, is *ASCII*.) | |
| Only the numbers from 32 to 126 (20 to 7E hex) are defined as | |
| *printable* characters (the others are defined as control codes): | |
| 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 A B C D E F | |
| =-------------------------------- | |
| 2 | ! " # $ % & ' ( ) * + , - . / <- <- <- 20 hex is the | |
| 3 | 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 : ; < = > ? blankspace | |
| 4 | @ A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O | |
| 5 | P Q R S T U V W X Y Z [ \ ] ^ _ | |
| 6 | ` a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o 7F is non-printing | |
| 7 | p q r s t u v w x y z { | } ~ <- in the US ("rubout") | |
| Unfortunately, this narrow standard ignored the needs of many other | |
| cultures: the British 'pound' sign, letters with accents in French | |
| and Scandinavian alphabets, etc., which led them to introduce slight | |
| modifications to the standard, making the following symbols (at | |
| least) non-universal: | |
| {^ ` { curly brace 1 ^ caret ` backquote | |
| #| } # hatch/hash mark | pipe } curly brace 2 | |
| ~\ ~ tilde \ backslash | |
| ]$[@ [square brackets] $ dollarsign @ at-sign | |
| [The test-graphic is vaguely a woman with a rose in her teeth, on my | |
| screen anyway...] | |
| Furthermore, even within the US, different typefaces assign | |
| significantly different shapes to some characters, for example: | |
| "|" (C7) is sometimes drawn as a continuous line, sometimes broken | |
| in the middle. | |
| ...@... ...@... (So this becomes a | |
| "^" (5E) may be anything from ..@.@.. to ..@.@.. 'Pinocchio' smiley: | |
| ....... .@...@. { ;^) | |
| Similarly with "<" and ">". ....... @.....@ (...doesn't it?)) | |
| Depending on your character set, any of these may be the blackest | |
| black: @#%* (I'm often seeing people choosing "#", which on my | |
| screen looks totally blotchy.) | |
| Any of these may display at different heights: ~^*-=+ | |
| Lettershapes may have serifs or not, and ascenders and descenders | |
| may be straight or curved. (Proportionally-spaced fonts, as opposed | |
| to monospaced, are of course *hopeless*. On the Mac, I favor Monaco | |
| 9, for its simplicity. Courier is another normally-monospaced | |
| family.) | |
| Even monospaced fonts may display with different aspect ratios | |
| (v:h), at least within GUIs, which can turn circles into ellipses | |
| and squares into rectangles. Different newsreaders may space the | |
| lines differently, too, with the same outcome. (What was the IBM- | |
| monochrome aspect-ratio?) | |
| For Internet transmission, you can assume the display is 80 | |
| characters wide, although if you trim this a bit it will allow | |
| images to be e-quoted without wrap-around. (If you use all 80, can | |
| the CR cause wraparound in some pagers?) | |
| Normal screen height is 24 or 25 lines, but when you're laying out a | |
| page you should assume you'll use a control-L before and after each | |
| screenful of text, to maintain the alignment, and this turns out to | |
| limit the height to 22 lines. | |
| ********************************************* | |
| Line-draw vs. greyscale character palettes | |
| ********************************************* | |
| Most ascii art so far has leaned almost entirely on less than twenty | |
| of the available characters-- what might be called the 'line-draw' | |
| character palette: | |
| / \ | - _ = | |
| . : ' ` " ~ | |
| < > ( ) [ ] | |
| Here's a cute example of the potential of this palette, a pastiche | |
| that re-combines an incredibly cool self-portrait by Jonggu Moon and | |
| a state-of-the-art dragon (off rec.games.mud, I think, but I got it | |
| 2ndhand and missed the credit). Notice, though, how the lines are | |
| mostly the same weight, creating a flatness: | |
| _ __,----'~~~~~~~~~`-----.__ | |
| . . `//====-_ ___,-' ` | |
| -. \_|// . /||\\ `~~~~`---.___./ | |
| ______-==. _-~o~ \/ ||| \\ _,'` | |
| __,--' ,=='||\=_ ;_--~/_-'|- |`\ \\ ,' | |
| _-' ' | \\`. '-'~7 /- / || `\. / | |
| .' //// || | \\ \_ / /- / || \ / | |
| / ____ O-O--= | \\.`-_/ /|- _/ ,|| \ / | |
| ,-' ( ^ _/\_ --_ \ `==-/ `| \'--===-' _/` | |
| /\~-\/ \ `-| /| )-'\~' _,--~' | |
| /|`/ _ \_ \ '-~~\_/ | | `\_ ,~ /\ | |
| / | : U_/ / / \ \__ \/~ `\__ | |
| \(__:__ \_/ _,-' _/'\ ,-'~____-'`-/ ``===\ | |
| =@===== ((->/' \|||' `. ~`-/ , _|| | |
| | | \_ ~\ `^---|__i__i__\--~'_/ | |
| / | | __-^-_ `) \-.______________,-~' | |
| / /| | //,-'~~`__--^- |-------~~~~~' | |
| | | | | //,--~~`-\ | |
| |__| |__| | |
| /#_) |#\ | |
| Tools for pasting clip-art *with appropriate 'hidden-line removal'* | |
| do not exist, so one must settle, for now, for a word processor with | |
| rectangular cut and paste. (Nisus on the Mac, MS Word in recent | |
| upgrades?) | |
| The animation sample at the beginning of this FAQ uses mostly | |
| linedraw, but also a bit of greyscale in the foreground (darker | |
| lineweight) and in the far-background (lighter weight). *Greyscale | |
| ascii art normally assumes you're displaying dark letters on a light | |
| background*. This won't be true for many pc-monochrome monitors. | |
| (Here's a page, again. Notice also how a degree of 'random noise' | |
| adds to the sense of realism, like avoiding using too-straight lines | |
| or too-symmetrical shapes.) | |
| ========================================================================== | |
| . | |
| :: | |
| :: .. : | |
| . .::::.: :: | |
| - :. :':::::.:::: /-\_/-\_/-\_/-\_/-\_/-\_/-\_/ | |
| | :':'::.::::::.: - . , . . . | |
| | \- - :''::':'::: ... _/ | . . <^o^o^^o^> . . | |
| | ] \- -::'::'::.::/ | . <^o^^o^^o^^o^> , | |
| | : ..\:::':'::/ | . . <^^^^^^^^^^^^^^> . | |
| | ] : .. _ -=_ | , H.:.//... ..:H . . | |
| | ] : ./ \ | . . . I://.//. //::I , | |
| | ] :/ \ | . H:.://.//...:H .. | |
| ] / / \ \ | :. I.:/./ .//..:I .: . | |
| _+m"m+_ / / \ | . , H:../////./::H . .. | |
| Jp qh J888888888888h | ., . I./:/../ //.:I , . , | |
| ______ O O / 88 \\\ \ \ \ 88 |____;__H:.// //:/./:H_________ | |
| Yb dY 88 \\\\\\ \\\ \ 88 | |
| "Y5m2Y" / 8 \\\\\\\\\\ \\ 8 | |
| _________________ / J888888888888888888h __________ | |
| ______"______ 8OO8XX [YBNNDY] XX8OO8 ==_======_====_===__________ | |
| ========================================================================== | |
| ************************ | |
| ASCII fonts (linedraw) | |
| ************************ | |
| Here's some ascii fonts that use only the linedraw palette. (I'd | |
| like to collect full alphabets for these.) Notice that they all use | |
| the underscore for the topline of the letters, so an almost-full | |
| line of blank must be left above them: | |
| ___ _ _ _ _ _____ | |
| | || |_ ___ _| ||_| ___ __ _| |_ / ___\ ___ __ ___ ___ | |
| | | || .\/ ._\/. || |/ ._\| \|_ _| | / __ / _ \ | / \ / _ \ | |
| |___||___/\___/\___||_|\___/|_|_| |_| | \_\ \ | __/ | /\ | | __/ | |
| \_____/ \___/ |_| |_| \___/ | |
| _ __ __ __ _ __ ___ __ __ ___ _ _ | |
| | |/ / / _| / _|| | / \ | __|/ _|/ _|| __|| \| | | |
| | ( ( (_ ( (_ | |_ | __ || __|\_ \\_ \| __|| | | |
| |_|\_\ \__| [] \__||___||_||_||___||__/|__/|___||_|\_| | |
| ___ __ __ ___ ____ ___ ____ _____ ___ _____ ___ ____ | |
| / \| | |/ \| \ / \ / ___| ___|/ \|_ _|/ \| | | |
| | =+= | =+= | =+= | =+= | =+= | \__ \| ___| +=+ | | | | +=+ | +=+ | |
| \___/|__|__|__|__|__|\_\__|__| |___/|_____|__|__| |_| |__|__|____| | |
| /\ | |
| ___/\___ ___ __ __(__) __ _______ | |
| _/ __/\ \/\ / \ | |/ ___\/ \/ ___/ | |
| \___ \_/ \/ _/\ \| _/ /| | \ / ____ | |
| _/ | \ \/ \ \_/ / \_ \| | | \ \/ _/ | |
| \ ___/\__|| \____/| |\__/__|__| \_ | | |
| \/ |____/ |__| |____/|__| /\ | |
| ___ (__)_____________ ___________ | |
| \ \/\ | |____ \____ \/ \_____ \ | |
| _/ \ | | _|/ / _|/ / _/\ \__|/ / | |
| \ \/ \| | \_ \_\_ \_\_/ /\_ \_ | |
| \__|| |__| |\___/ |\___/____/ |\___/ | |
| |____/ |__| |__| |__| | |
| Here's an especially readable box font (in tumbling-dice mode): | |
| __ ____ __ ____ __ __ | |
| /\ \ / \_\ / /\ / \ \ / |\ / /\ | |
| / \_\ / /\ |_| / / /| /\ \ \ / ||/ / / | |
| / /\ | |\ \/ /_/_ / / / \ \/ \ \ / |/ / / | |
| / \/ |_| \ __ \_\ /_/ / \ /\ \_\ / /| / / | |
| / /\ ./_/ \ \ \/_/_\_\/ \ \ \/_// / | / / | |
| \ \/ |_| \ \_\ /_/\ \ \_\ /_/ /|_/ / | |
| \__/_/ \/_/ \_\/ \/_/ \_\/ \_\/ | |
| And an impressively tiny one: | |
| ________ ________ | |
| / /_ __/\ /\ \__ _\ | |
| /___/_/_/\/ \ \___\_\_\ | |
| \___\_\_\/ \/___/_/_/ | |
| Warlorders call most ascii fonts "BUAFs", for butt-ugly ascii font. | |
| (buaG substitutes G-for-graphic.) I'm on the lookout for fonts that | |
| might pass for butt-beautiful, and I'll settle for butt-bearable... | |
| :^) Here's my new favorite (anybody know Jules?): | |
| _| _| _| _| _|_|_ _|_|_ | |
| _| _| _| _| _| |/ \|_ | |
| _| _| _| _| _| _|/ \| | |
| \|_|_/ \|_|_/ _|_|_| \|_|_| \|_|_/ | |
| For page-layout, the linedraw palette is useful for making boxes and | |
| frames, which adds to a screen's 'page-appeal' in the same way a | |
| picture-frame sharpens the look of a wall-poster. | |
| ********************* | |
| Texture and gesture | |
| ********************* | |
| I experienced a personal ascii-art epiphany last winter, on seeing a | |
| few signatures where people used this: _/ as a tile, which provides | |
| an amazing sense of *texture*: | |
| _/ | |
| _/ _/ | |
| _/ _/ _/ | |
| Another (flatter) sort of | |
| texture: The same, randomized: | |
| *::*::*::*::*::*::*::* ::*:::::***::::::::::: | |
| *::*::*::*::*::*::*::* :::::::**::::::*::::*: | |
| *::*::*::*::*::*::*::* :*::*:*::*::::*::::*:: | |
| *::*::*::*::*::*::*::* :::*::::::*::*:*:::::: | |
| *::*::*::*::*::*::*::* ::*:*::::*:*:::::::::: | |
| *::*::*::*::*::*::*::* ::::::*:*::::*:::::::: | |
| *::*::*::*::*::*::*::* *::::::::**:::::::::** | |
| *::*::*::*::*::*::*::* ::::*::::::*:::::*:::: | |
| If your wp's macro-language includes a random-number function, you | |
| can generate textures by writing a 'Spatter' macro that fills a | |
| rectangle with the letters of any string, randomly scattered. | |
| _/ _/ | |
| _/ _/ | |
| _/ _/ | |
| _/ _/ | |
| _/ _/ _/ _/ | |
| _/ _/ _/ _/ _/ | |
| _/ _/ _/ | |
| _/ _/_/ _/ _/ | |
| _/ _/ _/ | |
| As far as I know, _/ _/ _/ | |
| the first appli- _/ _/ _/ _/ _/ _/ _/ | |
| cation to allow _/ _/ _/ _/_/_/ _/ | |
| the use of a mouse _/ _/ _/ | |
| to draw ascii _/ _/_/ _/ _/ | |
| *gesturally* will _/ _/ _/ _/_/ | |
| be Matt Mora's _/ _/ _/ _/ | |
| AsciiPaint (for Mac), _/ _/ | |
| now in beta. (Watch _/ | |
| for announcements.) _/_/ | |
| It made this easy: _/ _/ _/ | |
| ***************** | |
| ASCII greyscale | |
| ***************** | |
| ASCII art has its roots in the technology of *mosaics*. Most | |
| mosaics use small elements with a single, solid colorshade. By this | |
| standard, ASCII offers 95 shades of grey! (When I was small, a | |
| design firm in my town built a hi-tech mosaic mural for the Wright | |
| Brothers museum in Dayton, Ohio, a wall-sized version of that | |
| classic b&w photo of their first flight, built out of inch-square | |
| tiles in about eight shades of grey-- only instead of solid greys, | |
| they used (fractally) tiny black-and-white 'icons', which | |
| represented other scenes from the Wrights' career, covering a scale | |
| from very light to very dark...) | |
| Here's an approximate, partial greyscale ascii palette (still | |
| assuming white background): | |
| .'`,^:";~ | |
| -_+<>i!lI? | |
| /\|()1{}[] (I'm looking for feedback about where this doesn't work, | |
| rcvunxzjft for non-Mac-Monaco displays.) | |
| LCJUYXZO0Q | |
| oahkbdpqwm | |
| *WMB8&%$#@ | |
| (If an eighth bit were available to toggle the background color | |
| between black and white... would this help a lot?) | |
| Of course, more than eight shades of grey is probably overkill, not | |
| least because the lettershapes contribute so much distracting | |
| 'noise' that fewer is probably better. | |
| @@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@J............@@@@@@JJJJJJ@@@@@@@@@@ | |
| @@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@J.................@@JJJJ@@@@JJ@@@@ | |
| @@@@@@..@@@@@@@@@@@@@JJJ...........@@@@@@@@@@@@@@JJ@@@@ | |
| @@@@@@J.JJJJ@@@J@@@@@@@@J........@@.JJJ..@@@@JJJ.JJJJ@@ The more you | |
| @@@@..JJ....@@JJ@@@@@@@@J........@@.J..JJ@@@@@@J...JJ@@ squint, the better | |
| @@@@JJ....J.J.....J.@@@@...........JJJ.JJ..........JJ@@ this looks! | |
| @@@@JJ....J.J.....J.@@@@............JJJ............JJ@@ Notice that it | |
| @@JJJJ..J..........J@@@@...............JJJJ........JJ@@ uses only three | |
| @@JJJJ..J..........J@@@@..................J........JJ@@ greys (or a | |
| @@JJJ..............J@@@@J..........................JJ@@ 'black', a white | |
| @@JJJ.............JJ@@@@J..........................JJ@@ and one grey.) | |
| @@JJJJ.........J.J@@@@J...........................JJJ@@ | |
| @@JJJJJ.......J.JJ@@@@J...........................JJJ@@ [This example is | |
| @@JJJJJ.......J.@@JJ@@....J........................@@@@ far from being | |
| @@JJJJJ.......JJ@@JJ@@..JJJ........................@@@@ optimized, even at | |
| @@JJJJJ.........JJ@@..............................J@@@@ this low res...] | |
| @@JJJJJJ...J.JJJJJ@@.............................JJ@@@@ | |
| @@@@@JJJJJJJ@@JJJJ@@@JJJ@@@JJJ..................J@@@@@@ (Aren't the J's | |
| @@@@@@JJJJJJ@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@JJJJJ.J.....JJ@@@@@@ annoying?) | |
| @@@@@@@@JJJJJJJJ.J@@@@@@@@@@@JJJ...............@@@@@@@@ | |
| @@@@@@@@JJJJJJJJJ.JJ@@@@@@@@J................@@@@@@@@@@ | |
| @@@@@@@@@@JJJJ.J.JJ........................@@@@@@@@@@@@ | |
| ....................J@@@@@@@@@@@@@......JJJJJJ.......... | |
| .....................J@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@..JJJJ....JJ.... | |
| ......@@.............JJJ@@@@@@@@@@@@..............JJ.... | |
| Here's the ......J@JJJJ...J........J@@@@@@@@@..@JJJ@@....JJJ@JJJJ.. | |
| same image ....@@JJ@@@@..JJ........J@@@@@@@@@..@J@@JJ......J@@@JJ.. | |
| in negative, ....JJ@@@@J@J@@@@@J@....@@@@@@@@@@@@JJJ@JJ@@@@@@@@@@JJ.. | |
| for pc-monos: ....JJ@@@@J@J@@@@@J@....@@@@@@@@@@@@@JJJ@@@@@@@@@@@@JJ.. | |
| ..JJJJ@@J@@@@@@@@@@J....@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@JJJJ@@@@@@@@JJ.. | |
| (The whites ..JJJJ@@J@@@@@@@@@@J....@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@J@@@@@@@@JJ.. | |
| just aren't ..JJJ@@@@@@@@@@@@@@J....J@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@JJ.. | |
| very white!) ..JJJ@@@@@@@@@@@@@JJ....J@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@JJ.. | |
| ..JJJJ@@@@@@@@@J@J....J@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@JJJ.. | |
| ..JJJJJ@@@@@@@J@JJ....J@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@JJJ.. | |
| ..JJJJJ@@@@@@@J@..JJ..@@@@J@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@.... | |
| ..JJJJJ@@@@@@@JJ..JJ..@@JJJ@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@.... | |
| ..JJJJJ@@@@@@@@@JJ..@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@J.... | |
| ..JJJJJJ@@@J@JJJJJ..@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@JJ.... | |
| .....JJJJJJJ..JJJJ...JJJ...JJJ@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@J...... | |
| ......JJJJJJ.......................JJJJJ@J@@@@@@JJ...... | |
| ........JJJJJJJJ@J...........JJJ@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@........ | |
| ........JJJJJJJJJ@JJ........J@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@.......... | |
| ..........JJJJ@J@JJ@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@............ | |
| ********************* | |
| ASCII anti-aliasing | |
| ********************* | |
| The oddities of the ascii lettershapes, though, need not be purely | |
| noise. One can also view ascii as a palette whose elements combine | |
| both linedraw and greyscale effects. This might be thought of as | |
| anti-aliased greyscale, and ought to allow at least doubled | |
| resolution, both horizontally and vertically. (I wonder how this | |
| works on other screens?): | |
| (((&(&(&(&(&(((&@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@(((((((((((((((((((((((@ | |
| ((&(((&((&(&((@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@&(((((((((((((((((((((@ | |
| (&(&((&(&&((@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@&((((((((((((((((((@ | |
| ((&(&(@&@&@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@&&(((((((((((((((@ | |
| &(((&&&@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@(((((((((((((((@ | |
| (&(&(@@@&&@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@5::""=@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@&((((((((((((((@ | |
| ((&(&&@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@:::::::m88CCC8@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@&(((((((((((@ | |
| (&(&@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@#88@@88b_::::::mm@9998C8@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@((((((((((@ | |
| ((@&@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@#L""#58@@@)::..8<"_@@9>"C@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@&(((((((@ | |
| (@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@3::))::)@@::: :Yh":::::C@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@m((((( | |
| @@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@33:)::::(@@:::. :"?::::C@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@(@((K(((( | |
| @@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@3)::::::d@@|::. ..::::C@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@(@((@(((@ | |
| @@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@3J)::::/J@@|::.. ..:::(C@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@((@@&((@ | |
| @@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@3J)::::6@C8:=).. .:::::@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@&((((@ | |
| @@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@33J):;;cO8::::.... :::::_@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@&((((@ | |
| @@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@833O8mm@@m888mme_=;:::_@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@&@(((@ | |
| @@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@88OOOO:@@@88P":::::::w@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@(@@@(@((@ | |
| @@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@88OOJJ):::::::::::_@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@(@@@(&((@ | |
| @@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@&&88888):::::__wm@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@(@@@@((@ | |
| @@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@&&88888 @@@@@&&@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@(@@@&((@ | |
| @@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@&8@888883 888888@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@&@ | |
| @@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@&@&8&8888833 88888&@@&@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@&@@ | |
| |@@@@@@@^^~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~^^@@@@@@@@| | |
| |@@@@@@^ ~^ @ @@ @ @ @ I ~^@@@@@@| | |
| |@@@@@ ~ ~~ ~I @@@@@| Here's a superb white-on-black | |
| |@@@@' ' _,w@< @@@@| anti-aliased image I just got | |
| |@@@@ @@@@@@@@w___,w@@@@@@@@ @ @@@| in the mail. | |
| |@@@@ @@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@ I @@@| | |
| |@@@@ @@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@*@[ i @@@| | |
| |@@@@ @@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@[][ | ]@@@| | |
| |@@@@ ~_,,_ ~@@@@@@@~ ____~ @ @@@| | |
| |@@@@ _~ , , `@@@~ _ _`@ ]L J@@@| | |
| |@@@@ , @@w@ww+ @@@ww``,,@w@ ][ @@@@| | |
| |@@@@, @@@@www@@@ @@@@@@@ww@@@@@[ @@@@| | |
| |@@@@@_|| @@@@@@P' @@P@@@@@@@@@@@[|c@@@@| | |
| |@@@@@@w| '@@P~ P]@@@-~, ~Y@@^'],@@@@@@| | |
| |@@@@@@@[ _ _J@@Tk ]]@@@@@@| | |
| |@@@@@@@@,@ @@, c,,,,,,,y ,w@@[ ,@@@@@@@| | |
| |@@@@@@@@@ i @w ====--_@@@@@ @@@@@@@@| | |
| |@@@@@@@@@@`,P~ _ ~^^^^Y@@@@@ @@@@@@@@@| | |
| |@@@@^^=^@@^ ^' ,ww,w@@@@@ _@@@@@@@@@@| | |
| |@@@_xJ~ ~ , @@@@@@@P~_@@@@@@@@@@@@| | |
| |@@ @, ,@@@,_____ _,J@@@@@@@@@@@@@| | |
| |@@L `' ,@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@| | |
| Here's a playful anti-aliased ascii font (3*3): | |
| ! i-, ,=_ :\ = - --= ,-, i i ! i ! / i \ / | |
| i=: :=\ : | ) |- |- | _ :_: : | =: : !""! | |
| j t |_) Y_- :=' o-= o Y-) ! ! i \-Y i \ =-- + + | |
| = : ,-, i- ,-, :-, ,-> ==- i i i i ! ! \ / i i <-= | |
| |\| [ ) :_) [ ) i_; "-, | | | \ / :/\: = ':' / | |
| : + "=" | "=t ! \ o_) ! "=" + ! ! j t ! o-= | |
| An anti-aliasing character palette should include these 'diagonals': | |
| JhjtY | |
| A new anti-aliasing algorithm! | |
| Happily, as I was working on this faq, I ran across Rob Harley | |
| (robert@vlsi.cs.caltech.edu), who had some handy code for converting | |
| b&w bitmaps according to a mapping like this: | |
| .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. | |
| .. .. .. .. .@ .@ .@ .@ @. @. @. @. @@ @@ @@ @@ | |
| .. .@ @. @@ .. .@ @. @@ .. .@ @. @@ .. .@ @. @@ | |
| , . _ - i v g - c i s = e z m | |
| .@ .@ .@ .@ .@ .@ .@ .@ .@ .@ .@ .@ .@ .@ .@ .@ | |
| .. .. .. .. .@ .@ .@ .@ @. @. @. @. @@ @@ @@ @@ | |
| .. .@ @. @@ .. .@ @. @@ .. .@ @. @@ .. .@ @. @@ | |
| ' ! / 2 ! ] / d / ( / K Y 4 Z W | |
| @. @. @. @. @. @. @. @. @. @. @. @. @. @. @. @. | |
| .. .. .. .. .@ .@ .@ .@ @. @. @. @. @@ @@ @@ @@ | |
| .. .@ @. @@ .. .@ @. @@ .. .@ @. @@ .. .@ @. @@ | |
| ` \ | L \ \ ) G ! t [ b + N D W | |
| @@ @@ @@ @@ @@ @@ @@ @@ @@ @@ @@ @@ @@ @@ @@ @@ | |
| .. .. .. .. .@ .@ .@ .@ @. @. @. @. @@ @@ @@ @@ | |
| .. .@ @. @@ .. .@ @. @@ .. .@ @. @@ .. .@ @. @@ | |
| ~ T 7 X V Y Z 8 f 5 P K * M A @ | |
| The most important factor in these assignments is not the letter | |
| shape alone, but the overall pixel density. On my Mac, these rows | |
| form an approximate greyscale, from 2 pixels per char, to six: | |
| 2 _ivc=!/|\~ | |
| 3 gjez2]/(YL\)t[+T7Vf | |
| 4 mdK4ZGbNDXY5P* | |
| 5 W8KMA | |
| 6 @ <-- remember, this choice varies widely: @#%&* | |
| Theoretically, these substitutions could turn 22*80 ascii resolution | |
| into 66*160. See rec.misc for the sourcecode and further details. | |
| Here's the output: | |
| i`it)v|[[[[(//s+)`(-\\/JJgbdd@@@@@@@dmKK(c!(/-[2=/cct/!-v\!_L\)| | |
| ]-!/(!-)\L\)v|c5(!,!Ldd@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@dK/]!c\\\v|i\/cT\v((c- | |
| ]!`/v\//(-|t\VvcL!m@@@@@M@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@bLt\\|)c/2-vv)/it\. | |
| --/-,\,\v\,|)/v/m@@@@@@K@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@bK!v!-( )-!.[/cT | |
| //.\--'--|-/c(e@@@@@@@DD@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@s\\\\-||/v!c\. | |
| -,-|\`||\-\/id@@@@@@@@N@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@b.),`-,-/c-`i | |
| !,\!-!-!'!-!d@@@@@@@P[+~**AAA@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@b/./`c-/.\7- | |
| --'.-- -/,id@@@*P!` \'Z8@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@i.\\'.\.c | |
| ',`,`\'-,-J@@5`- -- `-iYA@@@@@@@@@@b@@@@@@@@@_\-|-\c- | |
| '. -.,`/.G@@K- ` - )7KM@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@c-----/ | |
| - `- --i@@Ai -!ZZ@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@b! \`|-` | |
| `-,'- G@@@[, '.D8K@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@[/-,-/. | |
| -` .-/v@@@A) -)ZdMd@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@\' _\ | |
| - ` ,iVJ@@@! '-!(K5K@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@[(/s[. | |
| - i\G@@@Z- ' ! -i55ZZ@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@)(4)` | |
| , -|b@@@@!\ ' ` |-tYG@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@XNYZ- | |
| tt@@@@A-, ' `)(d@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@D)8A[ | |
| )8@@@@@\ ,-'-/Kd@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@KD@[ | |
| ]]Z@@@@d|- ,ii.c,, -.icLZKK@@@@@@8@K@@@@@@@@@(@8[ | |
| KN8@@@@@( .i!vGG_ J4Kb8ZKb@bbK@d@88@@@@@@@b@@@@@@@@@@dK@- | |
| )/8K@@@K@b@dP~~~T4( Jd@@7`___s@M@@@@MM8d@@@d@@@@@@@@@@@@LM8[ | |
| \!48@K@@@@8@@d*@@@bVi bAKLY~~@@@@@@*ff/\NM8@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@db@[ | |
| ,\\Kb@@@d@.~t` !*~!`. -MA) '~'.).` `,'K@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@AKb[ | |
| ,`8M@@@@@@ -`,,gvZ`` A//- ..c\+\` i]d@@@@@@M@@@@@@@@@@@8[ | |
| i\@8@K@@@D \!' !iZ8@@@8A@@@@@8d@b@@@8M[ | |
| e8d5@@@@@@ '!- '-)8@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@M8i | |
| 8dZ8@M@@@@- v , ,\tK@@@@@@@@@@@@A@@@@@@Z2| | |
| @b@AK@@@b@[ // cctbA@@@AK@@d@@d@@@K@@@bmi | |
| @@8@M@8@@@P- -=/. /iD8d@@@@@@@@@@@@@@A@@@d@@[ | |
| @8@@@MA@@@@\- . _)g2i -((dKK@@@@@d@@@@d@@K@@@@@@K[ | |
| @@@bAK@@K@@)i 'c,,Kb@@bK )X)Kb@M@@d@@@Mb@@A@d@@@@@@8@[ | |
| @K@b@@@@A@AA/i- ~M@@@@Mc .,\c=)D8d@@b@@@d@@@@@@@@@@8d@@A[ | |
| @@@@Mb@@@@@@('c\` PPK((,i]v|-\-v)8XNAdMK@@@@@@@b@@MK@A@@@@@[ | |
| @@8@@MK@d@A@L!--c)s_, ,(ZsbLb@\`- .-N]/KM@@@@@@@d@@@A@@@@@@@@d@[ | |
| @@Kb@@@K@b@@@/- !''~~Vff*N5f -` -,\))KK@@@@@@@MK@@d@@@M8d@b@@@[ | |
| @b@@@KAK@@@@@@2-- ,,_JJ/i)/- |/v)NK@8d@@@@@@@@@@8@@@@@@@@M@K[ | |
| @@8d@K@@@b@@@@@d!, 'VV\)\\)\7(-)4Jb@8@A@@@K@d@@@@@@@8@@@@@@@@[ | |
| M@@@@8@@K@Kb@@@d@v. `-\\/v)88b@M@A@K@@M@@@A@@M@8@@A@d@8@M[ | |
| Zb@d@M@K@@@@@@@@@@m -)!/stbb@b@@A@b@@@@@Kb@@@@@@@b@@@K@@@[ | |
| K@@d@@@@@d@M@8@@@@@Ks ,-/vJD@@8d@K@@@@@@8@@@@@@@@@@MK@@@b@@M@[ | |
| tN@b@@d@d@M@@@@@@@@@@LL4JKd@A@@d@@K@@@@MK@@@@8@@@@@@@@@@@b@@@@@[ | |
| )NM@8b@@A@@@A@@@@@@@@@@@@@@A@@A@@8@@K@d@@@@M@@K@@K@A@@@8@@M@@@@[ | |
| (tMM@@@d@@M8@@@@A@@@@A@@@A@@@@@@@@@A@@@@8b@@8d@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@M[ | |
| tNZ@@K@@@d@@@@A@@@@@8@@@/4N@@8@b@@d@@M@8@MK@M8@K@@@@@@d@@@@@@@@[ | |
| M/KA8@@@MA@@@M@@@@@@@@@@[|t*Z@N@@@@8@@M8ZAZZ@M@@@A@d@@@@@K@@@d@[ | |
| bYJ4M@@@@@@A@@@@@@@@@@@@D.\'(YKKZD@8dK@5A84YZ@dM@@@@@@@@@@@@d@@[ | |
| K5dM8@8d@d@@@@@@@@8@@@@@@..-!/))ZK5AK4)AY(/XY/Z@@@A@@@d@@@M@@@@[ | |
| Y8dNA@@AK@@d@@@b@@@@@@@@@L,-,\!]]\X(5)Z/7c\\t5/K@@@@@@@@b@@@@@@[ | |
| 8M8@@@A@@@A@@8@@@@@@@@@KDLt! !,-|t'(-\\!,\/,\!ZJG@@@d@Md@@@G@@@[ | |
| =----------=- ,!. --=----=----=----=----=----=----=----=----=----=----= | |
| Jorn Barger j't Anon-ftp to genesis.mcs.com in mcsnet.users/jorn for: | |
| <:^)^:< K=-=:: -=-> Finnegans Wake, artificial intelligence, Ascii-TV, | |
| .::.:.::.. "=i.: [-' fractal-thicket indexing, semantic-topology theory, | |
| jorn@mcs.com /;:":.\ DecentWrite, MiniTech, nant/nart, flame theory &c! | |
| =----------= ;}' '(, -=----=----=----=----=----=----=----=----=----=----= | |
| ============================================================================ | |
| [ Note: There has been some reformatting of the text to make it fit | |
| within 76 columns to avoid linewrap, and, the sub-headings | |
| have been re-done to make them clearer. Otherwise the | |
| original text has remained unchanged. ] | |
| Bye, | |
| File: academy/faqs/faq_randall.txt | |
| http://www.ascii-art.de/ascii/faq.html | |
| Archive-name: ascii-art/faq | |
| Posting-Frequency: monthly | |
| Version: 3.0.3.18 | |
| Last-changed: 2003-05-10 cjr | |
| Compiler: CJRandall | |
| Copyright: Public display of this document in proportional-fonts is forbidden | |
| ======================================================================== | |
| | | : : :: \ \ ;; | |
| J J : : :: \ \ ;; | |
| L L : : __ _ _________ \ \ ;; | |
| | | : : / |`| |`|___ ___|`-.\ \ ;; | |
| J J : : / . | | | `-.| |`-. `-.`\ \ ;; | |
| L L : : / /| | | | | | `-. `-\ \ ;; | |
| | | : : / /_| | | | | | `-. \ \. ;; | |
| J J : : / ___ | | | | | `-\ \`-. | |
| L L : : / /`-.| | | |___ | | _ \ \-.`-._ | |
| | | : : /_/____|_|_|_____|_|_|_(_) _ \ \ `-._`: | |
| J J : : |__________________________| `-. \ \-.,-' | |
| L L : : _ _ _ _ _ ___ `-. `-. \ \ | | |
| | | :_: /\(_ / ` | | _ /\ | ) | `-. `-. `-. \ \| | |
| J J | | /--\_)\_,_|_|_-/--\|_\__|__ `-. `-._`-\ \ | |
| L L|_| |___________________________|`-. `-._ `-.\ \ | |
| | | | _____ ___ ___ `-.`-._ `-._ \ ,!`-. | |
| J J | | ___|`/ _ \`-._/ _ \`--. `-._`--._`-'||`-' | |
| L L | | |_ / /_\ \ / / \ \ `-._ `--. `-,+.`-._ | |
| __-------_ | _|`/ _____ \ \ \_/ /_._ `--._ `-.|X||-./ | |
| | |/|_|_./_/_____\_\_\_____/=\`-._ `-. |X||.| | |
| | _,--------------.____ -========\_(A)`-.._ `-|X||\ | |
| Ool | _| ` |_`--. `-- |X||/ | |
| /VK | | | ALT.ASCII-ART: FREQUENTLY ASKED QUESTIONS / ||-. | |
| ======================================================================== | |
| [Subject:] (FAQ) Welcome to ASCII art | |
| ======================================================================== | |
| __ __ __ _, | |
| \\ \\ / ___ '|| ___ ___ __ _ _ ___ _/|_ ___ | |
| \\ /\\ / //_\) || // \)// \\ ||'||'|| //_\) || // \\ | |
| \/ \/ \\__,_||_\\__,\\_//_||_||_||_\\__, \|_\\_// | |
| ___ ___ ____ ____ | |
| /\ (( / // | || || ___ _,_ _/|_ | |
| /_\\ \\ (( || || __\\'||\) || | |
| _/ _\\_/__)) \\__,_||_ _||_ ((_||_||_ \|_ | |
| Answers to frequently asked questions about ASCII art | |
| ======================================================================== | |
| On the Web, the FAQ and other useful documents can be found in the | |
| ASCII art Documentation Archive (ADA), at the following locations:- | |
| ======================================================================== | |
| *** There is a wealth of information about ASCII Art *** | |
| *** in the ASCII Documents Archive *** | |
| ======================================================================== | |
| International Mirrors | |
| ======================================================================== | |
| http://www.sci.fi/~iltzu/ascii/ada/ (Helsinki, Finland) | |
| http://www.ludd.luth.se/~vk/q/ada/ (Lulea, Sweden) | |
| http://voices.vossnet.co.uk/a/atkins/ada/ (Langley, UK) | |
| http://website.lineone.net/~martin.atkins/ada/ (London, UK) | |
| http://www.bluedwarf.net/~mikechat/ada/ (California, USA) | |
| http://votrezone.com/ada/ (Calgary, Canada) | |
| http://martweb.hypermart.net/ada/ (Seattle, USA) <==spyware | |
| ======================================================================== | |
| -*+!%$%!+*-.-*+!%$%!+*-.-*+!%$%!+*-.-*+!%$%!+*-.-*+!%$%!+*-.-*+!%$%!+*- | |
| ======================================================================== | |
| Contents | |
| ======================================================================== | |
| [1] What's alt.ascii-art? | |
| [2] What is ASCII art? | |
| [3] What does ASCII mean? | |
| [4] Why do all the pictures look strange? | |
| [5] What font do you use for ASCII art? | |
| [6] What program do you use for ASCII art? | |
| [7] How do I draw my own ASCII art? | |
| [8] Can someone do me some kewl lettering? | |
| [9] Where can I find Figlet's address? | |
| [10] Can I copy or post that ASCII picture for myself? | |
| [11] What way works best to ask for a picture of something? | |
| [12] What should I know before posting to alt.ascii-art? | |
| [13] What to NOT post to alt.ascii-art? [da roolz] | |
| [14] How do I convert a picture or graphic to ASCII art? | |
| [15] I have a picture or graphic and I would like it Asciified? | |
| [16] What are ASCII art signature files? | |
| [17] What is ASCII art animation? | |
| [18] What does ObAscii mean? | |
| [19] The ASCII Art Rough-Guide to m$.Outlook? | |
| [20] Where can I find pictures/tutorials/infos/chatrooms/experts? | |
| [21] Historacle's What types of ASCII art are there? | |
| [X1] The Ascii Art 10-Commandments | |
| ======================================================================== | |
| [1] What's alt.ascii-art? What's going on here? | |
| ======================================================================== | |
| You're probably reading this because it's been posted to | |
| news:alt.ascii-art, news:alt.ascii-art.animation or rec.arts.ascii. | |
| If you're not, jump in and take a look. In these Usenet groups | |
| people discuss ASCII art, request ASCII art, post ASCII art, post | |
| improved versions or variations of other people's ASCII art, and | |
| generally have fun. | |
| ======================================================================== | |
| [2] What is ASCII art? | |
| ======================================================================== | |
| ASCII art is any sort of pictures or diagrams drawn with the | |
| printable characters in the ASCII character set. | |
| (For a definition of ASCII, see Question 3.) | |
| :-) Probably the most common ASCII art picture is the smiley (-: | |
| but it can get a lot more sophisticated than that. | |
| ____ | |
| .-" +' "-. Here's a small ASCII picture of | |
| /.'.'A_'*`.\ a snow-scene paperweight, | |
| |:.*'/\-\. ':| drawn by Joan Stark: | |
| |:.'.||"|.'*:| | |
| \:~^~^~^~^:/ If this picture looks very strange and | |
| /`-....-'\ you can't really tell what it is, | |
| jgs / \ don't panic -- see Question 5. | |
| `-.,____,.-' | |
| People use ASCII art for a number of reasons. Here are some of them. | |
| * It is the most universal computer art form in the world -- | |
| every computer system capable of displaying multi-line text can | |
| display ASCII art, without needing to have a graphics mode or | |
| support a particular graphics file format. | |
| * An ASCII picture is hundreds of times smaller in file size | |
| than its GIF or BMP equivalent, while still giving a good idea | |
| of what something looks like. | |
| * It's easy to copy from one file to another (just cut and paste). | |
| * It's fun! | |
| ======================================================================== | |
| [3] What does ASCII mean? | |
| ======================================================================== | |
| ASCII (American Standard Code for Information Interchange) | |
| 7-bit as defined in ISO-646 is a basic set of 128 numbered symbols | |
| which almost all kinds of computer can display. Here are the ones | |
| that are used for ASCII art: | |
| 032 [space] 048 0 064 @ 080 P 096 ` 112 p | |
| 033 ! 049 1 065 A 081 Q 097 a 113 q | |
| 034 " 050 2 066 B 082 R 098 b 114 r | |
| 035 # 051 3 067 C 083 S 099 c 115 s | |
| 036 $ 052 4 068 D 084 T 100 d 116 t | |
| 037 % 053 5 069 E 085 U 101 e 117 u | |
| 038 & 054 6 070 F 086 V 102 f 118 v | |
| 039 ' 055 7 071 G 087 W 103 g 119 w | |
| 040 ( 056 8 072 H 088 X 104 h 120 x | |
| 041 ) 057 9 073 I 089 Y 105 i 121 y | |
| 042 * 058 : 074 J 090 Z 106 j 122 z | |
| 043 + 059 ; 075 K 091 [ 107 k 123 { | |
| 044 , 060 < 076 L 092 \ 108 l 124 | | |
| 045 - 061 = 077 M 093 ] 109 m 125 } | |
| 046 . 062 > 078 N 094 ^ 110 n 126 ~ | |
| 047 / 063 ? 079 O 095 _ 111 o | |
| There are other characters in the set (with the numbers 0 - 31 and | |
| 127), but they can do bad stuff to Usenet readers, so PLEASE DON'T | |
| USE THEM in your pictures (except characters 10 and or 13 which | |
| are used to insert a new-line by a variety of Operating Systems). | |
| ======================================================================== | |
| [4] Why do the pictures look strange? | |
| ======================================================================== | |
| If one particular picture posted to this group looks faulty, but the | |
| rest of them look fine, then its most likely a problem with that | |
| particular picture, or with the poster's Usenet program. But if | |
| *all* the pictures look bad, then your Usenet reader may be set to | |
| display messages in a proportional font (see Question 5). | |
| * If there are a lot of almost-blank lines in the picture, then | |
| the message is probably suffering from `wrapping'. This | |
| wrapping may be being done by your newsreader; see if it has an | |
| option called `wrap long lines' or similar, and make sure it is | |
| turned off. If this doesn't work, then the wrapping was probably | |
| done by the news program of the person who sent the picture, in | |
| which case there's not much you can do -- everybody else will be | |
| seeing the same thing. | |
| * If there are a lot of < and > symbols in the picture, with | |
| words like HTML, FONT COLOR, B, I, and so on inside them, then | |
| the picture has been sent in HTML format and your newsreader | |
| does not understand HTML (most newsreaders don't). | |
| ======================================================================== | |
| [5] What font do you use for ASCII art? | |
| ======================================================================== | |
| ASCII art is created using a fixed-width font (like on a traditional | |
| typewriter), because this is the only way to make it portable. | |
| However, several Usenet readers now display messages in a | |
| proportional font (where different characters are different widths). | |
| The following two lines tell you which kind of font you're using. | |
| The arrow ends up in a different place for different font types and | |
| is right most of the time: | |
| You are using a [Proportional] [Monospaced] font | |
| ................................. --^-- | |
| Also, to see what your program is doing, look at these two lines: | |
| iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii| | |
| WWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWW| | |
| If they look the same length, you're using a fixed-width font and | |
| all should be ok. If the second line is longer than the first, you | |
| need to change your settings to use a fixed-width font. | |
| In Netscape Messenger, this option is set in | |
| Edit > Preferences > Mail & Newsgroups. | |
| In Outlook Express, the option is set in | |
| View > Options > Fonts (see Question 19) | |
| In Forte Agent, the option is set in | |
| Options > Display Preferences > Fonts | |
| and Free Agent, the option is set in | |
| Options > General Preferences > Fonts | |
| The AOL newsreader can not, at the time of writing, | |
| display Usenet messages in a fixed-width font at all. | |
| Detailed information on how to configure other Usenet readers is | |
| available at the: | |
| ASCII-Art Documentation Archive (see the beginning of this FAQ). | |
| If all else fails, copy the text of the picture from | |
| your program and paste it into a text editor (such as Notepad). | |
| It's a hassle, but at least you'll get to see the pictures. | |
| ======================================================================== | |
| [6] What program do you use for ASCII art? | |
| ======================================================================== | |
| You can create ASCII art in any text editor, [jorn barger] | |
| such as: Notepad in Windows, | |
| SimpleText or BBEdit in MacOS, | |
| nedit, vi, vim, or pico in Unix, _+m"m+_ | |
| BEd or AZ in AmigaOS, edit in DOS, Jp qh | |
| or any of the various Emacs editors. O O | |
| Yb dY | |
| A 'quick-start' program for learning "Y5m2Y" | |
| is JavE, a free Java program that can be | |
| obtained from:- http://www.jave.de | |
| Some editors have features which make them more | |
| suitable for ASCII art than others, but that is | |
| largely a matter of personal opinion. Features which | |
| are both useful for ASCII art and available in many | |
| text editors, include the following:- | |
| * Overtype, also known as overstrike: removes the need for | |
| you to constantly realign characters using the Backspace, | |
| Space, and Delete keys. Try the Insert key if there is one | |
| on your keyboard, or your program's Options or Preferences. | |
| * Rectangular copy and paste: allows you to select rectangular | |
| sections of text (not just rows or parts of rows). On programs | |
| which have this feature, it is usually done by holding down a | |
| key such as Ctrl while selecting text. | |
| * Find/Change: allows you to change all the characters of one | |
| value to another (eg: change all the ~s to "s). | |
| ======================================================================== | |
| [7] How do I draw my own ASCII art? | |
| ======================================================================== | |
| Unfortunately, there aren't many text books on the subject. :-) | |
| A good way to learn is to study how someone has made a picture. | |
| What characters are chosen and how the characters are laid out. | |
| How a texture is made. | |
| #########::::::::::######## The best way to learn is to Practise. | |
| ##########::::::::######### Draw your cat, your toaster, your | |
| ###########::::::########## partner, your musical instruments, | |
| ###########,---.########### anything that will sit still long | |
| ##########/`---'\########## enough. Practice makes, if not | |
| #########/ \######### perfect, then at least pretty good. | |
| ########/ \######## Whether you do small drawings (less | |
| #######:`-._____.-':####### work involved) or large ones (easier | |
| ######::::: ( ) |::::###### to make recognizable) is up to you. | |
| #####:::::: ) ( o:::::##### If you're interested in tutorials, | |
| ####::::: .-(_)-. :::::#### there are many available from the | |
| ###:::::: '=====' ::::::### ASCII-art Documentation Archive. | |
| ########################Mk# | |
| _ | |
| A good way to begin drawing is to \`"-. | |
| type a row of spaces for however ) _`-. | |
| wide you want your picture, and , : `. \ | |
| then copy this row and paste it : _ ' \ | |
| for however many rows high you ; *` _. `--._ | |
| think the picture will get. `-.-' `-. | |
| Turn Overtype on and place the | ` `. | |
| cursor somewhere in the middle :. . \ | |
| and begin drawing. This can save | \ . : .-' . | |
| using Delete, Backspace, Enter : )-.; ; / : | |
| and Space-bar keystrokes. : ; | : : ;-. | |
| Saving this empty `canvas' as a ; / : |`-: _ `- ) | |
| read-only file for future use can ,-' / ,-' ; .-`- .' `--' | |
| save you even more time later. `--' `---' `---' bug | |
| Another method is by tracing a picture either onto clear-plastic | |
| and sticking it onto the screen then opening an editor to trace | |
| under or using an editor which allows the loading of a background | |
| image to trace over, a process known as `water-mark'. | |
| You can also modify existing art. Take a piece of art you think | |
| could be improved. Make a copy. Now work on it. When you are | |
| good at that, try to improve a really good pic. Then see if you | |
| can fix a damaged file. Now take some small pics and put them | |
| together into a big composite image. | |
| When drawing ASCII art be aware that there are a few characters | |
| that differ in size, shape and position among fonts: | |
| ' apostrophe -- tilts southwest-northeast or vertical | |
| ^ caret -- differs in size and shape | |
| ~ tilde -- appears in the middle or top | |
| I aye -- straight line in sans-serif, with strokes in serif | |
| try using the vertical bar (|) instead. | |
| # hash -- hash symbol on most, currency on some old computers. | |
| ======================================================================== | |
| [8] Can someone do me some kewl lettering? | |
| ======================================================================== | |
| There is a program called Figlet which does that sort of thing | |
| automatically -- you type in `Jane Smith', and you get back | |
| ___ __, | |
| ( / ( o _/_ / | |
| / __, _ _ `. _ _ , / /_ | |
| _/_(_/(_/ /_(/_ (___)/ / /_(_(__/ /_ | |
| // | |
| (/ | |
| in this and a whole lot of other fonts (see Question 9). | |
| The ASCII art text produced by Figlet can be quite stunning, | |
| so try it first before asking for help from the newsgroups. | |
| IF, however, Figlet doesn't produce the kind of results you want, | |
| THEN post to alt.ascii-art or rec.arts.ascii with your request and | |
| ensure that you include: | |
| * that you have already tried Figlet or don't have access to it | |
| otherwise you will probably just get told to use it. | |
| * a description of the kind of lettering you want, along with | |
| any other symbols or logos which you would like incorporated | |
| into it. | |
| ======================================================================== | |
| [9] Where can I find Figlet ? | |
| ======================================================================== | |
| The Figlet home page is at:- http://www.figlet.org/ | |
| and links to the FTP site:- ftp://ftp.figlet.org/pub/figlet/ | |
| where you can download versions of the program or source-code | |
| for many different platforms. | |
| You can run Figlet on the Web by going to one of the following sites | |
| and choosing your text and options on the Web page. Different sites | |
| offer different options (e.g. multiple fonts at once, justification, | |
| and limited line length). Some of these sites also provide an e-mail | |
| Figlet service for people with browsers which don't support forms. | |
| * http://schnoggo.com/figlet.html | |
| * http://www.network-science.de/ascii/ | |
| * http://home.cern.ch/~rigaut/FigletJava.html | |
| ======================================================================== | |
| [10] Can I copy or post that ASCII picture for myself? | |
| ======================================================================== | |
| . | |
| / \ Don't assume that if somebody posts | |
| | | something to a Usenet group, that gives | |
| |.| you the right to use it however you like, | |
| |.| copyright laws still apply. | |
| |:| __ For more information, see the article:- | |
| ,_|:|_, / ) Copyright Myths FAQ: | |
| (Oo / _I_ `10 big myths about copyright explained' | |
| +\ \ || __| in news:news.announce.newusers. | |
| \ \||___| | |
| \ /.:.\-\ It is also available at:- | |
| |.:. /-----\ http://www.clari.net/brad/copymyths.html | |
| |___|::oOo::| | |
| / |:<_T_>:| Generally, ASCII artists don't mind | |
| |_____\ ::: / if you copy their pictures and | |
| | | \ \:/ re-post them or put them on your own | |
| | | | | Web site, as long as you don't | |
| [nosig] \ / | \__ make any money out of them. | |
| / | \____\ | |
| `-' | |
| Here are a few important considerations:- | |
| * If the picture contains a few letters in one corner which don't | |
| seem to be part of the picture, they're the artist's initials. | |
| DO NOT remove these initials -- would you cut away the part of | |
| a Van Gogh painting containing his name? Leaving the initials | |
| on is a small price to pay for being able to use the picture | |
| for free. | |
| * If you're going to use a picture in your signature file, or in | |
| a place (such as a log-in screen) which means you're going to | |
| be using it a lot, you should really e-mail the artist (or post | |
| to the newsgroup, if you don't know their address) and ask for | |
| permission, because otherwise people may get the mistaken | |
| impression that you were the one who drew the picture. | |
| * If you find a picture you want to use, or post, but it doesn't | |
| have initials on it, a common method of marking has been to use | |
| the tag: Unknown. More recently the tag: [nosig] has been used. | |
| As for posting other people's ASCII art, | |
| after a discussion in news:alt.ascii-art _ ___ | |
| the following rules were agreed upon: #_~`--'__ `===-, | |
| 1. If an ASCII ART picture has initials `.`. `#.,// | |
| on it, leave them on when posting it ,_\_\ ## #\ | |
| 2. If an ASCII ART picture doesn't have `__.__ `####\ | |
| initials on it, mention that you ~~\ ,###'~ | |
| didn't draw it when posting it. \##' | |
| 3. If somebody posts a picture without [nosig] | |
| initials and you have an original copy | |
| with initials on, feel free to re-post the original version. | |
| * The re-post ought not to be taken personally, as we all | |
| know that ASCII art often loses proper credits. | |
| Responses to the re-post are not necessary. | |
| One contributor, name of Krogg, suggested the following: | |
| 1.) Ultra polite:...ya make yer own ascii and use it. | |
| 2.) Very polite:...Ya contact the author and ask if ya | |
| can use it... | |
| 3.) polite:...Ya use it but you keep the Credits | |
| in there like they should be. | |
| 4.) rude:...Ya use it and strip credits. | |
| 5.) Very rude:...Ya use it and claim that it Is | |
| _Your_ very own creation... | |
| You choose ... I think the default choice is #3 but you should | |
| make up yer own mind.... | |
| ======================================================================== | |
| [11] What way works best to ask for a picture of something? | |
| ======================================================================== | |
| Give your request the subject: `REQ:' or `[req]' | |
| Whatever you're looking for a picture of, in the message describe | |
| more exactly what you're looking for. Generally, the more specific | |
| you are, the more likely you are to get some response. | |
| If you just say something like: | |
| `can someone draw me a fish, please' | |
| then you may not get many replies, because people may not know | |
| what size or feel they're wasting their time by drawing something | |
| you won't want. If you don't have Web access, mention this fact, | |
| otherwise you may get replies consisting only of URLs for the | |
| kind of pictures you're looking for. | |
| If someone is rude back to you directly, then please be patient, | |
| since it may just be a troll trying to wind you up. | |
| __ | |
| .' )) __-:!:- If you have a picture | |
| .' .' )) and want it Ascii-fied | |
| ((__,' .' ASCII! -:!:- see Question 14 and 15. | |
| -:!:- ((__,'* | |
| ======================================================================== | |
| [12] What should I know before posting to alt.ascii-art? | |
| ======================================================================== | |
| It doesn't matter if your ASCII art isn't particularly good; we'd | |
| like to see it anyway. We won't be rude about it (although you'd | |
| better tell us what it is, or we might ask :-), but if it shows | |
| potential, you may find that other people will `re-diddle' it -- | |
| change a few characters, make it a bit better, and re-post it. | |
| HOWEVER, there are a few things you should check before you | |
| post to news:alt.ascii-art any piece of ASCII art | |
| (see also Question 13). | |
| * Are you sending it as PLAIN TEXT? Some news programs, | |
| particularly those built in to Web browsers, read and write | |
| messages in HTML (HyperText Markup Language, the language which | |
| Web pages are written in). HTML allows colours and (using | |
| JavaScript) animations in ASCII art, but few newsreaders | |
| support it, and those which don't will show a whole lot of | |
| garbage text with your picture hidden inside it. | |
| So if you have one of these HTML-sending programs, then select | |
| the option which tells it to send messages as PLAIN TEXT only | |
| and turn off "send MIME message". | |
| If you have a picture which uses HTML for a particular | |
| feature (such as colors or animation), put it on a Web page | |
| and post the URL of the page to alt.ascii-art | |
| * Is it under 72 characters wide? Most news readers can only show | |
| lines which are under either 72, 76, or 80 characters wide, so | |
| if your picture is wider than 72 characters it may get wrapped | |
| [see Question 4]. Also remove any unnecessary space characters | |
| from the end of each line of the picture, to prevent lines from | |
| being too long (and getting wrapped) without your realizing. | |
| * If it IS over 72 characters wide? | |
| Then a warning in the subject line [wide:110] or whatever the | |
| original picture width and Check Your Post Output Line-Wrap | |
| settings. [for Outlook see Question 19] | |
| Previous versions of this FAQ used a system to prefix posts | |
| such as: [pic] [info] [req] [big] which may be used as a guide | |
| when providing warnings. | |
| * Have you used any TAB characters or Control Codes? | |
| Inserting control codes (ASCII characters 0 to 31) in a picture | |
| can sometimes achieve interesting effect on your computer screen | |
| or news reader, such as reversing text or changing its colour. | |
| DO NOT post any of these pictures to news:alt.ascii-art, post to | |
| news:alt.binaries.pictures.ascii instead for two reasons:- | |
| 1. the effects that the control codes have on your news reader | |
| are almost certainly going to be different from those on | |
| the thousands of other news readers that other people use | |
| 2. on some news readers, control codes can cause messed up | |
| displays, messages not appearing, or (in some cases) the | |
| news reader crashing. | |
| * If your first line starts with one or more spaces, stick a | |
| dummy line (such as -- or .) above it, to prevent the spaces | |
| from being ignored by your news program (this only applies to | |
| some news programs, and only to the first line of the | |
| message). | |
| If you're not sure about whether your message will turn out ok, | |
| post it to a test group (such as news:alt.test or news:misc.test) | |
| first and make sure (using a different newsreader, if you can) that | |
| you can read it ok. | |
| [See Question 10 for advice on posting someone else's ASCII art.] | |
| ======================================================================== | |
| [13] What to NOT post to alt.ascii-art? [da roolz] | |
| ======================================================================== | |
| [13.1] ASCII art is a very simple medium. | |
| _ _ _ _ | |
| ___ (~ )( ~) The following List of Items (~ )( ~) ___ | |
| / \_\ \/ / should NOT be posted to \ \/ /_/ \ | |
| | D_ ]\ \/ the Usenet groups:- \/ /[ _G | | |
| | D _]/\ \ / /\[_ G | | |
| \___/ / /\ \ news:alt.ascii-art / /\ \ \___/ | |
| mark (_ )( _) news:alt.ascii-art.animation (_ )( _) JavE | |
| ~ ~ news:alt.ascii-art.endless.blabla ~ ~ | |
| news:alt.binaries.pictures.ascii | |
| NOTE: alt.binaries.pictures.ascii supports posting of ASCII | |
| software tools or fonts (in ZIP format) and binary images | |
| of ASCII or other FontSet (in GIF format) and any other | |
| ASCII art related material, but no Spam, in relation to | |
| discussions in the alt.ascii-art newsgroups. | |
| -= List of Items =- | |
| * Binaries, Trojans, Zombies, Virus, Spam. | |
| * ANSI,`extended ASCII' or `high ASCII', and non-Western font art. | |
| Many computer systems have an extended character set of 256 or | |
| more characters, based on the ANSI, Unicode or BIG5 character | |
| sets and having the first 128 characters possibly identical to | |
| ASCII. These characters should not be sent to news:alt.ascii-art | |
| because many computer system types do not display them properly, | |
| even those that do, do not display them in a standard way, for | |
| example, the Windows ANSI character set is different to the | |
| Macintosh ANSI character set. Capture and send a GIF of it to | |
| news:alt.binaries.pictures.ascii or put it on a Web page | |
| instead, and post a reference to it to news:alt.ascii-art. | |
| Alternatively, post it to news:rec.arts.ascii (see [13.2]). | |
| * HTML art. HTML, the language used in Web pages, can be used to | |
| add special effects such as colours, font size, and blinking | |
| text to ASCII art, and HTML can be read by some Usenet readers. | |
| However, to many they just appear as a jumble of <TAGS> and are | |
| totally unrecognizable, so don't post HTML to Usenet. Put it on | |
| a Web page instead, and post the address to news:alt.ascii-art. | |
| See http://llizard.crosswinds.net/ascii-art/asciionpage.htm | |
| for instructions on how to do this. | |
| * ASCII art animated using Java or JavaScript. | |
| This relies, not only on the newsreader being able to display | |
| HTML, but also being able to run Java or JavaScript. | |
| Put it on a Web page instead, and post the address to | |
| news:alt.ascii-art.animation and news:alt.ascii-art | |
| * Proportional Font ASCII art screws up on many readers' displays | |
| Send a GIF of it to news:alt.binaries.pictures.ascii or | |
| put it on a Web page instead and post a reference to it to | |
| news:alt.ascii-art or post it to news:rec.arts.ascii | |
| Finally, do not use any control codes, non-ASCII characters, | |
| or word-processor-type formatting in your postings. These are | |
| particular to your editor or computer system they will almost | |
| certainly not have the intended effect on the systems the rest | |
| of us use (they may even crash some Usenet readers). | |
| ==================================================================== | |
| [13.2] What can I post to rec.arts.ascii? | |
| ==================================================================== | |
| The official charter for rec.arts.ascii, as sent in the newsgroup | |
| control message, is: | |
| The group news:rec.arts.ascii will be an appropriate group for | |
| postings to include, but not be limited to, the following: | |
| o All forms of ASCII art including, but not limited to: | |
| - Standard ASCII art. | |
| - Animations. | |
| - ANSI color graphics. | |
| o Discussion about pieces of art. | |
| o Requests for specific pieces of art, and their fulfilment. | |
| o Questions and answers covering: | |
| - Creating and viewing ASCII art. | |
| - Locating FTP sites for ASCII art and related files. | |
| o Discussion about artists in the field. | |
| rec.arts.ascii is a moderated group meaning that all posts are | |
| reviewed before being sent to the group. That work is done by a | |
| robo-moderator which filters Spam and checks the posts have the | |
| correct format before approving them. It can also target a | |
| specific poster's traffic for human moderator approval. | |
| Subjects must be tagged either: | |
| [PIC] for pictures | |
| [REQ] for requests for others to draw pictures | |
| (people replying with pictures change the tag to [PIC]) | |
| [DIS] for general ascii art related discussion and replies. | |
| [ADMIN] for the moderator to post important information. | |
| >> NOTE: Please read:- | |
| >> | |
| >> http://myweb.tiscali.co.uk/asciiart/guidelines.txt | |
| >> | |
| >> for concise up-to-date list of permitted subject tags | |
| >> and usage before posting. | |
| The robo-mod also checks that the posts are in PLAIN TEXT only, | |
| that line length is set to LESS than 80 characters UNLESS the | |
| phrase [long lines] is in the BODY of the post, when the LIMIT | |
| is then raised to 200 characters. | |
| Cross-posting is permitted provided that: | |
| o - it is to no more than three groups | |
| o - the followup-to header is set to only one group. | |
| Cross-posting to other moderated groups is NOT permitted. | |
| ======================================================================== | |
| [14] How do I convert a picture to ASCII art? | |
| ======================================================================== | |
| [14.1] programs: | |
| There are computer programs available which convert graphics files | |
| of a variety of formats (often GIF) to ASCII art. They go by names | |
| such as ascgif, gifa, gifscii, and gif2ascii. Do a Web search for | |
| any of these programs to find places where you can download them. | |
| Try: | |
| gopher://twinbrook.cis.uab.edu/1A/atools.70 | |
| ftp://ftp.simtel.com/. | |
| http://www.jave.de/. <== new | |
| Many think that you just put a GIF into a converter program and | |
| out comes a perfect ASCII pic. Here are some things you can do | |
| to improve the chances of getting a good conversion:- | |
| o Use an 8 bit grey scale or color image instead of a 2 bit B&W. | |
| o Use an image with a wide, even distribution of tones. | |
| o Keep it simple, like a face or close-up of an object. | |
| o Avoid busy backgrounds. Generally avoid bright backgrounds. | |
| o Use an image that is tightly cropped, without a lot of waste. | |
| o Be prepared to quickly run through a series of conversions, | |
| you will probably not like 9 to 11 out of 12. | |
| o It helps to do touch-up work on the converted picture, | |
| concentrate on the focal points and important areas. | |
| [14.2] tracing: | |
| Another method is by tracing a picture, either onto clear-plastic | |
| and sticking it onto the screen then opening an editor to trace | |
| under or using an editor which allows the loading of a background | |
| image to trace over, a process known as `water-mark'. | |
| [14.3] image2html: | |
| There are computer programs and web-servers available which convert | |
| graphics files of a variety of formats (often GIF) to HTML colored | |
| TEXT art for use on web-pages. Do a quick search on your favourite | |
| web search-engine. | |
| ======================================================================== | |
| [15] I have a picture and I would like it Asciified? | |
| ======================================================================== | |
| In this case, post a request to news:alt.ascii-art asking for | |
| someone to `asciify' it, but | |
| >>> PLEASE DON'T POST THE PICTURE ITSELF <<< | |
| to save downloading time for people reading the messages, | |
| if possible give the URL (Web address) of the picture instead. | |
| If you saw the picture on a Web page, you can find out its URL by | |
| right-clicking on it (on the Macintosh, right-clicking, | |
| Ctrl-clicking, or holding down the mouse button) and selecting | |
| `Open this image' (or its equivalent for your Web browser), then | |
| copy the URL from the Location bar to your news program (make sure | |
| you copy it exactly). | |
| If the picture is not on a Web site anywhere, put it up on your own | |
| site (if you have one), or get a friend to put it up on their site, | |
| and post the URL to alt.ascii-art. If you can't do this, post your | |
| request to the newsgroups and wait for someone to reply, then post | |
| the picture to news:alt.binaries.pictures.ascii or e-mail to them. | |
| ======================================================================== | |
| [16] What should I know about signature files? | |
| ======================================================================== | |
| A signature file (or `sig' for short; not to be confused with the | |
| initials added to an ASCII picture) is a small, personalized text | |
| file which an e-mail or news program can add to the end of every | |
| message a person sends -- the equivalent of a letterhead for dead | |
| tree (paper) mail (or snail-mail). Usually it contains little more | |
| than the person's name, organization and e-mail address, maybe an | |
| inspirational quote of some sort and some people like to incorporate | |
| ASCII art into their signature files as well. | |
| _ _ _ _ _ _ ___ ___ \|/ ____ \|/ | |
| | | | ___| | (_) \| | __/ __| @~/ ,. \~@ | |
| |_ _|___| |__| | .` | _|\__ \ /_( \__/ )_\ Mike | |
| |_| |____|_|_|\_|___|___/[Figlet] \__U_/ Jittlov | |
| The lack of importance in relation to global warming, violence in | |
| society, and so on, can be the subject of heated arguments. To be | |
| brief, (almost) no-one will complain if your signature file is four | |
| lines long or fewer -- and it is quite possible to draw good ASCII | |
| pictures which are that small. | |
| _______________________________________________ | |
| (@) (@) `) There are a lot of web-pages on this with ) | |
| ^ < > ^ ( google search ascii sig. _______) | |
| === `----Richard James-----------------' | |
| Some e-mail/news programs don't allow you to have a signature file | |
| which is longer than four lines, while others just complain. Five or | |
| six lines may be acceptable, but any longer, and you're starting to | |
| take the risk that your signature will be longer than some of your | |
| e-mail messages; this wouldn't really make sense on paper, so it | |
| isn't really acceptable in cyberspace either. The exception is in | |
| messages posted to news:alt.ascii-art itself -- we're used to seeing | |
| long sigs, so we won't complain. | |
| -'*((,,.-'*((,,.-'*((,,.-'*((,,.-'*((,,.-'*((,,.-'*((,,.- | |
| But, no matter what the length of your signature, make sure it's | |
| fewer than 72 characters wide, otherwise it may end up a horrible | |
| mess (see Question 8). | |
| ======================================================================== | |
| [17] What is ascii-animation? | |
| ======================================================================== | |
| An animated image produced by a sequence of changing ASCII pictures. | |
| The speed will depend on the system you are using. | |
| ----------------------------------------------------------------- | |
| o \ o / _ o __| \ / |__ o _ \ o / o | |
| /|\ | /\ __\o \o | o/ o/__ /\ | /|\ | |
| / \ / \ | \ /) | ( \ /o\ / ) | (\ / | / \ / \ | |
| ----------------------------------------------------------------- | |
| Ascii-Animation transports vary a lot. The earliest known portable | |
| types used the Control-Codes of the (often .VT or .ANS) terminal | |
| screens for either `paging' or `direct cursor addressing'. | |
| Sometimes found as c-code in .sigs, which, when compiled and run | |
| produce moving patterns or images. | |
| ----------------------------------------------------------------- | |
| o _ _ _ | |
| _o /\_ _ \\o (_)\__/o (_) | |
| _< \_ _>(_) (_)/<_ \_| \ _|/' \/ | |
| (_)>(_) (_) (_) (_) (_)' _\o_ | |
| ----------------------------------------------------------------- | |
| Most Web Ascii-Animation uses Java or Javascript. | |
| * To find out how to animate ASCII art using JavaScript, see:- | |
| http://www.geocities.com/SouthBeach/Marina/4942/faq_hta.htm | |
| http://llizard.crosswinds.net/ascii-art/animation/animlesson.htm | |
| * To find out how to animate ASCII art using Java, see:- | |
| http://www.jave.de/. | |
| http://www.jave.de/javeplayer/. | |
| ======================================================================== | |
| [18] What does ObAscii mean? | |
| ======================================================================== | |
| ObAscii = Obligatory Ascii | |
| Obligatory: [adj] compulsory (of a ruling) having binding force | |
| Ascii: [slang] ascii-art picture | |
| A funny way to remind people to put a drawing in their post. | |
| This means an ascii in every post! (especially off-topic threads) | |
| Failure to comply can result in flaming! This implies that if you | |
| don't include an ascii in your post you deserve to get flamed! | |
| It is to be a new ascii-art which takes longer but allows time to | |
| collect your thoughts and gives bystanders something to look at. | |
| ==================================================================== | |
| The concept of ObAscii has been around since the creation of the | |
| usenet group news:alt.ascii-art and it's purpose is to provide some | |
| on-topic content to an otherwise off-topic posting. | |
| ==================================================================== | |
| *NOT* The 1st ever! ObAscii : | |
| ==================================================================== | |
| From: Matthew Thomas <mpt26@spamfree.land> | |
| Date: Thu, 08 Oct 1998 13:50:09 +1300 | |
| Organization: University of Canterbury.nz (opinions are my own) | |
| ^ | |
| ,' \ [snip - 3rd party flame ] | |
| L""/ | |
| ` | BOLLOCKS!!! | |
| J | | |
| J L I am staying out of this as much as | |
| | | . , possible, Colin, because I really ... | |
| | | `v_L.' | |
| // ,>'--\'_ :. | |
| \`' \ - /-. [snip - rant/rave] | |
| / /`""| :. | |
| ),' `- | |
| ( ,-' \ Anyway, I think a lot of this | |
| ) ,' ,' h flaming would decrease if everyone | |
| / / / `)--.. was required to post a (different) | |
| \/ / \ <) obligatory ASCII pic in each message | |
| < , L<' -- at the very least, it would slow | |
| F/ _/ ,' the flames down. | |
| L ,-' \ | |
| | ___L So, to start the trend, here's my | |
| / ( F | |
| J ___,' L ObAscii: the Statue of Liberty. | |
| | ,' | | |
| F ,' | | |
| (_,--..__ mt-2|_ | |
| ,' `"`--.._\ | |
| ,' / \ | |
| / (_ | |
| [snip - .sig of Matthew Thomas] | |
| ======================================================================== | |
| [19] The ASCII Art Rough-Guide to m$.Outlook? | |
| ======================================================================== | |
| Microsoft's Outlook Express program has a number of flaws, including | |
| * deleting spaces from the beginning of lines, and | |
| * inserting the word `file://' in unexpected places | |
| which make it very difficult to send ASCII art properly. Whether | |
| these are bugs or features we don't know, but we do know that | |
| Microsoft would rather ASCII art as a medium just disappeared (see | |
| http://cgi.pathfinder.com/time/digital/daily/0,2822,13735,00.html | |
| for more information). A registry patch to fix some of the flaws | |
| in Outlook Express is available from the ADA. | |
| how to get rid of blue-lines in OE5: | |
| 1. Press the decode button twice when viewing a blue-struck image. | |
| Because, after ROT13, OE will not parse links and so 2 x ROT13 | |
| returns everything back to normal, but without the blue lines. | |
| 2. Create a button in your toolbar so you can do it quickly. | |
| In OE 5.5-6.0 the URL parsing code is slightly better and | |
| doesn't foul as many images as previous versions. | |
| How to stop Ms.Outlook giving wrapped output | |
| or the ascii-art you are sending is wider than 72 characters: | |
| 1. Tools menu | |
| 2. Options | |
| 3. Send | |
| 4. Both of these Mail and News format | |
| 5. Plain text settings ____ | |
| 6. Automatically wrap text at |____| | |
| How to set your Outlook Express 6 to view ASCII art correctly: | |
| 1. On the TOOLS menu, click OPTIONS | |
| 2. Select the READ tab | |
| 3. International settings | |
| 4. "Use default encoding for all incoming messages" [tick] | |
| 5. Set the FONTS to display as western european. | |
| set both the PROPORTIONAL font and FIXED-WIDTH font to | |
| LUCIDA CONSOLE, and FONT SIZE to SMALLER | |
| 6. Click OK, then OK again. | |
| How to set your Outlook Express 5 to view ASCII art correctly: | |
| 1. On the TOOLS menu, click OPTIONS | |
| 2. Select the READ tab | |
| 3. Click the FONTS button near the bottom of the box | |
| 4. For the languages UNICODE, WESTERN EUROPEAN and USER DEFINED | |
| set both the PROPORTIONAL font and FIXED-WIDTH font to | |
| LUCIDA CONSOLE, and FONT SIZE to SMALLER | |
| 5. Click OK, then OK again. | |
| How to set your Outlook Express 4 to view ASCII art correctly: | |
| 1. On the TOOLS menu, click OPTIONS | |
| 2. Select the READ tab | |
| 3. Click the FONTS button near the bottom of the box | |
| 4. For the languages UNIVERSAL ALPHABET, USER DEFINED and WESTERN | |
| set both the PROPORTIONAL font and FIXED-WIDTH font to | |
| LUCIDA CONSOLE, and FONT SIZE to SMALLER | |
| 5. Click OK, then OK again. | |
| NOTE : If LUCIDA CONSOLE is not available as a font, pick another | |
| from the list of available FIXED-WIDTH fonts. | |
| Examples of fixed-width fonts 1. ANDALE MONO | |
| commonly available with ms.windows: 2. COURIER NEW | |
| 3. LUCIDA CONSOLE | |
| 4. LUCIDA SANS TYPEWRITER | |
| 5. OCR A EXTENDED | |
| If you have followed the above steps correctly, you should now | |
| be able to view and create ASCII art as it should be. | |
| ======================================================================== | |
| [20] Where do I find ASCII art pictures, tutorials and information? | |
| ======================================================================== | |
| There are a number of ASCII art Usenet groups:- | |
| news:alt.ascii-art | |
| news:alt.ascii-art.animation | |
| news:alt.ascii-art.endless.blabla | |
| news:alt.binaries.pictures.ascii | |
| news:rec.arts.ascii | |
| are English-speaking ones that are widely used. | |
| alt.ascii-art [original ASCII art discussion group] | |
| alt.ascii-art.animation [is about animating ASCII art] | |
| alt.ascii-art.endless.blabla [an off-topic follow-up troll-trap] | |
| alt.binaries.pictures.ascii [ASCII art sofware/image drop-zone] | |
| rec.arts.ascii [primary moderated ASCII art group] | |
| Lots of ASCII artists put up libraries of their own and others' | |
| ASCII art on their Web sites, as well as tutorials on how to draw | |
| ASCII art: | |
| The DMOZ Open Directory Project ASCII art sites: | |
| http://dmoz.org/Arts/ASCII/. | |
| Allen Mullen has links to many of these sites at: | |
| http://www.geocities.com/SoHo/2695/links.htm. | |
| The Ascii-Art Library at: The Ascii-Art dot com at: | |
| http://www.ascii-art.de http://www.ascii-art.com | |
| The Ascii-Art Document Archive (address as listed in the header) | |
| There is an on-line panel of experts at: The ASCIItorium | |
| http://www.ludd.luth.se/~vk/cgi/asciichat/ | |
| And webrings: | |
| http://artcode.org/ascii/index.php | |
| http://webring.org/ascii/ | |
| Also IRCascii.8bit: | |
| http://www.geocities.com/SouthBeach/Marina/4942/ascii.htm | |
| http://www.bluedwarf.net/ (irc.bluedwarf.net#ascii) | |
| http://www.remorse.org/ (irc.efnet#ascii) | |
| ======================================================================== | |
| [21] Historacle: from the old-old FAQ v1.2 March 14, 1994 | |
| ======================================================================== | |
| What types of ascii-art are there? | |
| o Linedrawing - like stickmen | |
| o Lettering - like Figlet does | |
| o Grey scale pictures - These create the illusion of grey shades | |
| by using letters for their light emitting value. | |
| Here is an example of how they break down by light intensity: | |
| (Jorn Barger's light value scale) | |
| Darker .'`,^:";~ Lighter | |
| bright /|\ -_+<>i!lI? /|\ dark | |
| letters | /\|()1{}[] | letters | |
| on rcvunxzjft on | |
| dark | LCJUYXZO0Q | bright | |
| background \|/ oahkbdpqwm \|/ background | |
| Lighter *WMB8&%$#@ Darker | |
| o 3-D images - Can be viewable by people with similar vision in | |
| both eyes. You try to focus as if you are looking at the back | |
| of the monitor. The image should pop into focus and create a | |
| 3-D illusion. Other 3-D images are viewed by putting your nose | |
| on the monitor glass. | |
| o Geometric Article - Text is formed into meaningful shapes. | |
| o Picture Poem - A geometric article that is also a poem. | |
| o Page Making - Text and graphics are intermixed, as in a magazine. | |
| o Picture Story - A story told with accompanying ASCII pictures. | |
| o Color - You can view color ASCII pics, if you have a color screen | |
| and 'ANSI' color compatible software, or Web access using HTML. | |
| o Color Graphics - You can view color ASCII pics if you have color | |
| o Animation - take a look at [dead-link snipped] | |
| o Color Animation - take a look at [dead-link snipped] | |
| o Scroll Animation - This is an animation that is made to be viewed | |
| by scrolling down. The image plays out as the screen is redrawn | |
| with the next 'page' of the image. | |
| o Overstrike Art - It contains carriage returns without line feeds | |
| at times. The print head can overstrike a line on the paper that | |
| has already been printed on. This allows for darkening, and for | |
| placing different characters at the same place on the paper. | |
| This kind of art is obviously only printed. | |
| ======================================================================== | |
| [X1] | |
| -------------------THE ASCII ART FAQ TEN COMMANDMENTS------------------- | |
| \\\\`/// | |
| / _ _| 1. Thou shalt read the FAQ. | |
| (\'('\/') 2. Thou shalt not remove the | |
| ______/( >(__ initials from any ASCII art. | |
| /`- \ \_=__| `\ 3. Thou shalt not claim ownership | |
| / /__( _____\ _____ of someone else's ASCII art. | |
| /_ \.____ ," "." ",__ 4. Thou shalt read the FAQ. | |
| | / _\__/_ - / \ 5. Thou shalt ask permission | |
| \/ /____ \ASCII ART FAQ /// before using someone else's | |
| ) / / \__\ - | ASCII art. | |
| '-.__|_/ ///| I VI | 6. Thou shalt not sell someone | |
| \_ | | | else's ASCII art. | |
| | | II VII | 7. Thou shalt read the darn FAQ. | |
| \ | | | 8. Thou shalt not post someone | |
| / | III VIII | else's ASCII art without making | |
| \ | | | clear that you didn't make it. | |
| \_ | IV IX | 9. Thou shalt not assume that | |
| \| | | ASCII art isn't art at all. | |
| | V X | 10. Thou shalt read the FAQing FAQ. | |
| |______b'ger______| | |
| ======================================================================== | |
| |||| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | |||| | |
| END O F T H E A S C I I A R T FAQ | |
| |||| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | |||| | |
| File: academy/faqs/faq_thomas.txt | |
| http://www.ascii-art.de/info/faq_thomas.txt | |
| ━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━ | |
| FAQ: New to ASCII art? Read me first! | |
| __ __ __ _ | |
| \\ \\ / ___ '|| ___ ___ __ _ _ ___ _/|_ ___ | |
| \\ /\\ / //_\) || // \)// \\ ||'||'|| //_\) || // \\ | |
| \/ \/ \\__,_||_\\__,\\_//_||_||_||_\\__, \|_\\_// | |
| ___ __ ___ () () ___ _,_ _/|_ | |
| __\\ (/_'// \)'||'|| ==== __\\'||\) || | |
| ((_||_,_/)\\__,_||_||_ ((_||_||_ \|_ | |
| Answers to frequently asked questions in the ASCII art discussion groups | |
| * news:alt.ascii-art * news:alt.ascii-art.animation * news:rec.arts.ascii | |
| Author: Matthew Thomas | |
| Version: 2.0 | |
| Last changed: 1998-05-10 | |
| NOTE: If you are new to Usenet News, please read the messages in | |
| news.announce.newusers before posting to any discussion groups. | |
| This FAQ is regularly posted to the newsgroups news:alt.ascii-art , | |
| news:rec.arts.ascii , and news:alt.ascii-art.animation. | |
| It is also available at the following locations: | |
| * http://www.geocities.com/SoHo/7373/faq.htm | |
| * http://artpacks.acid.org/faqs/faq-altasciiart.html | |
| * http://vibes.vossnet.co.uk/i/ighaig/ascfaq.htm. | |
| * http://www.ascii-art.de/ascii/faq.html | |
| * http://fmf.ml.org/~shimrod/asciiart/FAQ.html | |
| * http://www.gwtc.net/~bakd/asciifaq.html | |
| ━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━ | |
| Contents | |
| 1. What is ASCII art? | |
| 2. What isn't ASCII art? | |
| 3. What goes on in the ASCII art discussion groups? | |
| 4. How do I view ASCII art? | |
| 5. How do I draw my own ASCII art? | |
| 6. What should I know before posting ASCII art? | |
| 7. Can I post to ask for some text drawn in ASCII? | |
| 8. Can I post to ask for an ASCII art picture? | |
| 9. How do I get an existing picture converted to ASCII art? | |
| 10. Can I post or use other people's ASCII art? | |
| 11. What should I know about signature files? | |
| 12. Where can I find more ASCII art? | |
| ━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━ | |
| 1. What is ASCII art? | |
| ASCII art is any kind of artwork -- pictures, charts, cartoons, | |
| whatever -- drawn with the characters in the ASCII character set. | |
| The ASCII (American Standard Code for Information Interchange) | |
| character set is a set of 128 characters (0 to 127) which are standard | |
| on almost all types of computer. The only characters used in ASCII art | |
| are those with the values 32 to 126, which are shown below, and 13, | |
| which represents a carriage return (new line). The other characters in | |
| the ASCII character set (0-12, 13-31, and 127) are control codes for | |
| representing things such as `end of file' and `backspace'; they should | |
| not be used in ASCII art. | |
| 032 [space] 048 0 064 @ 080 P 096 ` 112 p | |
| 033 ! 049 1 065 A 081 Q 097 a 113 q | |
| 034 " 050 2 066 B 082 R 098 b 114 r | |
| 035 # 051 3 067 C 083 S 099 c 115 s | |
| 036 $ 052 4 068 D 084 T 100 d 116 t | |
| 037 % 053 5 069 E 085 U 101 e 117 u | |
| 038 & 054 6 070 F 086 V 102 f 118 v | |
| 039 ' 055 7 071 G 087 W 103 g 119 w | |
| 040 ( 056 8 072 H 088 X 104 h 120 x | |
| 041 ) 057 9 073 I 089 Y 105 i 121 y | |
| 042 * 058 : 074 J 090 Z 106 j 122 z | |
| 043 + 059 ; 075 K 091 [ 107 k 123 { | |
| 044 , 060 < 076 L 092 \ 108 l 124 | | |
| 045 - 061 = 077 M 093 ] 109 m 125 } | |
| 046 . 062 > 078 N 094 ^ 110 n 126 ~ | |
| 047 / 063 ? 079 O 095 _ 111 o | |
| These characters are almost completely standard, except for a few | |
| slight variations which you should keep in mind when drawing and | |
| viewing ASCII art: | |
| # (hash/pound): | |
| a hash sign on most computers, a pound (£- currency) sign on some | |
| British ones | |
| | (bar): | |
| a vertical line in most fonts, but in some it is split in the | |
| middle | |
| ^ (caret): | |
| differs in size depending on the font used | |
| ~ (tilde): | |
| appears in the middle of the line in some fonts, at the top in | |
| others | |
| ' (apostrophe/single quote): | |
| tilts southwest-northeast in some fonts, is vertical in others | |
| (this also applies to the comma ,). | |
| Here's a small example of ASCII art using some of these variable | |
| characters: a snow-scene paperweight, drawn by Joan Stark. How good it | |
| looks will depend to some extent on which font and computer system you | |
| are using to view it. | |
| ____ | |
| .-" +' "-. | |
| /.'.'A_'*`.\ | |
| |:.*'/\-\. ':| | |
| |:.'.||"|.'*:| | |
| \:~^~^~^~^:/ | |
| /`-....-'\ | |
| jgs / \ | |
| `-.,____,.-' | |
| People use ASCII art for a variety of reasons, some of which are: | |
| * it is the most universal computer art form in the world -- every | |
| computer system capable of displaying multi-line text can display | |
| ASCII art, without needing to have a graphics mode or support a | |
| particular graphics file format; | |
| * an ASCII picture is also hundreds of times smaller in file size than | |
| its GIF or BMP equivalent, while still giving a good idea of what | |
| something looks like; | |
| * it is easy to copy from one file to another; | |
| * it's fun to do! | |
| 2. What isn't ASCII art? | |
| The following specialized artforms are not ASCII art and are not | |
| welcome in the ASCII art discussion groups. | |
| 1. ANSI or `extended ASCII' art. Many computer systems have an | |
| extended character set of 256 or more characters, based on the | |
| ANSI or Unicode character sets and having the first 128 characters | |
| identical to ASCII. These characters should not be used in ASCII | |
| art because many types of computer system do not support them, and | |
| even those that do may not display them in a standard way (for | |
| example, the Windows ANSI character set is different from the Mac | |
| ANSI character set). | |
| 2. HTML art. HTML, the language used in Web pages, can be used to add | |
| special effects such as colours, font size, and blinking text to | |
| ascii art, and HTML can be read by some newsreaders. However, the | |
| key word here is `some'. To many newsreaders, HTML art will just | |
| appear as a jumble of <TAGS> and will be totally unrecognizable. | |
| If you want to create HTML art, do so by all means, but put it on | |
| a Web page and post the page address (URL) to the appropriate | |
| discussion group. Advice on how to do this can be found at http:// | |
| www.geocities.com/SoHo/Studios/9334/asciionpage.htm. | |
| 3. ASCII art animated using JavaScript. This relies not only on the | |
| newsreader being able to display HTML, but also being able to run | |
| JavaScript. As with HTML art, put it on a Web page and post the | |
| address to news:alt.ascii-art.animation. | |
| Not all "ASCII" is ASCII! Certain computer operating systems use their | |
| own specific character sets which are modified hybrids of the original | |
| 128-character ASCII set. These "strains", if you will, have been | |
| deceivingly dubbed as "Extended ASCII" or "High ASCII" as they have | |
| added symbols beyond the first 128. Realize that while these extra | |
| characters may seem to give you more flexibility in your artwork, you | |
| are severely limiting your viewing audience to those who use the same | |
| operating system as you -- thus defeating the purpose of ASCII | |
| entirely! | |
| Please refrain from using these special characters in addition to the | |
| 33 special control codes in the real ASCII character set. Remaining | |
| within the 32-126 range benefits everyone in a multitude of ways. Not | |
| only by maximizing the number of potential viewers, but it also | |
| ensures proper interpretation of your artwork by others and will alter | |
| the way they perceive your abilities. This is just one of the | |
| necessary disciplines of becoming a true ASCII artists. [RaD Man] | |
| 3. What goes on in the ASCII art discussion groups?? | |
| In the ASCII art discussion groups people discuss ASCII art, post | |
| ASCII pictures, post improved versions or variations of pictures other | |
| people have drawn, and generally have fun. | |
| Types of messages which we usually enjoy seeing include: | |
| □ look, here's an ASCII picture I drew ... | |
| □ REQ: xyz (ie, has anyone got any ASCII pictures of xyz?) | |
| □ suggestions on, or improvements of, other people's ASCII pictures | |
| □ hey-guys-love-your-work-type messages! | |
| Types of messages which we usually don't enjoy seeing include: | |
| □ messages with the subject `ASCII art' (try to be a bit more | |
| informative, please) | |
| □ make money fast!!! ... (yawn, yawn, snore) | |
| □ heres the adress of my web site, come see it pleez (why should | |
| we?) | |
| □ don't read this, this is a test (that's what alt.test, misc.test, | |
| and many other `test' newsgroups are for) | |
| There are three ASCII art discussion groups. | |
| 1. news:alt.ascii-art is the main group, where most of the discussion | |
| takes place. | |
| 2. news:rec.arts.ascii is identical in purpose to news:alt.ascii-art, | |
| but it is a moderated group -- all messages pass through an | |
| intermediary (the moderator) who checks them for appropriateness | |
| before sending them to the group itself. The advantage of this is | |
| that there isn't any unwanted advertising in the group; however, | |
| the frequency of postings to news:rec.arts.ascii is very low at | |
| the time of writing (it was resurrected in November 1997 after the | |
| previous moderator, Bob Allison (`Scarecrow') retired in December | |
| 1996). | |
| If your news server isn't set up to allow direct posting to | |
| news:rec.arts.ascii, e-mail your message to the moderator, Don | |
| Bertino <bertino@netcom.com>. | |
| 3. news:alt.ascii-art.animation is specifically for discussion and | |
| postings of animated ASCII art [see Question 12]. | |
| 4. How do I view ASCII art? | |
| If a picture you see posted to this newsgroup looks like a complete | |
| mess to you, don't panic. There are several reasons why it may look | |
| weird. | |
| □ If none of the pictures in the newsgroup look like what the sender | |
| describes them as, then you're probably using a proportional font. | |
| To view (and draw) ASCII art, you must use a fixed-width font -- | |
| one where all characters are the same width (like on a | |
| typewriter). If you're not sure if your font is fixed-width or | |
| not, check the following two lines and see if they're the same | |
| length. | |
| iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii| | |
| mmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmm| | |
| If they aren't, find the option in your news reader which lets you | |
| specify which font to use. If you just have a choice between | |
| proportional and fixed width, choose fixed width. If you have a | |
| choice of which font to use, try different ones until you find a | |
| fixed-width one (using the `i's and `m's above as a guide). | |
| Popular fixed width fonts include Courier, Monaco, and Fixedsys; | |
| anything with `fixed' or `terminal' will probably be fixed-width. | |
| Some Internet Service Providers (ISPs) supply newsreaders to their | |
| customers which, strange as it seems, don't allow them to use a | |
| fixed-width font. If this applies to you, there's not much you can | |
| do except to ask them for a newsreader which does, or switch ISPs. | |
| □ If there are a lot of almost-blank lines in the picture, then the | |
| message is probably suffering from `wrapping'. This wrapping may | |
| be being done by your newsreader; see if it has an option called | |
| `wrap long lines' or similar, and make sure it is turned off. If | |
| this doesn't work, then the wrapping was probably done by the news | |
| program of the person who sent the picture, in which case there's | |
| not much you can do -- everybody else will be seeing the same | |
| thing. | |
| □ If there are a lot of < and > symbols in the picture, with words | |
| like HTML, FONT COLOR, B, I, and so on inside them, then the | |
| picture has been sent in HTML format (see Question 2), and your | |
| newsreader does not understand HTML (most newsreaders don't). | |
| □ If you still can't work out what the picture is supposed to be, | |
| try reducing the font size (if you can), and moving a couple of | |
| metres away. If it still looks unrecognizable, then it's probably | |
| a problem with the news program used by the person who sent the | |
| message -- or maybe it's just a really bad picture! | |
| 5. How do I draw my own ASCII art? | |
| You don't need a special program to draw ASCII art with. It can be | |
| drawn using any text editor, such as SimpleText or BBEdit in MacOS, | |
| Notepad in Windows, nedit, vi, or pico in Unix, BEd or AZ in AmigaOS, | |
| edit in DOS, or any of the various Emacs editors. You can use a word | |
| processor to draw ASCII art, but remember: (1) use a fixed-width font | |
| (see Question 4); and (2) using any special formatting (bold/italic/ | |
| coloured etc) is a waste of time, as it will be lost when you post the | |
| picture. | |
| There are some features of editors/word processors which can help when | |
| drawing ASCII art. | |
| □ Overtype, also known as overstrike: removes the need for you to | |
| constantly realign characters using the Backspace, Space, and | |
| Delete keys. Try the Insert key if there is one on your keyboard, | |
| or look in your program's Options or Preferences. | |
| □ Rectangular copy and paste: allows you to select rectangular | |
| sections of text (not just rows or parts of rows). On programs | |
| which have this feature, it is usually done by holding down a key | |
| such as Ctrl while selecting text. | |
| □ Find/Change: allows you to change all the characters of one type | |
| to another (eg all the ~s to "s). | |
| But before you start, a word about fonts. For ASCII art you should use | |
| a fixed-width font (see Question 4), because every type of computer | |
| system is guaranteed to have one, and that after all is one of the | |
| main reasons ASCII art exists -- because everyone can view it. | |
| Different fixed-width fonts do vary slightly in the height of the | |
| characters, but for most drawings this doesn't matter that much. | |
| DON'T try to post pictures drawn in a proportional-width (ie | |
| non-fixed- width) font: even if you specify the exact font you used, | |
| the chances of other people being able to read it are pretty slim | |
| (even `standard' proportional fonts such as Times New Roman can vary | |
| in width from computer to computer). | |
| The other thing to be aware of with fonts is the difference between | |
| serif and sans serif. Here's roughly how an `m' looks in both: | |
| __ __ __ __ __ | |
| |/ \ / \ |/ \ / \ | |
| | | | | | | | |
| | | | | | | | |
| _|_ _|_ _|_ | | | | |
| Serif Sans serif | |
| The serif version has little strokes, or serifs, at the end of most of | |
| the main strokes, while the sans serif version doesn't (sans means | |
| `without'). For example, Courier is a serif font, and Monaco is sans | |
| serif. This isn't often important, but if you're using a sans serif | |
| font, just remember to use the vertical bar (|, above \ on most | |
| keyboards) to draw vertical lines, and not the capital i (I), | |
| otherwise it will look weird for people using serif fonts. It also | |
| means that you should think carefully before using characters like L | |
| and 7 for various corners -- they won't always look that good with a | |
| serif font. | |
| One way to make drawing ASCII art easier is to type a row of spaces | |
| for however wide you want your picture, and then copy this row and | |
| paste it for however many rows high you think your art will get. Then | |
| turn overtype on, stick your cursor somewhere in the middle, and | |
| you're ready to draw. | |
| If nothing springs to mind immediately, start with the ASCII art | |
| equivalent of the stick figure: | |
| O | |
| /H\ Person | |
| / \ | |
| Fiddle with it, and see what you can do... | |
| A _ o _ | |
| O Person wearing O` _O_ (< = Person about | |
| /H\ a dunce's hat /H\ Professor XHX Angel /H-' to eat a | |
| / \ / \ / \ / \ sandwich...? | |
| Gradually you'll be able to add things like scenery around the person: | |
| ___ ,---. | |
| / __\/---. ._, | |
| / \@-. -(_)- | |
| @ ' ` Person playing a banjo | |
| ,P while sitting against a | |
| d'O_, MT palm tree ... | |
| ____@/|/________ | |
| ::::@\O_,::::::: | |
| :::::::::::::::: | |
| Draw your cat, your toaster, your musical instruments, your partner, | |
| anything that will sit still long enough -- practice makes, if not | |
| perfect, then at least pretty good. Whether you do small drawings | |
| (less work involved) or large ones (easier to make a drawing | |
| recognizable) is up to you. | |
| The things which give beginning ASCII artists the most trouble are | |
| usually diagonal lines and circles. Here are some lines of various | |
| angles: | |
| | | / ,' ,-' _,-' | |
| | .' / ,' ,-' _,-' | |
| | | / ,' ,-' _,-' __..--"" | |
| | .' / ,' ,-' _,-' __..--"" | |
| | | / ,' ,-' ,-' __..--"" _______________ | |
| And here are a few circular shapes: | |
| _____ __ | |
| .-' `-. ,dP""Yb, | |
| .' `. ,d" "b, | |
| / \ d' _ `Y, | |
| _ ; ; 8 8 `b | |
| __ ,'" "`. | | `b,_,aP P | |
| __ ,' `. / \ ; ; """" d' | |
| .' `. / | | | \ / ,P" | |
| _ | | | / \ / `. .' a,.__,aP" | |
| . o (_) `.__.' `.__.' `.___.' `-._____.-' `"""'' | |
| The spiral is a good example of anti-aliasing -- using the particular | |
| shape of some characters (especially b, d, and P) to smooth the edge | |
| of a solid shape. | |
| A final point: don't use the Tab key. Pressing Tab will go along a | |
| certain number of spaces in your editor/word processor -- but that | |
| `certain number' is different for different newsreaders, editors, and | |
| so on, so your picture may suffer from what is known as `tab damage' | |
| when other people try to view it. Just use spaces instead. | |
| Here are a couple links to existing ASCII art tutorials: | |
| http://www.geocities.com/SoHo/7373/dcau.htm (Daniel Au's Tutorial) | |
| http://www.inetw.net/~mullen/asciiart.htm (Allen Mullen's Site- | |
| several tutorials) | |
| 6. What should I know before posting ASCII art? | |
| It doesn't matter if it's not particularly good -- we'd like to see it | |
| anyway. We won't be rude about it (although you'd better tell us what | |
| it is, or we might ask :-), but if it shows potential, you may find | |
| that other people will `re-diddle' it -- change a few characters, make | |
| it a bit better, and re-post it. | |
| HOWEVER, there are a few things you should check before you post any | |
| piece of ASCII art. | |
| □ Are you sending it as plain text? Some news programs, particularly | |
| those built in to Web browsers, read and write messages in HTML | |
| (HyperText Markup Language, the language which Web pages are | |
| written in). HTML allows colours and (using JavaScript) animations | |
| in ASCII art, but few newsreaders support it, and those which | |
| don't will show a whole lot of garbage text with your picture | |
| hidden inside it. | |
| So if you have one of these HTML-sending programs, PLEASE select | |
| the option which tells it to send messages as plain text only. If | |
| you have a picture which uses HTML for a particular feature (such | |
| as colours or animation), put it on a Web page, and post the URL | |
| of the page to alt.ascii-art, rather than posting the whole | |
| picture. | |
| □ Is it under 72 characters wide? Most news readers can only show | |
| lines which are under either 72, 76, or 80 characters wide, so if | |
| your picture is wider than 72 characters it may get wrapped (see | |
| Question 4). Also remove any unnecessary space characters from the | |
| end of each line of the picture, to prevent lines from being too | |
| long (and getting wrapped) without your realizing. | |
| □ Have you used any control codes? Inserting control codes (ASCII | |
| characters 0 to 31) in a picture can sometimes achieve interesting | |
| effects on your computer screen or news reader, such as reversing | |
| text, changing its colour, and so on. DO NOT post any of these | |
| pictures to alt.ascii-art, for two reasons: | |
| 1. the effects that the control codes have on your news reader | |
| are almost certainly going to be different from those on the | |
| thousands of other news readers that other people use | |
| 2. on some news readers, control codes can cause messed up | |
| displays, messages not appearing, or (in some cases) the news | |
| reader crashing. | |
| □ If your first line starts with one or more spaces, stick a dummy | |
| line (such as -- or .) above it, to prevent the spaces from being | |
| ignored by your news program (this only applies to some news | |
| programs, and only to the first line of the message). | |
| If you're not sure about whether your message will turn out ok, post | |
| it to a test newsgroup (such as news:alt.test or news:misc.test) first | |
| and make sure (using a different newsreader, if you can) that you can | |
| read it ok. | |
| [See Question 10 for advice on posting someone else's ASCII art.] | |
| 7. Can I post to ask for some text drawn in ASCII? | |
| Probably not, unless we're REALLY bored. The reason for this is that | |
| there is a program called Figlet which does that sort of thing | |
| automatically -- you type in `Jane Smith', and you get back | |
| ___ __, | |
| ( / ( o _/_ / | |
| / __, _ _ `. _ _ , / /_ | |
| _/_(_/(_/ /_(/_ (___)/ / /_(_(__/ /_ | |
| // | |
| (/ | |
| in this and a whole lot of other fonts (lettering styles). The ASCII | |
| text-art produced by Figlet can be quite stunning, so it's best to try | |
| it first before asking for help from the newsgroup. | |
| The Figlet home page is at http://st-www.cs.uiuc.edu/users/chai/ | |
| figlet.html. This site links to the FTP site ftp://ftp.internexus.net/ | |
| pub/figlet where you can download versions of the program for many | |
| different platforms. | |
| If you have a Web browser which has form support (most browsers do), | |
| you can run Figlet on the Internet by going to one of the following | |
| sites and choosing your text and options on the Web page. Different | |
| sites offer different options (eg multiple fonts at once, | |
| justification, line length etc). Some of these sites also provide an | |
| e-mail Figlet service for people with browsers which don't support | |
| forms. | |
| □ http://www.surfplaza.com/figlet/ | |
| □ http://wwwcn.cern.ch/~rigaut/FigletJava.html | |
| □ http://www.schnoggo.com/figlet.html | |
| □ http://www.inf.utfsm.cl/cgi-bin/figlet/ | |
| □ http://saigon.mit.edu/dinhyen/figlet/figlet.html | |
| □ http://www.mediacube.de/cgi-bin/moniteurs/figlet/ | |
| □ http://www.sconnect.net/figlet/index.cgi | |
| □ http://boulder.Colorado.EDU/~kai/figlet.html | |
| □ http://www.ifi.unizh.ch/cgi-bin/bwagner/FIGLET/figlet.pl | |
| □ http://www.se.cuhk.edu.hk/~mcchau3/cgi-bin/express.html | |
| □ http://www.webserve.com/gateways/figletgateway.pl | |
| (Thanks to Shimrod and Veronica Karlsson for the original list.) | |
| If Figlet doesn't produce the kind of results you want, THEN you can | |
| post to the newsgroup with your request. Make sure that you include: | |
| □ the fact that you have already tried Figlet, or don't have access | |
| to it | |
| (otherwise you will probably just get told to use it) | |
| □ a description of the kind of lettering you want, along with any | |
| other symbols or logos which you would like incorporated into it. | |
| 8. Can I post to ask for an ASCII art picture? | |
| Yes, if we find it interesting. Give your request the subject `REQ: | |
| xyz' if you're looking for a picture of an xyz, then in the message | |
| describe more exactly what you're looking for. Generally, the more | |
| specific you are, the more likely you are to get someone to draw what | |
| you want: if you just say something like `can someone draw me a fish' | |
| then you're not likely to get many replies, because people won't be | |
| sure whether or not they're wasting their time by drawing something | |
| you won't want. If you don't have Web access, mention this fact, | |
| otherwise you may get replies consisting only of URLs for the kind of | |
| pictures you're looking for. | |
| 9. How do I get an existing picture converted to ASCII art? | |
| There are computer programs which convert graphics files of a | |
| particular format (usually GIF) to ASCII art. They go by names such as | |
| ascgif, gifa, gifscii, and gif2ascii. Do a Web search for any of these | |
| programs to find places where you can download them. Try: | |
| □ gopher://twinbrook.cis.uab.edu/1A/atools.70 | |
| □ ftp://ftp.wwa.com/pub/Scarecrow/Gifscii/. | |
| However, the output from these programs is often not good (fiddling | |
| with the picture in an image-editing program beforehand may help). In | |
| this case, you can post a request to the newsgroup asking for someone | |
| to `asciify' it, but please don't post the picture itself. To save | |
| downloading time for people reading the messages, if possible give the | |
| URL (Web address) of the picture instead. | |
| If you saw the picture on a Web page, you can find out its URL by | |
| right- clicking on it (on the Macintosh, holding down the mouse | |
| button) and selecting `Open this image' (or its equivalent for your | |
| Web browser), then copy the URL from the Location bar to your news | |
| program (make sure you copy it exactly). | |
| If the picture is not on a Web site anywhere, put it up on your own | |
| site (if you have one), or get a friend to put it up on their site, | |
| and post the URL to alt.ascii-art. If you can't do this, post your | |
| request to alt.ascii-art and wait for an artist to reply, then e-mail | |
| the picture to them. | |
| 10. Can I post or use other people's ASCII art? | |
| Don't assume that if somebody posts something to a newsgroup, that | |
| gives you the right to use it however you like; copyright laws still | |
| apply. For more information, see the article `Copyright Myths FAQ: 10 | |
| big myths about copyright explained' in news:news.announce.newusers. | |
| (It is also available at http://www.clari.net/brad/copymyths.html.) | |
| ASCII art is often an exception to this rule, though: generally, ASCII | |
| artists don't mind if you copy their pictures and repost them or put | |
| them on your own Web site for your personal use. There are a few | |
| important conditions, however. | |
| □ If the picture contains a few letters in one corner which don't | |
| seem to be part of the picture, they're the artist's initials. DO | |
| NOT remove these initials -- would you cut away the part of a Van | |
| Gogh painting containing his name? Leaving the initials on is a | |
| small price to pay for being able to use the picture for free. | |
| □ If you're going to use a picture in your signature file, or in a | |
| place (such as a log-in screen) which means you're going to be | |
| using it a lot, you should really e-mail the artist (or post to | |
| the newsgroup, if you don't know their address) and ask for | |
| permission, because otherwise people may get the mistaken | |
| impression that you were the one who drew the picture. | |
| As for posting other people's ASCII art, after a discussion in | |
| news:alt.ascii-art the following rules were agreed upon: | |
| 1. If an ASCII ART picture has initials on it, leave them on when | |
| posting it. | |
| 2. If an ASCII ART picture doesn't have initials on it, mention that | |
| you didn't draw it when posting it. | |
| 3. If somebody posts a picture without initials and you have an | |
| original copy with initials, feel free to repost the original | |
| version. The repost ought not to be taken personally, as we all | |
| know that ASCII art often loses proper credits. Responses to the | |
| repost are not necessary. | |
| [Donovan] | |
| 11. What should I know about signature files? | |
| A signature file (or `sig' for short) is a small, personalized text | |
| file which an e-mail or news program adds to the end of every message | |
| a person sends -- the equivalent of a letterhead for dead-tree (paper) | |
| mail. Usually it contains little more than the person's name, | |
| organization, and e-mail address, and an inspirational quote of some | |
| sort; but some people like to incorporate ASCII art into their | |
| signature files as well. | |
| The biggest problem that this causes is the number of lines that the | |
| signature file takes up. This is a topic which, despite its lack of | |
| importance in relation to global warming, violence in society, and so | |
| on, can be the subject of heated arguments. To summarize, (almost) | |
| no-one will complain if your signature file is four lines long or | |
| fewer -- and it is quite possible to draw good ASCII pictures which | |
| are that small. Some examples are at: | |
| □ http://wwwtios.cs.utwente.nl/~kenter/sigs.html | |
| □ http://www.geocities.com/SoHo/7373/sigs.htm. | |
| Some e-mail programs don't allow you to have a signature file which is | |
| longer than four lines, while others just complain. Five or six lines | |
| is usually acceptable, but any longer, and you're starting to take the | |
| risk that your signature will be longer than some of your e-mail | |
| messages; this wouldn't really make sense on paper, so it isn't really | |
| acceptable in cyberspace either. The exception is in messages posted | |
| to alt.ascii-art itself -- we're used to seeing long sigs, so we won't | |
| complain. | |
| But no matter what the length of your signature, make sure it's fewer | |
| than 72 characters wide, otherwise it may end up a horrible mess -- | |
| see Question 6. | |
| 12. Where can I find more ASCII art? | |
| Lots of ASCII artists put up libraries of their own and others' ASCII | |
| art on their Web sites, | |
| as well as tutorials on how to draw ASCII art. Allen Mullen has links | |
| to many of these sites at | |
| http://www.geocities.com/SoHo/2695/links.htm. | |
| Yahoo also has a page dedicated to ASCII art, at http://www.yahoo.com/ | |
| Arts/Visual_Arts/Computer_Generated/ASCII_Art/. | |
| And try Joan Stark's Web site: http://www.geocities.com/SoHo/7373/. | |
| To find out how to animate ASCII art using JavaScript, see | |
| http://www.geocities.com/SouthBeach/Marina/4942/faq_hta.htm | |
| http://www.geocities.com/SoHo/Studios/9334/animlesson.htm. | |
| THE END | |
| ━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━ | |
| This document may be freely copied as long as Matthew Thomas is identified | |
| as the original author. | |
| -------------------THE ASCII ART FAQ TEN COMMANDMENTS------------------- | |
| \\\\`/// | |
| / _ _| 1. Thou shalt read the FAQ. | |
| (\'('\/') 2. Thou shalt not remove the | |
| ______/( >(__ initials from any ASCII art. | |
| /`- \ \_=__| `\ 3. Thou shalt not claim ownership | |
| / /__( _____\ _____ of someone else's ASCII art. | |
| /_ \.____ ," "." ",__ 4. Thou shalt read the FAQ. | |
| | / _\__/_ - / \ 5. Thou shalt ask permission | |
| \/ /____ \ASCII ART FAQ /// before using someone else's | |
| ) / / \__\ - | ASCII art. | |
| '-.__|_/ ///| I VI | 6. Thou shalt not sell someone | |
| \_ | | | else's ASCII art. | |
| | | II VII | 7. Thou shalt read the darn FAQ. | |
| \ | | | 8. Thou shalt not post post someone | |
| / | III VIII | else's ASCII art without making | |
| \ | | | clear that you didn't make it. | |
| \_ | IV IX | 9. Thou shalt not assume that | |
| \| | | ASCII art isn't art at all. | |
| | V X | 10. Thou shalt read the FAQing FAQ. | |
| |______b'ger______| | |
| -----------[Joris Bellenger, Colin Douthwaite, Matthew Thomas]---------- | |