Re: Diagram tools?

I used yEd with great success: https://www.yworks.com/products/yed
Easy to use, with nice features, free (as in beer), multi-platform (with
Java or online), and it can export to many formats (including SVG).

--
Marc

Le Wed, 28 Sep 2016 12:52:06 -0400,
Joe Berkovitz <joe@noteflight.com> a écrit :

> I have recently started using Google Slides to create diagrams. This
> too is obviously a proprietary tool but it is free, can be used on
> any platform and I find it is adequate for most diagrams.
> 
> .            .       .    .  . ...Joe
> 
> Joe Berkovitz
> President
> Noteflight LLC
> 
> +1 978 314 6271
> 
> 49R Day Street
> Somerville MA 02144
> USA
> 
> "Bring music to life"
> www.noteflight.com
> 
> On Wed, Sep 28, 2016 at 12:35 PM, Chris Lilley <chris@w3.org> wrote:
> 
> > On 2016-09-28 11:58, Raymond Toy wrote:
> >
> >> It looks like most[1] of the diagrams in the spec were created
> >> using OmniGraffle.  Is this the desired tool we want to use for
> >> the diagrams?
> >>
> >> I don't care too much as long as we pick one.
> >>
> > I would much prefer the diagrams to be maintained in an open format
> > (SVG would be a good choice here) which can be generated and
> > maintained in multiple editors on all platforms. OmniGraffle looks
> > nice, but the app is iOS and OS X only and it is a proprietary
> > format.
> >
> >>
> >> It seems we might also be missing the source for some of the
> >> diagrams, like the convolver example. It would be nice to have the
> >> original sources for the diagrams checked in somewhere.
> >>
> > Agreed.
> >
> > --
> > Chris Lilley
> > @svgeesus
> > Technical Director, W3C Interaction Domain
> >
> >
> >

Received on Thursday, 29 September 2016 01:41:35 UTC