Chironomic gesture: tikz code and SVG format
  • MatthewRoth
    Posts: 3,316
    Some of use LaTeX here to make Gregorio scores, book(-lets), and other documents. tikz is used for all sorts of drawings including mathematical and scientific drawings.

    It's thus the perfect tool to draw the basic chironomic gesture associated with the classical Solesmes method, (cf. Carroll, Technique of Gregorian Chironomy, p. 9) as I'm generating the material with LaTeX. I have omitted the ictus because it's too hard to get right apparently. (Yes, I had a little "help" for this one, but I'm satisfied with the outcome.)

    but most of you probably don't want to ever do that. So I've converted it to SVG with another LaTeX tool (thanks, StackExchange). The SVG can be opened in a program such as Inkscape and exported to a more usable graphics format as needed, or drawn on (if you want to draw the ictus for me, great, and if you export it back to tikz and share here, even better).
  • Charles_Weaver
    Posts: 172
    Matthew, in my dissertation I also drew some chironomy curves (but the type drawn on a chant score) using Tikz. There are so many possibilities.
  • francis
    Posts: 11,235
    I am a vector artist (see http://www.franciskoerber.com/floosiga/) and can illustrate anything you might need. PM me and we can collaborate)
  • MatthewRoth
    Posts: 3,316
    @Charles_Weaver that’s my next step—I have an example .jpg in my teaching document but a native solution is more portable.

    I swore up and down that I’d never use tikz and then said to myself “wait, this is just a mathematical drawing,” and here we are.