[texhax] Placing text in a graphical manner (bad description, sorry)
Uwe Lück
uwe.lueck at web.de
Wed Nov 14 14:53:44 CET 2012
Am Dienstag, den 13.11.2012, 21:51 -0700 schrieb Gordon Haverland:
> Not all elements are found as solids in engineering applications.
> And there is the odd solid compound (multiple elements) that is of
> interest.
>
> What I am thinking of, is the name of the element (or compound) is
> rotated 90 degrees (clockwise), and is printed where the baseline
> (or midline) of the logarithm of the density would place it.
>
> To do this in a single line, would have too many terms overwriting
> each other, so I expect a person needs to have multiple lines of
> this kind of data, and a person picks and chooses what solids go
> in which lines of data.
>
> Has anything like this ever been done in LaTeX?
>
> The high end is osmium at almost 22.5. The least dense are
> aerogels at around 0.0008 (hence the logarithmic scale). (I'm
> also doing number density, which runs from almost 200 to 0.02.)
>
> I am thinking any given "row" is a minipage, and one stacks up
> minipages to whatever level. And one places data in each minipage
> to try and avoid overwriting as much as possible.
As to rotating, the LaTeX graphics/x package provides \rotatebox,
aware of it? See grfguide.pdf. I do not understand what remains.
Cheers,
Uwe.
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