Page:Calligraphy for computers (Hershey, 1967) (IA DTIC AD0662398).djvu/26

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Thus the thickness and size of components vary in ranges which depend upon the range of fineness of detail. In order to reproduce the above ranges of line thickness and triangle size the conversion may be determined to be 0.011 inches per raster unit. This provides two widths of vertical stroke and three sizes of triangle provided the plotting dot is not more than one raster unit in diameter, and due allowance is made for the thickness of line.

A critical determination of the conversion of length is provided by those characters where there is a set of equally spaced parallel strokes. The space between strokes must conform to an integral number of raster units. Any change of space between strokes then is magnified to a large change in the space allowance for the set. Measurements of spacing have been made upon sixty characters. From the measured distance which spans each set of equally spaced strokes it is possible to compute a distance per raster unit for every possible number of raster units per space. When these distances are plotted together for comparison it becomes apparent that there is a tendency for certain distances per raster unit to persist from character to character.

There is some persistence around 0.011 inches per raster unit while there is a stronger persistence around 0.0055 inches per raster unit. The second value would allow the horizontal strokes to have just the right thickness for a full representation of detail but the characters would be twice as large.

Critical examples of characters with many equally spaced strokes are given in the table on the next page.

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