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LaTeX Graphics with TikZ

You're reading from   LaTeX Graphics with TikZ A practitioner's guide to drawing 2D and 3D images, diagrams, charts, and plots

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Product type Paperback
Published in Jun 2023
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781804618233
Length 304 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Tools
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Author (1):
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Stefan Kottwitz Stefan Kottwitz
Author Profile Icon Stefan Kottwitz
Stefan Kottwitz
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Table of Contents (18) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Chapter 1: Getting Started with TikZ 2. Chapter 2: Creating the First TikZ Images FREE CHAPTER 3. Chapter 3: Drawing and Positioning Nodes 4. Chapter 4: Drawing Edges and Arrows 5. Chapter 5: Using Styles and Pics 6. Chapter 6: Drawing Trees and Graphs 7. Chapter 7: Filling, Clipping, and Shading 8. Chapter 8: Decorating Paths 9. Chapter 9: Using Layers, Overlays, and Transparency 10. Chapter 10: Calculating with Coordinates and Paths 11. Chapter 11: Transforming Coordinates and Canvas 12. Chapter 12: Drawing Smooth Curves 13. Chapter 13: Plotting in 2D and 3D 14. Chapter 14: Drawing Diagrams 15. Chapter 15: Having Fun with TikZ 16. Index 17. Other Books You May Enjoy

Defining and using styles

At first, we take the example of a node and its style. Let’s take this node, which we call A:

\node (A) {A};

Well, it simply prints an A in the default font, without any shape or color. We change that now: let’s have sans-serif and bold font, white text color, the shape of a circle, and color the circle like a blue ball:

\node [font = \sffamily\bfseries, text = white,
      shape = circle, ball color = blue] (A) {A};

That gives us a much fancier A:

Figure 5.1 – A fancy node

Figure 5.1 – A fancy node

That’s quite a lot of options for that node. If we have several nodes in a document, we don’t want to repeat this for every single node. In Chapter 3, Drawing and Positioning Nodes, we saw the every node/.style syntax for applying such a set of options to all nodes in a drawing. That doesn’t help us when we have different kinds of nodes in a drawing.

Let’s explore...

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