insilmaril@28: \documentclass{article} insilmaril@28: \usepackage{a4} insilmaril@28: \usepackage[latin1]{inputenc} insilmaril@28: \usepackage{verbatim} insilmaril@28: \usepackage{hyperref} insilmaril@28: \usepackage{graphicx} insilmaril@493: %\usepackage{longtable} insilmaril@28: insilmaril@28: \hypersetup{bookmarks, bookmarksopen, insilmaril@28: pdftitle={VYM - a tool for visual thinking }, insilmaril@28: pdfauthor={Uwe Drechsel}, insilmaril@28: pdfsubject={map}, insilmaril@28: pdfkeywords={map, tool}, insilmaril@28: pdfpagemode={UseOutlines}, insilmaril@28: bookmarksopenlevel={1}, insilmaril@28: colorlinks={true}, insilmaril@28: linkcolor={blue}, insilmaril@28: urlcolor={green}, insilmaril@28: citecolor={red}} insilmaril@28: insilmaril@28: insilmaril@28: \newcommand{\vym}{{\sc vym }} insilmaril@28: \newcommand{\ra}{$\longrightarrow$} insilmaril@28: \newcommand{\la}{$\longleftarrow$} insilmaril@28: \newcommand{\ua}{$\uparrow$} insilmaril@28: \newcommand{\da}{$\downarrow$} insilmaril@28: \newcommand{\key}[1]{[#1]} insilmaril@28: insilmaril@28: \begin{document} insilmaril@233: \title{ insilmaril@450: \includegraphics[width=8cm]{images/vym-logo-new.png} insilmaril@233: \\ insilmaril@493: VYM \\ -- \\View Your Mind\\ {\small Version 1.9.0}} insilmaril@28: \author{\textcopyright Uwe Drechsel } insilmaril@28: insilmaril@233: insilmaril@28: \maketitle insilmaril@28: insilmaril@233: \newpage insilmaril@233: insilmaril@28: \tableofcontents insilmaril@28: insilmaril@28: \newpage insilmaril@28: insilmaril@28: \section{Introduction} insilmaril@28: \subsection{What is a \vym map?} insilmaril@486: A \vym map (abbreviated below as {\em map}) is a tree like structure: insilmaril@28: \begin{center} insilmaril@450: \includegraphics[width=12cm]{images/example1.png} insilmaril@28: \end{center} insilmaril@486: Such maps can be drawn by hand on a sheet of paper or flip chart and help to insilmaril@486: structure your thoughts. While a tree like structure like the illustration above can be insilmaril@264: drawn manually \vym offers much more features to work with such maps. insilmaril@486: \vym is not just another drawing software application, but a tool to store and modify insilmaril@264: information in an intuitive way. For example you can reorder parts of insilmaril@486: the map by pressing a key or add various pieces of information like a complete insilmaril@264: email by a simple mouse click. insilmaril@264: insilmaril@486: Once you have finished collecting and organising your ideas, you can insilmaril@486: easily generate a variety of outputs including for example a presentation in Open~Office based on a {\em map}. insilmaril@28: insilmaril@486: \subsection{Why should I use {\em maps}? Time, Space and your Brain.} insilmaril@28: \subsubsection*{Space} insilmaril@486: A {\em map} can concentrate very complex content in a small space such as a insilmaril@28: piece of paper. It helps to use both sides of your brain: the logical insilmaril@486: side and also your creative side (e.g. by using pictures, colours and insilmaril@486: keywords in a map, often called {\em anchors}). It is a technique to help insilmaril@486: organize the way you think and stimulate your creativity: It can help you by developing, sorting and helping to memorise your ideas. insilmaril@28: insilmaril@28: \subsubsection*{Time} insilmaril@28: Because you just use keywords and drawings, it is much faster than good insilmaril@486: old fashioned 'notes'. Your brain memorizes things by associating them with insilmaril@486: other things -- a {\em map} makes use of those connections and stimulates insilmaril@28: new asccociations. insilmaril@28: insilmaril@125: insilmaril@28: \subsubsection*{Your Brain} insilmaril@486: In 1960 Prof. {\sc Roger Sperry} discovered that both hemispheres insilmaril@486: of the human brain undertake different tasks (of course both of them insilmaril@125: basically {\em can} do the same): insilmaril@125: \begin{center} insilmaril@125: \begin{tabular}{|p{5.5cm}|p{5.5cm}|} \hline insilmaril@125: Left side & Right side \\ \hline insilmaril@125: \begin{itemize} insilmaril@125: \item verbal speech and writing insilmaril@125: \item numbers insilmaril@125: \item logical thinking insilmaril@486: \item analysing and details insilmaril@125: \item science insilmaril@125: \item linear thinking insilmaril@125: \item concept of time insilmaril@125: \end{itemize} & insilmaril@125: \begin{itemize} insilmaril@125: \item body language insilmaril@125: \item visual thinking, day dreams insilmaril@125: \item intuition and emotion insilmaril@125: \item overview of things insilmaril@125: \item creativity insilmaril@125: \item art, music, dancing insilmaril@125: \item non-linear thinking, connecting things insilmaril@125: \item spatial awareness insilmaril@125: \end{itemize} \\ \hline insilmaril@125: \end{tabular} insilmaril@125: \end{center} insilmaril@486: In our science oriented western society we have learned to mainly rely on our insilmaril@486: left side of the brain, the "rational" one. In other cultures, such as the native americans and other "old" cultures, the right insilmaril@486: side is much more important. {\em Map} are just one way to stimulate the insilmaril@486: other side and make use of additional resources we all have. insilmaril@28: insilmaril@28: insilmaril@486: \subsection{Where could I use a {\em map}?} insilmaril@486: Here are some examples, how you can use those {\em maps} insilmaril@28: \begin{itemize} insilmaril@28: \item to prepare articles, papers, books, talks, \ldots insilmaril@28: \item to sort complex data insilmaril@486: \item to memorize facts, peoples names, vocabulary, \ldots insilmaril@28: \item to sort emails, files and bookmarks on your computer insilmaril@28: \item to moderate conferences insilmaril@486: \item to brainstorm solutions to problems insilmaril@486: \item to record the tasks when planning a project insilmaril@28: \end{itemize} insilmaril@28: insilmaril@486: \subsection{What you shouldn't do with a {\em map}...} insilmaril@486: A {\em map} drawn by somebody shows the way that the author thinks. There is insilmaril@486: no question of right or wrong in the way it is drawn, so there is no way to criticise insilmaril@486: it. "It is, what it is" ({\sc F.~Lehmann}).The tool will be of considerable use to the author and only very limited use to anyone else. insilmaril@486: insilmaril@486: However, when groups share in creating a {\em map} all of the group will benefit from its use. An example of such use is when a Tutor develops a {\em map} with a group of students during instruction. Another group use is when a Project leader gathers a group of specialists to help {\em map} the tasks that will be required to deliver a project. insilmaril@28: insilmaril@28: %\section{Tutorials} insilmaril@28: %TODO insilmaril@28: insilmaril@125: \subsection{Internet Ressources} insilmaril@486: A good starting point to learn more about Mindmaps in general is Wikipedia: insilmaril@125: \begin{itemize} insilmaril@125: \item English: insilmaril@125: \href{http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mind_map}{http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mind\_map} insilmaril@125: \item German: insilmaril@125: \href{http://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mindmap}{http://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mindmap} insilmaril@125: \end{itemize} insilmaril@125: insilmaril@28: insilmaril@245: insilmaril@245: insilmaril@486: \section{The Concept of the \vym application} insilmaril@28: %TODO may add a general introduction here... insilmaril@493: \subsection{The Mainwindow and its satellites} \label{satellite} insilmaril@493: \vym comes with several windows, the central one being the {\em insilmaril@493: mapeditor}. insilmaril@493: More windows, each having a special purpose, can be opened and arranged insilmaril@493: around the mainwindow\footnote{ insilmaril@493: The advantage of having separate window instead of integrating them insilmaril@493: in a combined workspace is flexibility in arranging the windows. For insilmaril@493: example I usually have the {\em noteeditor} "behind" the {\em insilmaril@493: mapeditor}. On Linux my windowmanager (KDE) allows me to enter text insilmaril@493: into a small visible corner of the {\em noteeditor} withour clicking insilmaril@493: the mouse button in it. I just push the mouse around to set the insilmaril@493: window focus, a concept which is useful also working with insilmaril@493: \href{http://www.gimp.org}{http://www.gimp.org}. insilmaril@493: }. insilmaril@493: The image below shows the {\em mapeditor} insilmaril@493: together with the often used {\em noteeditor}: insilmaril@28: \begin{center} insilmaril@450: \includegraphics[width=8cm]{images/windows.png} insilmaril@28: \end{center} insilmaril@486: Most of the time you will work in the {\em mapeditor} by just adding new insilmaril@28: branches, moving around and reordering them. The various ways to do this insilmaril@28: will be explained in \ref{mapeditor}. You can store additional insilmaril@28: information e.g. the content of a email easily in a {\em branch}: Just insilmaril@28: type or copy\&paste it into the {\em noteeditor}. Working with notes is insilmaril@28: explained in \ref{noteeditor} insilmaril@420: insilmaril@493: Here is a list of the available satellite windows: insilmaril@493: \begin{itemize} insilmaril@493: \item Noteeditor (see \ref {noteeditor}) insilmaril@493: \item Historywindow (see \ref{historywindow}) insilmaril@493: \item Branch Property Window (see \ref{propwindow}) insilmaril@493: \end{itemize} insilmaril@493: insilmaril@28: insilmaril@245: \subsection{Menus and Context menus} insilmaril@486: At the top of each window you will find the menubar. The options provided there insilmaril@486: are similar to those you are probably used to from other applications. Note that insilmaril@245: many (and even more) options are availabe via {\em context menus}. Those insilmaril@245: are available if you right-click onto an object in a map (on Mac~OS~X insilmaril@245: Command-Click). insilmaril@245: insilmaril@245: \subsection{Toolbars} insilmaril@245: The toolbars in the mainwindows give quick access to many functions and insilmaril@493: also display the state of selected objects in the map. For example a insilmaril@493: branch may show certain {\em flags}, the corresponding flags are also insilmaril@493: set in the toolbar. insilmaril@245: insilmaril@493: Note that you can reposition all toolbars by simply grabbing and insilmaril@493: dragging them with the toolbar handle to a new position. For example you insilmaril@493: can move the flags-toolbar from its original horizontal position on top insilmaril@493: of the mapeditor to a vertical position on the right side. Or just insilmaril@493: insert it again at its original position. Also hiding some of the insilmaril@493: toolbars is possible by right-clicking on the toolbar handle. insilmaril@245: insilmaril@245: \subsection{Maps} insilmaril@486: The {\em map} itself has always a {\em mapcenter}. The insilmaril@486: mapcenter has {\em branches} radiating out from the centre just like the trunk of a tree. Each branch in turn may have branches again. insilmaril@28: \begin{center} insilmaril@450: \includegraphics[width=10cm]{images/branches.png} insilmaril@28: \end{center} insilmaril@28: We will call a branch directly connected to the mapcenter a {\em insilmaril@28: mainbranch}, because it determines the position of all its child insilmaril@28: branches. insilmaril@28: insilmaril@28: The mapcenter and the branches all have a {\em heading}. This is the insilmaril@28: text you see in the mapeditor. Usually it should just be one or a few insilmaril@486: key words, so that one can easily keep track of the whole map. insilmaril@28: insilmaril@28: insilmaril@28: In the toolbar above the mapeditor you see various symbols. insilmaril@28: \begin{center} insilmaril@450: \includegraphics[width=8cm]{images/default-flags.png} insilmaril@28: \end{center} insilmaril@28: These are called {\em flags} and can be used to mark branches in the insilmaril@486: {\em map}, e.g. if something is important or questionable. insilmaril@28: There are also more flags set by \vym automatically to show additional insilmaril@486: information, e.g. when a note is attached to a particular branch. insilmaril@28: insilmaril@260: By default some of these flags are set exclusively e.g. when the insilmaril@486: "thumb-up" flag is set, then the "thumb down" is reset and vice insilmaril@104: versa. You can change this default behaviour in the settings menu. insilmaril@104: insilmaril@28: \section{Mapeditor} \label {mapeditor} insilmaril@28: \subsection{Start a new map} insilmaril@486: After \vym is started two windows will open: the {\em mapeditor} and the {\em noteditor}. Usually you will work in both windows, but at the moment we insilmaril@28: will just need the mapeditor. insilmaril@28: insilmaril@28: Select the mapcenter "New map" in the middle of the mapeditor by insilmaril@486: left-clicking with the mouse. It will be highlighted yellow to show that is insilmaril@103: selected. There are several ways to add a new branch to the center: insilmaril@28: \begin{itemize} insilmaril@486: \item Using the mouse: Open the context menu by clicking with the insilmaril@103: right mouse button (CTRL-Click on Mac) onto the insilmaril@486: mapcenter and choose Add \ra Add branch as child insilmaril@103: \item Press \key{Ins} or \key{A} insilmaril@28: \end{itemize} insilmaril@28: A new branch will appear and you will be able to type the heading of the insilmaril@28: branch. Finish adding the new branch by pressing \key{Enter}. insilmaril@28: %tipp insilmaril@486: Sometimes it comes in handy to be able to add a new branch above or below the current insilmaril@486: one. insilmaril@486: \begin{itemize} insilmaril@493: \item Use \key{Shift-Ins} to add a branch above the selected one or... insilmaril@493: \item \key{Ctrl-Ins} to add one below. insilmaril@486: \end{itemize} insilmaril@486: It is also insilmaril@104: possible to add a branch in such a way, that the current selection insilmaril@104: becomes the child of the new branch, which is like inserting it {\em insilmaril@104: before} the selection. This can be done using the context menu. insilmaril@28: insilmaril@28: \subsection{Navigate through a map} insilmaril@28: \subsubsection*{Select branches} insilmaril@28: To select branches you can use the left button of your mouse or also the insilmaril@486: arrow keys. Depending on the {\em orientation} of a branch tap insilmaril@486: \key{\la} or \key{\ra} to move nearer to the mapcenter or deeper insilmaril@28: down into the branches. Within a set of branches, let's call them a insilmaril@28: {\em subtree}, you can use \key{\ua} and \key{\da} to go up and down. You can insilmaril@486: also use \key{Home} and \key{End} to select the first and last branch. insilmaril@28: insilmaril@28: insilmaril@486: \subsubsection*{Panning the view of a map} insilmaril@28: While adding more and more branches the size of the map may become insilmaril@486: larger than the mapeditor window. You can use the scrollbars on the insilmaril@486: right and the bottom of your mapeditor window to scroll the view up or down or left or right. It is easier to just scroll using the left mouse button: Click anywhere on the {\em canvas} itself. Choose an empty space somewhere between the branches. The insilmaril@486: mouse pointer will change from an arrow to a hand, now move or drag the visible insilmaril@486: map to show the desired part. insilmaril@28: insilmaril@28: If you select branches using the arrow keys, the map will scroll insilmaril@28: to ensure that the selected branch is always visible. insilmaril@28: insilmaril@486: \subsubsection*{Zooming the view of a map} insilmaril@28: Working with huge maps, the {\em zoom}-function comes in handy: You can insilmaril@28: use insilmaril@28: \begin{itemize} insilmaril@486: \item from the menu: View \ra Zoom in, View \ra Zoom out, View \ra reset Zoom. insilmaril@28: \item the toolbar buttons insilmaril@28: \begin{center} insilmaril@450: \includegraphics[width=3cm]{images/zoom-buttons.png} insilmaril@28: \end{center} insilmaril@28: \end{itemize} insilmaril@486: Clicking the crossed magnifying lens icon will reset the zoomed view to its original size. insilmaril@28: insilmaril@28: insilmaril@28: \subsubsection*{Find Function} \label{findwindow} insilmaril@28: With huge maps there is the need to have a insilmaril@28: find function. Choose Edit \ra Find to open the Find Window: insilmaril@28: \begin{center} insilmaril@450: \includegraphics[width=6cm]{images/find-window.png} insilmaril@28: \end{center} insilmaril@486: The find function will search for, the text you enter here, in all the branch headings and also in the associated notes. Everytime you press the "Find"-button it will look for the next occurence, which will then be selected automatically. If the search insilmaril@486: fails, a short message "Nothing found" will appear for a few insilmaril@28: seconds in the {\em statusbar} on the bottom of the mapeditor. insilmaril@28: insilmaril@260: \subsubsection*{Keep the overview -- scroll a part of the map} insilmaril@486: A very big subtree of a map e.g. a branch with hundreds of child branches would make insilmaril@28: it very hard to keep an overview over the whole map. You can hide all insilmaril@486: the children of a branch by {\em scrolling} it -- this function is often called {\em folding}. Think of the whole subtree as painted onto a insilmaril@486: broadsheet newspaper. You can scroll or fold the paper to a small roll, leaving just insilmaril@486: the headline visible. insilmaril@28: insilmaril@486: To scroll or unscroll a branch and its children, insilmaril@28: \begin{itemize} insilmaril@486: \item press either the \key{Scroll Lock} key or the \key{S} insilmaril@28: \item press the middle-mouse button or insilmaril@486: \item choose the scroll icon from the toolbar. insilmaril@28: \end{itemize} insilmaril@28: If you select parts of a scrolled branch e.g. using the find function or insilmaril@28: by using the arrow-keys, it will unscroll temporary. This is shown as a insilmaril@486: scroll with a little hour glass. If the temporary unscrolled part is no insilmaril@28: longer needed, it will be hidden again automatically. It is also insilmaril@486: possible to unscroll all branches using "Edit\ra Unscroll all scrolled insilmaril@486: branches". insilmaril@28: insilmaril@264: You can also hide parts of the map while exporting it e.g. to a webpage insilmaril@264: or a presentation, see \ref{hideexport} for details. insilmaril@28: insilmaril@28: \subsection{Modify and move branches} insilmaril@260: \subsubsection*{Modify the heading} insilmaril@28: You can edit the heading by selecting the branch and then insilmaril@28: \begin{itemize} insilmaril@28: \item pressing \key{Enter} insilmaril@486: \item pressing \key{F2} insilmaril@28: \item double-clicking with left mouse. insilmaril@28: \end{itemize} insilmaril@28: Just type the new heading (or edit the old one) and press \key{Enter}. insilmaril@28: insilmaril@28: \subsubsection*{Move a branch} insilmaril@28: The easiest way to move a branch is to select it with left-mouse and insilmaril@28: drag it to the destination while keeping the mouse button pressed. insilmaril@28: Depending on the branch it will be insilmaril@28: \begin{itemize} insilmaril@28: \item moved to the destination or insilmaril@28: \item {\em linked} to a new {\em parent} (mapcenter or branch) insilmaril@28: \end{itemize} insilmaril@28: If you drag the branch over another one or over the mapcenter, you will insilmaril@28: notice that the link connecting it to the old parent will be changed to insilmaril@28: lead to the new parent which is now under your mousepointer. insilmaril@28: If you release the button now, the branch will be relinked. insilmaril@28: insilmaril@28: If you release the button in the middle of nowhere, the result will insilmaril@28: depend on the type of branch you are releasing: insilmaril@28: \begin{itemize} insilmaril@28: \item A mainbranch is directly connected to the mapcenter. insilmaril@28: It will stay on its new position. insilmaril@28: \item An ordinary branch will "jump" back to its original position. insilmaril@28: \end{itemize} insilmaril@28: Thus you can easily rearrange the layout of the mainbranches to avoid insilmaril@28: overlapping of their subtrees. insilmaril@28: There is another convenient way to move branches, especially if you want insilmaril@28: to {\em reorder} a subtree: You can move a branch up or down in a insilmaril@28: subtree by insilmaril@28: \begin{itemize} insilmaril@28: \item pressing \key{\ua} and \key {\da} insilmaril@28: \item selecting Edit \ra Move branch insilmaril@28: \item clicking on the toolbar buttons: insilmaril@28: \begin{center} insilmaril@450: \includegraphics[width=1.5cm]{images/move-buttons.png} insilmaril@28: \end{center} insilmaril@28: \end{itemize} insilmaril@28: %tipp insilmaril@28: There is yet another way to move branches: If you press \key{Shift} or insilmaril@28: \key{Ctrl} while moving with the mouse, the branch will be added above insilmaril@486: or below the one the mouse pointer is over. This can also be used to reorder branches in a map. insilmaril@28: insilmaril@486: \subsection{Colours and Images - Using the right side of your brain} insilmaril@486: \subsubsection*{Change colour of a heading} insilmaril@486: You can also use colours to add more information to a map, e.g. use insilmaril@486: red, green and more colours to prioritize tasks. Again you can insilmaril@28: \begin{itemize} insilmaril@486: \item use the menu and choose e.g Format \ra Set Color insilmaril@28: \item use the toolbar insilmaril@28: \begin{center} insilmaril@493: \includegraphics[width=3cm]{images/color-buttons.png} insilmaril@28: \end{center} insilmaril@28: \end{itemize} insilmaril@486: The first button (black in the graphic above) shows the current colour. insilmaril@486: Clicking on it let's you choose another colour. You can also "pick" insilmaril@486: another colour by selecting a branch with the desired colour and using the insilmaril@486: "pick colour" button. Both of the icons showing a palette actually apply insilmaril@486: the current colour to the selected branch. While the first one just insilmaril@486: colours the heading of the selection, the last one also colours all the insilmaril@486: children of the selected branch. insilmaril@28: insilmaril@28: %tipp insilmaril@486: A very useful function is the "copy colour" using the mouse: Select the insilmaril@486: branch which should get the new colour, then press \key{Ctrl} and insilmaril@486: simultanously click with left-mouse on another branch to copy its colour insilmaril@486: to the first one. Here the children of the selection also will get the new insilmaril@486: colour, if you just want to colour the selection itself, additionally insilmaril@28: press \key{Shift}. insilmaril@28: insilmaril@28: \subsubsection*{Use flags} insilmaril@486: \vym provides various flags. They are usually displayed in the toolbar on top of the insilmaril@28: mapeditor window. (Note: Like all toolbars you can also move them to the insilmaril@28: left or the right side of the window or even detach them. Just grab the insilmaril@28: very left "dotted" part of the toolbar with your left-mouse button.) insilmaril@28: \begin{center} insilmaril@450: \includegraphics[width=8cm]{images/default-flags.png} insilmaril@28: \end{center} insilmaril@28: If you have a branch selected, you can set any number of flags by insilmaril@28: clicking them in the toolbar. The toolbar buttons change their state and insilmaril@486: always reflect the flags set in the selected branch. So, to remove a flag from a branch, select the branch and then click the highlighted flag on the toolbar. insilmaril@28: insilmaril@486: At present \vym uses two kinds of flags: {\em System Flags} and {\em insilmaril@28: Standard Flags}. The standard flags are those shown in the toolbar. insilmaril@28: System flags are set by \vym to indicate e.g. that there is additional insilmaril@28: information in a note (more on this in \ref{noteeditor}). Later versions insilmaril@28: of \vym may have another kind of flags, which may be edited by the user. insilmaril@28: insilmaril@28: \subsubsection*{Images} insilmaril@125: The easiest way to add an image to a branch is by dragging it e.g. from a insilmaril@125: webbrowser to the mapeditor while a branch is selected there. insilmaril@125: insilmaril@486: You can also add an image to a branch by opening the context menu of the insilmaril@493: branch. Right click the selected branch, choose "Add Image". A insilmaril@486: dialog window enables you choose the image to load. insilmaril@28: \footnote{Supported image types are: PNG, BMP, XBM, XPM and PNM. It may insilmaril@28: also support JPEG, MNG and GIF, if specially configured during insilmaril@28: compilation (as done when \vym is part of SUSE LINUX).} insilmaril@486: While an image is selected in the dialog, a preview of the insilmaril@486: image is displayed. It is also possible to select multiple images. insilmaril@28: insilmaril@28: You can position the image anywhere you want, just drag it with left insilmaril@28: mouse. To relink it to another branch, press \key{Shift} while moving insilmaril@28: it. To delete it, press \key{Del}. insilmaril@28: insilmaril@28: If you right-click onto an image, a context menu will open which let's insilmaril@28: you first choose one of several image formats. Then a file dialog opens insilmaril@486: to save the image. insilmaril@486: insilmaril@486: Hint: This is used to "export" the image, it will be insilmaril@28: saved anyway in the map itself! You can also cut and insilmaril@28: copy images, but it is not possible to add objects to an image\footnote{ insilmaril@28: Images are regarded as "extra feature". It would make working with insilmaril@28: the map much more complex if e.g. images could be linked to images.} insilmaril@28: insilmaril@28: The option \lq{\bf Use for export} \rq controls the output of exports insilmaril@28: e.g. to HTML: If set to no, the image won't appear in the {\em text} insilmaril@28: part of the output. This is useful for large images or if images are insilmaril@28: used as a kind of frame e.g. the famous cloud symbol around a part of insilmaril@28: the map. Those shouldn't appear in the middle of the text. insilmaril@28: insilmaril@28: At the moment image support is preliminary: Images will be saved insilmaril@28: together with all the other data of a map in the {\tt .vym}-file. insilmaril@28: Later versions will include more functionality like resizing the images, insilmaril@28: changing its z-value (put it into background) etc. insilmaril@28: insilmaril@28: \subsubsection*{Frames} insilmaril@493: A frame can be added to a branch in the {\em property window} (see insilmaril@493: \ref{propwindow}). insilmaril@493: Alternatively, you can use use images as frames. Have a look at the demo insilmaril@493: map {\tt todo.vym} as an example, where the mapcenter is a cloud. You insilmaril@493: can use an external drawing program like {\tt gimp} to create an image, insilmaril@28: preferable with an transparency channel, so that you can design frames insilmaril@493: which don't use a rectangular borderline, just like that cloud. insilmaril@28: insilmaril@28: insilmaril@493: \subsection{Design of map background and connecting links } insilmaril@28: The design of the background of a map and also of the links connecting insilmaril@28: various parts of the map can be changed by insilmaril@28: \begin{itemize} insilmaril@28: \item Selecting Format from the menu insilmaril@486: \item Right clicking on the canvas, which will open a context menu insilmaril@28: \end{itemize} insilmaril@28: insilmaril@493: \subsubsection*{Background } insilmaril@486: The colour is set (and also displayed) as "Set background colour". insilmaril@493: Alternatevily you can set an background image, though this is not insilmaril@493: recommended in general. Working on the map becomes slow and the image insilmaril@493: currently cannot be positioned freely. insilmaril@28: insilmaril@486: \subsubsection*{Link colour} insilmaril@486: Links connecting branches can be coloured in one of two ways: insilmaril@28: \begin{itemize} insilmaril@486: \item use the same colour for the heading and for the branch link line. insilmaril@486: \item use {\em one} colour for all links and choose different colours for the branch headings text. The default colour for branch link lines is blue. insilmaril@28: \end{itemize} insilmaril@486: The latter can be set with "Set link colour". Check or uncheck the "Use insilmaril@486: colour of heading for link" option to toggle between the two designs for insilmaril@28: your map. insilmaril@28: insilmaril@28: \subsubsection*{Link style} insilmaril@28: \vym offers four different styles for the appearences of links: insilmaril@28: \begin{itemize} insilmaril@28: \item Line insilmaril@28: \item Parabel insilmaril@28: \item Thick Line insilmaril@28: \item Thick Parabel insilmaril@28: \end{itemize} insilmaril@486: The "thick" styles only apply to links starting at the mapcenter, link lines for the rest insilmaril@486: of the map are always painted "thin". insilmaril@28: insilmaril@28: insilmaril@260: \subsection{Links to other documents and webpages} insilmaril@260: \vym supports two kind of external links: insilmaril@28: \begin{itemize} insilmaril@28: \item Document, which will be opened in an external webbrowser insilmaril@28: \item \vym map, which will be opened in \vym itself insilmaril@28: \end{itemize} insilmaril@260: In addition to the external links there also internal ones, leading from one insilmaril@486: branch in a map to another one. Those are called {\em XLinks} and are explained insilmaril@260: in section~\ref{xlinks}. insilmaril@28: insilmaril@28: \subsubsection*{Webbrowser} insilmaril@486: Modern Webbrowsers like {\tt konqueror and Firefox} are able to display various insilmaril@486: types of files, both local or on the internet. To enter the URL of insilmaril@486: any document, right-click onto a branch to open the contextmenu then choose "Edit URL". Enter the path to your document (or copy and paste it from your browser). Examples for valid paths are: insilmaril@28: \begin{verbatim} insilmaril@28: http://www.insilmaril.de/vym/index.html insilmaril@28: file:/usr/share/doc/packages/vym/doc/vym.pdf insilmaril@28: \end{verbatim} insilmaril@28: If an URL was entered, a little globe will appear in the branch. By insilmaril@28: clicking on the globe in the toolbar or the context menu an external insilmaril@28: browser\footnote{ insilmaril@28: The browser can be changed in the Settings Menu.} insilmaril@486: will be launched. insilmaril@28: \begin{center} insilmaril@450: \includegraphics[width=0.5cm]{images/flag-url.png} insilmaril@28: \end{center} insilmaril@340: For more information on working with bookmarks and webbrowsers see insilmaril@340: section \ref{bookmarks}. insilmaril@266: insilmaril@493: In the context menu there is also an option to open all URLs found insilmaril@493: in the selected subtree of the map. That's useful to simultanously open insilmaril@493: a collection of URLs in the webbrowser, especially if the browser can insilmaril@493: open them in tabs (like Konqueror). insilmaril@493: insilmaril@28: insilmaril@28: \subsubsection*{\vym map} insilmaril@486: To link to to another map right click on a branch and choose "Edit \vym link". A file dialog opens where you can choose the map. A insilmaril@28: branch with a link is marked with insilmaril@28: \begin{center} insilmaril@450: \includegraphics[width=0.5cm]{images/flag-vymlink.png} insilmaril@28: \end{center} insilmaril@486: Clicking this flag beside the branch heading, in the toolbar or in the context menu of a branch will open the map in another tab (see \ref{tabs} for working with insilmaril@486: multiple maps). To delete an existing link, just right click the branch and select "Delete \vym link". insilmaril@28: insilmaril@493: In the context menu there is also an option to open all vymlinks found insilmaril@493: in the selected subtree of the map. That's useful to simultanously open insilmaril@493: a collection of related maps. insilmaril@493: insilmaril@28: Technical note: Internally \vym uses absolute paths, to avoid opening insilmaril@28: several tabs containing the same map. When a map is saved, this path is insilmaril@28: converted to a relative one (e.g. {\tt /home/user/vym.map} might become insilmaril@28: {\tt ./vym.map}. This makes it fairly easy to use multiple maps on insilmaril@28: different computers or export them to HTML in future. insilmaril@28: insilmaril@28: \subsection{Multiple maps} \label{tabs} insilmaril@28: You can work on multiple maps at the same time. Each new map is opened insilmaril@28: in another {\em tab}. The available tabs are shown just above the insilmaril@28: mapeditor. You can use the normal cut/copy/paste functions to insilmaril@28: copy data from one map to another. insilmaril@28: insilmaril@28: %todo insilmaril@28: insilmaril@28: %TODO insilmaril@28: %\subsubsection{Menus} insilmaril@28: %\subsubsection{Keyboard shortcuts} insilmaril@28: insilmaril@28: % Settings insilmaril@28: % Images insilmaril@28: % Copy & Paste insilmaril@28: % Working with tabs (multiple maps) insilmaril@28: % Exporting insilmaril@28: % Scrolling insilmaril@28: insilmaril@28: \section{Noteeditor} \label {noteeditor} insilmaril@486: If you want to attach more text to a branch e.g. a complete email, a insilmaril@28: cooking recipe, or the whole source code of a software project, you can insilmaril@125: use the noteeditor. insilmaril@233: \begin{center} insilmaril@450: \includegraphics[width=8cm]{images/noteeditor.png} insilmaril@233: \end{center} insilmaril@486: This editor displays text associated with a branch selected in the mapeditor. The noteeditor insilmaril@486: shows different background colours depending on whether text is associated with a selected branch. insilmaril@28: insilmaril@125: \subsection{States} insilmaril@28: Before you can type or paste text into it, you have insilmaril@486: to select a branch in the mapeditor. Note that the background colour insilmaril@28: of the noteeditor indicates its state: insilmaril@28: \begin{itemize} insilmaril@28: \item grey: no text entered yet insilmaril@486: \item white: some text has been entered insilmaril@28: \end{itemize} insilmaril@486: In the mapeditor itself, to signal that there is a note with more insilmaril@486: information for a particular branch, a little "note" flag will appear next insilmaril@486: to the heading of the branch. This is illustrated in the lower branch on the right hand side: insilmaril@28: \begin{center} insilmaril@450: \includegraphics[width=8cm]{images/branches-flags.png} insilmaril@28: \end{center} insilmaril@28: insilmaril@125: \subsection{Import and export notes} insilmaril@420: The note is always saved automatically within the \vym map itself. insilmaril@28: Nevertheless sometimes it is nice to import a note from an external file insilmaril@486: or write it. In the Note Editor use "File\ra~Import" and "File\ra~Export" to do so. insilmaril@28: insilmaril@125: \subsection{Edit and print note} insilmaril@28: Editing works like in any simple texteditor, including undo and redo insilmaril@28: functions. You can delete the complete note by clicking the insilmaril@28: trashcan. Only the note itself is printed by clicking the printer icon. insilmaril@28: insilmaril@486: \subsection{RichText: Colours, paragraphs and formatted text} insilmaril@233: \vym supports formatted text (QT Rich Text) in the noteeditor since insilmaril@486: version 1.4.7. Colours and text attributes (e.g. italic, bold) can be insilmaril@486: set with the buttons above the text. The text itself is divided into insilmaril@233: paragraphs. For each paragraph the format can be set (e.g. centered, insilmaril@233: right). A paragraph is ended when a \key{Return} is entered. If you just insilmaril@233: want to begin a new line, press \key{CTRL-Return}. insilmaril@233: insilmaril@486: \subsection{Fonts and how to switch them quickly} insilmaril@486: The noteeditor is designed to be used for simple notes, not really as a full insilmaril@493: featured word processor. Because of many requests \vym supports insilmaril@28: formatted text in the noteeditor\footnote{ insilmaril@28: \vym uses the QRichtText format, which is basically a subset of the insilmaril@28: formatting provided in HTML.} insilmaril@28: Two default fonts are supported which can be set in the Settings menu. insilmaril@28: One is a fixed width font, the other has variable width. The fixed font insilmaril@28: is usually used for emails, source code etc.\ while the variable font is insilmaril@28: used for simple notes, where one doesn't need fixed character widths. insilmaril@28: Both fonts can easily switched using the following symbol from the insilmaril@28: toolbar: insilmaril@28: \begin{center} insilmaril@450: \includegraphics[width=0.5cm]{images/formatfixedfont.png} insilmaril@28: \end{center} insilmaril@486: In the Settings menu both fonts can be set. The default font can also be toggled between the fixed and variable font by selecting or deselecting the "fixed font is default" menu item. insilmaril@28: insilmaril@28: Additionally to the default fonts any font installed on your system can insilmaril@28: be used. Please note, that the chosen font also will be used for HTML insilmaril@486: exports, so if youy VYM mind map could ever be exported to a web or intranet page you should only use fonts which are available generally. insilmaril@28: insilmaril@217: \subsection{Find text} insilmaril@28: The noteeditor itself has no Find function, use Find in the mapeditor, insilmaril@28: which will also search all notes (see \ref{findwindow}). insilmaril@28: insilmaril@217: \subsection{Paste text into note editor} insilmaril@28: Often you will paste text into the editor from another application e.g. insilmaril@28: an email. Normally \vym will generate a new paragraph for each new line. insilmaril@28: This usually is not what you want, so you can choose from the menu insilmaril@28: insilmaril@493: insilmaril@28: \section{Hello world} insilmaril@233: This section is about how \vym can interact with other applications. insilmaril@486: Many applications can now read and write their data using XML, the insilmaril@233: eXtensible Markup Language. \vym also uses XML to save its maps, see insilmaril@233: \ref{fileformat} for a more detailed description. insilmaril@233: insilmaril@486: So if you make use of another application that understands XML, chances are good that someone insilmaril@233: could write import/export filters for \vym. Volunteers are always insilmaril@233: welcome ;-) insilmaril@233: insilmaril@340: \subsection{Import} \label{import} insilmaril@233: insilmaril@233: \subsubsection*{KDE Bookmarks} insilmaril@486: The integrated bookmark editor in KDE (Konqueror etc.) is somewhat limited, so why not insilmaril@233: use \vym to maintain the bookmark mess? To create a new map containing insilmaril@233: your current KDE bookmarks just choose insilmaril@233: \begin{itemize} insilmaril@486: \item File \ra Import\ra KDE Bookmarks insilmaril@233: \end{itemize} insilmaril@233: insilmaril@233: \subsubsection*{Mind Manager} insilmaril@233: \vym has currently a very basic import filter to convert maps created by insilmaril@486: {\em Mind Manager}\footnote{Mind Manager is a commercial i.e. non free, software application by Mindjet for Windows and the Mac. Both names are registered trademarks by Mindjet. For more information see their website at insilmaril@486: \href{http://mindjet.com}{http://mindjet.com}} into \vym maps. Notes and insilmaril@233: pictures are not converted at the moment. You can import files with insilmaril@233: \begin{itemize} insilmaril@486: \item File \ra Import\ra Mind Manager insilmaril@233: \end{itemize} insilmaril@233: insilmaril@233: insilmaril@233: \subsubsection*{Directory structure} insilmaril@233: \vym can read a directory structure. This is mainly for insilmaril@233: testing \vym e.g. to easily create huge maps used for benchmarks (yes, insilmaril@233: there is still room to optimize \vym ;-) insilmaril@28: insilmaril@340: insilmaril@340: insilmaril@340: insilmaril@340: \subsection{Export} \label{export} insilmaril@264: \label{hideexport} insilmaril@486: Often you may not want to export the whole map, but just parts of it. For insilmaril@264: example you may have additional info you want to talk about in a insilmaril@264: presentation, while those parts should not be visible to the audience. insilmaril@264: To achieve this you can "hide" parts of the map during exports by insilmaril@291: setting the "hide in export" flag. insilmaril@264: \begin{center} insilmaril@450: \includegraphics[width=0.5cm]{images/flag-hideexport.png} insilmaril@264: \end{center} insilmaril@291: You can toggle this flag in the toolbar or by pressing \key{H}. insilmaril@264: Note that there is a global option in the settings menu to toggle the insilmaril@264: use of this flag. By default the flag is enabled. insilmaril@233: insilmaril@233: \subsubsection*{Open Office} insilmaril@486: Open Office beginning with version~2 uses the so called "Open Document Format", which can be written by \vym. The options are insilmaril@233: currently limited, but it possible to export presentations which can be insilmaril@233: opened in Open Office Impress. By selecting insilmaril@28: \begin{itemize} insilmaril@486: \item File \ra Export\ra Open Office insilmaril@28: \end{itemize} insilmaril@233: you get a file dialogue where you can choose the output file and the insilmaril@233: file type: insilmaril@233: \begin{center} insilmaril@450: \includegraphics[width=12cm]{images/export-oo.png} insilmaril@233: \end{center} insilmaril@233: The file types represent various templates, which can be created with insilmaril@233: some manual work from an existing Open Office document. The structure of insilmaril@233: \vym map is then inserted into a template. insilmaril@233: There are some limitations at the moment: insilmaril@233: \begin{itemize} insilmaril@233: \item \vym can't take care of page lengths, so you have to check and insilmaril@233: probably reedit in Open Office to avoid text running over the end of insilmaril@233: a page insilmaril@233: \item Images and flags are not used at the moment insilmaril@486: \item Notes are just written as plain text, without RichText insilmaril@486: \item The full range of templates are not available in all distributions. insilmaril@233: \end{itemize} insilmaril@486: Some of the templates make use of {\em sections} i.e sections insert the insilmaril@233: headings of mainbranches as chapters for sections into the presentation. insilmaril@28: insilmaril@28: \subsubsection*{Image} insilmaril@28: \vym supports all image formats which are natively supported by the insilmaril@28: QT~toolkit: insilmaril@28: BMP, JPEG, PBM, PGM, PNG, PPN, XPM, and XBM. insilmaril@28: For use in websites and for sending images by email PNG is a good insilmaril@28: recommodation regarding quality and size of the image. \vym uses QTs insilmaril@28: default options for compressing the images. insilmaril@28: insilmaril@28: \subsubsection*{ASCII} insilmaril@28: Exporting an image as text is somewhat experimental at the moment. Later insilmaril@486: this will probably be done using stylesheets. So the output may change in insilmaril@28: future versions of \vym. insilmaril@28: insilmaril@233: \subsubsection*{\LaTeX} insilmaril@233: \vym can generate an input file for \LaTeX. Currently this is considered insilmaril@233: as experimental, there are no options (yet). insilmaril@233: By selecting insilmaril@233: \begin{itemize} insilmaril@486: \item File \ra Export\ra \LaTeX insilmaril@233: \end{itemize} insilmaril@233: you will be asked in a file dialog for the name of the output file. This insilmaril@486: file may then be included in a \LaTeX document using command: insilmaril@233: \begin{verbatim} insilmaril@233: \include{inputfile.tex} insilmaril@233: \end{verbatim} insilmaril@233: insilmaril@340: \subsubsection*{KDE Bookmarks} insilmaril@340: \vym will overwrite the KDE bookmarks file and then try to notify insilmaril@486: running Konquerors via DCOP of the changed file. \vym does not create a insilmaril@340: backup! insilmaril@340: \begin{itemize} insilmaril@486: \item File \ra Export \ra KDE Bookmarks insilmaril@340: \end{itemize} insilmaril@340: insilmaril@340: insilmaril@233: \subsubsection*{XHTML (Webpages)} insilmaril@233: insilmaril@486: This is the format to use if you wish to create a webpage. To see an example insilmaril@486: visit the \vym homepage: insilmaril@233: \href{http://www.InSilmaril.de/vym}{www.InSilmaril.de/vym} insilmaril@233: insilmaril@486: Some explanation on how this works: insilmaril@233: Before a map is exported as XHTML, it will be first written as XML into a insilmaril@28: directory (see \ref{xmlexport}). Then the external program {\tt insilmaril@486: xsltproc}\footnote{On SUSE Linux and some other distributions {\tt xsltproc} is installed by insilmaril@28: default.} insilmaril@28: will be called to process the XML file and generate HTML code. insilmaril@486: A dialog allows the user to set various options: insilmaril@28: \begin{itemize} insilmaril@28: \item {\bf Include image:} If set, \vym will creat an image map at insilmaril@28: the top of the HTML output. Clicking on a branch in the map will insilmaril@28: jump to the corresponding section in the output. insilmaril@28: insilmaril@28: \item {\bf Colored headings:} insilmaril@486: If set to yes, \vym will colour the headings in the text part with the insilmaril@486: same colours used in the \vym map. insilmaril@28: \item {\bf Show Warnings:} insilmaril@28: If set to yes, \vym will ask before overwriting data. insilmaril@28: \item {\bf Show output:} insilmaril@28: This is useful mainly for debugging. It will show how the processing of insilmaril@28: the XML file works by calling the external {\tt xsltproc}. insilmaril@28: \end{itemize} insilmaril@28: Additionally the paths to the CSS and XSL stylesheets can be set. By insilmaril@28: default on SUSE~Linux they will be in {\tt /usr/share/vym/styles}. insilmaril@28: insilmaril@28: insilmaril@28: \subsubsection*{XML} \label{xmlexport} insilmaril@486: The map is written into a directory both as an image and as an XML file. The insilmaril@28: directory is set in a file dialog. If the directory is not empty, you insilmaril@486: will be warned and offered choices if you are at risk of overwriting existing contents. insilmaril@28: insilmaril@28: It is possible to export different maps into the same directory. Each insilmaril@28: file generated will have the map's name as prefix, e.g. {\tt todo.vym} insilmaril@28: becomes {\tt todo.xml}, {\tt todo.png}, {\tt todo-image-1.png} and so insilmaril@486: on. This is useful if, for example, a website comprises several combined maps that have to be stored in the same directory. insilmaril@28: insilmaril@105: \subsubsection*{Export a part of a map} insilmaril@486: Select a branch you want to export together with its children, then open insilmaril@105: the context menu and choose {\em Save Selection}. This will create a insilmaril@486: file with the suffix {\tt .vyp}, which is an abbreviation for \lq vym insilmaril@105: part\rq. insilmaril@105: insilmaril@125: insilmaril@125: \section{Advanced Editing} insilmaril@340: insilmaril@493: \subsection{Properties of an object} insilmaril@493: For any branch you can open a satellite window (see \ref{satellite}): insilmaril@493: the {\em property window}: insilmaril@493: \begin{center} insilmaril@493: \includegraphics[width=8cm]{images/propwindow.png} insilmaril@493: \label{propwindow} insilmaril@493: \end{center} insilmaril@493: %FIXME create screenshot insilmaril@493: %FIXME explain the tabs insilmaril@493: insilmaril@493: \begin{itemize} insilmaril@493: \item Frame insilmaril@493: \item Link (see \ref{hideunselected}) insilmaril@493: \item Layout (see \ref{incimg}) insilmaril@493: \end{itemize} insilmaril@493: insilmaril@420: \subsection{Changing the history: Undo and Redo} insilmaril@493: \vym keeps track of all changes done in a map. The default number of insilmaril@493: changes which can be undone is~75. The complete history can be seen in insilmaril@493: the {\em historywindow}: insilmaril@493: \begin{center} insilmaril@493: \includegraphics[width=8cm]{images/historywindow.png} insilmaril@493: \label{historywindow} insilmaril@493: \end{center} insilmaril@493: A single step back be undone or redone with \key{CTRL-Z} or \key{CTRL-Y}, insilmaril@493: or by using the buttons in the toolbar or the {\em historywindow}. insilmaril@493: Inside the {\em historywindow}, you can click on a line to unwind all insilmaril@493: actions done until that point in time -- or redo all changes by clicking insilmaril@493: on the last line. insilmaril@420: insilmaril@450: \subsection{Macros} \label{macros} insilmaril@450: Macros have been added to \vym in version~1.9.0. Each function key insilmaril@450: \key{F1} to \key{F12} holds a macro, which is executed on the current insilmaril@486: selection if the key is pressed. The default macros change the colour of insilmaril@450: a subtree or set the frame of a branch: insilmaril@450: \begin{center} insilmaril@450: \includegraphics[width=8cm]{images/macros.png} insilmaril@450: \end{center} insilmaril@450: Each macro is a \vym script, which is executed when the associated key insilmaril@450: is pressed. The default location of the scripts can be changed in the insilmaril@450: Settings menu. More information on using scripts in \vym is found in insilmaril@450: appendix~\ref{scripts}. insilmaril@450: insilmaril@493: \subsection{Bookmarks} \label{bookmarks} insilmaril@340: \subsubsection*{Open new tabs instead of new windows} insilmaril@486: If you use konqueror as your browser, \vym will remember the konqueror session which insilmaril@340: was opened first by \vym. You can also press \key{Ctrl} and click to insilmaril@486: open the link in a new tab. insilmaril@340: insilmaril@340: \vym can also open a new tab in Mozilla or Firefox using the remote insilmaril@340: command\footnote{\href{http://www.mozilla.org/unix/remote.html}{http://www.mozilla.org/unix/remote.html}} insilmaril@486: of these browsers. insilmaril@340: insilmaril@340: \subsubsection*{Drag and Drop} insilmaril@340: If you want to keep bookmarks in a map, select a branch where you want insilmaril@340: to add the bookmark, then simply drag the URL from your browser to the insilmaril@340: map. Also you could use an existing heading as URL: Right click onto the insilmaril@340: branch and select "Use heading for URL". insilmaril@340: insilmaril@340: insilmaril@340: \subsubsection*{Directly access bookmark lists of a browser} insilmaril@340: Please see the sections \ref{import} and \ref{export} about insilmaril@340: Import and Export filters. insilmaril@340: insilmaril@340: \subsubsection*{Special URLs} insilmaril@340: \vym can turn an existing heading of a branch into an URL. Currently insilmaril@340: this works for Bugentries in the Novell Bugtracking system: Open the insilmaril@340: context menu of a branch (usually by right-clicking it) and select insilmaril@340: \begin{itemize} insilmaril@340: \item Create URL to Bugzilla insilmaril@340: \end{itemize} insilmaril@340: The URL will be build from the number in the heading. insilmaril@340: insilmaril@493: \subsection{Associating images with a branch} \label{incimg} insilmaril@486: The default setting for an image is for it to float "freely". Images can be insilmaril@486: positioned anywhere on the canvas, but may end up in the same place as other insilmaril@486: parts of the map obscuring that part of the map. insilmaril@340: insilmaril@486: The solution is to insert or include them "into" a branch. This can be done via insilmaril@493: the property window (see \ref{propwindow}): insilmaril@340: \begin{itemize} insilmaril@340: \item Include images horizontally insilmaril@340: \item Include images vertically insilmaril@340: \end{itemize} insilmaril@486: The image is still positioned relative to its parent branch, but the insilmaril@486: heading and border of the branch frame adapt to the floating image, see below: insilmaril@340: \begin{center} insilmaril@450: \includegraphics[width=11cm]{images/includeImages.png} insilmaril@340: \end{center} insilmaril@340: insilmaril@125: \subsection{Modifier Modes} insilmaril@486: Modifiers are for example the \key{Shift}- the \key{Ctrl}- ot the \key{Alt}-keys. When insilmaril@486: pressed while applying mouse actions, they will cause \vym to use insilmaril@493: a "modified" version of the action which usually would be done. insilmaril@493: insilmaril@493: %\key{Ctrl} or \key{Alt}is pressed while releasing the branch, it will be insilmaril@493: %added above/below the target, not as child of the target. insilmaril@125: insilmaril@486: Without a modifier key pressed, the first mouse click on a branch just selects insilmaril@125: it. For the behaviour of the \key{Ctrl} modifier there are several insilmaril@125: options, which can be set from the modifier toolbar: insilmaril@125: \begin{center} insilmaril@450: \includegraphics[width=3cm]{images/modmodes.png} insilmaril@125: \end{center} insilmaril@493: The default mode is to copy the colour from the clicked branch to the already insilmaril@493: selected branch. The figure above shows the toolbar with the default modifier insilmaril@493: selected. The second modifier insilmaril@125: let's you easily copy a whole branch with a single click. The third insilmaril@493: modifier lets you create links between branches called {\em xLinks}. insilmaril@493: They will be explained in the next section \ref{xlinks}. insilmaril@125: insilmaril@493: \subsection{Hide links of unselected objects} \label{hidelink} insilmaril@264: Sometimes it would be useful to position a branch freely, just like a insilmaril@486: mainbranch or an image. This is possible for all insilmaril@264: branches, you can use a mainbranch and hide its connecting link to the insilmaril@486: mapcenter or hide the link between a child branch and its parent. This can be used e.g. for legends or a collection of vymLinks insilmaril@264: pointing to other maps: insilmaril@264: \begin{center} insilmaril@450: \includegraphics[width=9cm]{images/hiddenlink.png} insilmaril@264: \end{center} insilmaril@493: To hide the link between a branch and its parent open the insilmaril@493: \ref{propwindow} and check "Hide link if object is not selected" on insilmaril@493: "Link" tab. insilmaril@264: insilmaril@264: insilmaril@260: \subsection{XLinks} \label{xlinks} insilmaril@125: So far all the data in the \vym map has been treelike. Using xLinks you insilmaril@125: can link one branch to any other, just like attaching a rope between two insilmaril@125: branches in a real tree. This is especially useful in complex maps, insilmaril@486: where you want to have crossreferences which can not be displayed on the same insilmaril@486: visible area of the {\em mapeditor} window. The following example map still fits on one screen, but shows how data can be crosslinked. In the graphics there is a link from a task (prepare a presentation) to general information: insilmaril@125: \begin{center} insilmaril@450: \includegraphics[width=12cm]{images/xlink.png} insilmaril@125: \end{center} insilmaril@125: Note that a xLink which points to a branch that is not visible (because insilmaril@486: it is scrolled), is just shown as a little horizontal arrow. In the insilmaril@125: screenshot above have a look at the \lq Tuesday\rq\ branch. insilmaril@125: insilmaril@233: \subsubsection*{Create a xLink} insilmaril@486: Choose the link mode from the modifier toolbar (by clicking the toolbar icon or pressing insilmaril@125: \key{L}). Select the branch, where the xLink should start. Press the insilmaril@486: modifier key \key{Ctrl} and then click on the selected branch where the insilmaril@486: link should start and drag the mouse pointer to the branch where the link is to end. (The link is drawn to follow the mouse pointer). When you release the mouse over a branch the xLink becomes permanent. insilmaril@125: insilmaril@233: \subsubsection*{Modify or delete a xLink} insilmaril@493: First select a branch at either end of the xLink. Then open the context insilmaril@493: menu and select \lq Edit xLink\rq. A submenu contains all the xLinks of insilmaril@493: the branch (if there are any). They are named like the branches, where insilmaril@493: they end. Choose one and the xLink dialogue opens, where you can set insilmaril@493: colour, width and also delete the xLink. insilmaril@125: insilmaril@233: \subsubsection*{Follow a xLink} insilmaril@486: In a complex \vym map it sometimes comes in handy to be able to jump to the other end insilmaril@493: of a xLink. You can do this by opening the context menu of the branch insilmaril@493: and clicking on \lq Goto xLink\rq and selecting the xLink you want to insilmaril@493: follow. insilmaril@125: insilmaril@125: insilmaril@125: insilmaril@233: \subsection{Adding and removing branches} insilmaril@125: The context menu of a branch shows some more ways to add and delete data insilmaril@486: e.g. you can delete a branch while keeping its children. The children become insilmaril@125: linked to the parent of the previously removed branch. insilmaril@125: Similar branches can be inserted into existing maps. For keyboard insilmaril@125: shortcuts also have a look at the context menu. insilmaril@28: insilmaril@233: \subsection{Adding a whole map or a part of a map} insilmaril@493: Select a branch where you want to add a previously saved map ({\tt insilmaril@493: .vym})or a part of a map ({\tt .vyp}) , then open the context menu and insilmaril@493: choose {\em Add \ra Add Map (Insert)}. For the import you can choose insilmaril@493: between {\em Add Map (Insert)} and {\em Add Map (Replace)}: The imported insilmaril@493: data will be added after the selected branch. insilmaril@105: insilmaril@105: \section{\vym on Mac OS X} insilmaril@105: \subsection{Overview} insilmaril@105: Basically there are two ways to run \vym on Macs: insilmaril@233: \subsubsection*{QT Mac Edition:} insilmaril@105: \vym here provides the well known Mac look and feel. \vym is insilmaril@105: available as zipped Mac OS X application. It has been compiled and insilmaril@105: tested in Mac~OS~10.3, but should also work on Tiger. It is using insilmaril@105: the Mac version of Trolltechs QT library. insilmaril@233: \subsubsection*{X11} insilmaril@105: \vym can also be run using the Linux version, but then menus and insilmaril@105: handling will also be those of the Linux version e.g. The menu bar insilmaril@105: will look different. insilmaril@105: insilmaril@125: \subsection {Contextmenu and special keys} insilmaril@125: Most Macs unfortunatly just have a single mouse button. In order to show insilmaril@125: the context menu which usually would be opened with the right mouse insilmaril@125: button, you can click while pressing the \key{kommand}-key. insilmaril@125: insilmaril@125: Especially on Laptops some of the keys usually used on PC keyboards seem insilmaril@125: to be missing. The QT-Mac Edition of \vym has its own keyboard insilmaril@125: shortcuts. To find the shortcuts just have a look at all the menu insilmaril@125: entries, the shortcut is visible next to an entry. Toolbar buttons also insilmaril@125: may have shortcuts, just position the mouse pointer over a button and insilmaril@125: wait for the little help window to appear. insilmaril@125: insilmaril@125: \subsection {Viewing external links} insilmaril@125: \vym on Mac uses the system call {\tt /usr/bin/open} to view links. insilmaril@125: Mac~OS determines automatically if the link is a pdf or www page and insilmaril@125: opens the right browser. insilmaril@125: insilmaril@233: insilmaril@233: \begin{appendix} insilmaril@233: insilmaril@486: \section{\vym initialisation process and configuration} insilmaril@420: \subsection{Configuration file} insilmaril@420: On startup \vym will look for a configuration for user specific settings insilmaril@420: like window positions, toolbars etc. If this file does not already insilmaril@420: exist, it will be created. The file is located in the users home insilmaril@420: directory. The exact position depends on the platform: insilmaril@420: \begin{center} insilmaril@420: \begin{tabular}{cl} insilmaril@420: {\bf Platform} & {\bf Configuration file} \\ \hline insilmaril@420: Linux & {\tt $\sim$/.config/InSilmaril/vym.conf } \\ insilmaril@420: Mac OS X & {\tt /Users/NAME/Library/Preferences/com.insilmaril.vym.plist } \\ insilmaril@420: \end{tabular} insilmaril@420: \end{center} insilmaril@420: The file can be edited manually, or on Mac~OS~X with Property List insilmaril@420: Editor (installed with xtools). insilmaril@420: insilmaril@291: \subsection{Path to ressources} insilmaril@291: \vym will try to find its ressources (images, stylesheets, filters, insilmaril@291: etc.) in the following places: insilmaril@291: \begin{enumerate} insilmaril@291: \item Path given by the environment variable {\tt VYMHOME}. insilmaril@291: \item If called with the local option (see \ref{options} below), insilmaril@291: \vym will look for its data in the current directory. insilmaril@291: \item {\tt /usr/share/vym} insilmaril@291: \item {\tt /usr/local/share/vym} insilmaril@291: \end{enumerate} insilmaril@291: insilmaril@291: \subsection{Command line options} \label{options} insilmaril@264: \vym has the following options: insilmaril@264: \begin{center} insilmaril@450: \begin{tabular}{cccp{8cm}}\\ insilmaril@450: \bf Option & \bf Comment & \bf Argument & \bf Description \\ \hline insilmaril@493: v & version & & Show version and codename of \vym\\ insilmaril@450: l & local & & Use local paths to stylesheets, translations, icons, insilmaril@450: etc. instead of system paths. Useful for testing\\ insilmaril@486: h & help & & Show help\\ insilmaril@486: r & run & filename & Run script\\ insilmaril@479: q & quit & & Quit immediatly after startup. Useful for benchmarks.\\ insilmaril@264: \end{tabular} insilmaril@264: \end{center} insilmaril@264: You can also give several filenames at the commandline to let \vym open insilmaril@264: several maps at once. insilmaril@264: insilmaril@450: insilmaril@486: \section{Scripts} \label{scripts} insilmaril@486: %FIXME insilmaril@450: insilmaril@450: insilmaril@450: insilmaril@450: insilmaril@450: insilmaril@233: \section{Contributing to \vym} insilmaril@260: So far I'd say I have written 98\% of the code on my own. No surprise, insilmaril@260: that \vym exactly fits my own needs. Nevertheless I would like to insilmaril@260: encourage all users of \vym to contribute. Maybe not only with feature insilmaril@260: requests, but also with code, new import/export filters, translations insilmaril@260: etc. In this appendix I'll try to show how easy it is to expand the insilmaril@260: things you can do already with \vym. I really look forward to hear from insilmaril@260: you! insilmaril@233: insilmaril@233: \subsection{Getting help} insilmaril@233: insilmaril@233: \subsubsection*{Frequently asked questions} insilmaril@233: Please refer to the FAQ available on the \vym website: insilmaril@125: \begin{center} insilmaril@125: \href{http://www.InSilmaril.de/vym/faq.html}{http://www.InSilmaril.de/vym/faq.html} insilmaril@125: \end{center} insilmaril@105: insilmaril@233: \subsubsection*{Mailinglists} insilmaril@233: There are two mailinglists: {\tt vym-forum} is the \vym users forum to insilmaril@233: discuss various questions, while {\tt vym-devel} is intended for people insilmaril@233: interested in contributing to \vym. You can view the archives and insilmaril@233: subscribe at insilmaril@233: \begin{center} insilmaril@233: \href{https://sourceforge.net/mail/?group_id=127802}{https://sourceforge.net/mail/?group\_id=127802} insilmaril@233: \end{center} insilmaril@233: insilmaril@264: \subsubsection*{Contacting the author}\label{author} insilmaril@233: Especially for support questions please try the mailinglists first. If insilmaril@486: everything else fails you can contact the author Uwe Drechsel at insilmaril@233: \begin{center} insilmaril@260: \href{mailto:vym@InSilmaril.de}{vym@InSilmaril.de} insilmaril@233: \end{center} insilmaril@233: insilmaril@233: insilmaril@264: insilmaril@264: \subsection{How to report bugs} insilmaril@264: Though Sourceforge has its own bugreporting system, I'd rather prefer if insilmaril@264: you contact me directly (see \ref{author}) or even better: You can file insilmaril@264: a bugreport in Bugzilla, the bugtracking system of openSUSE: insilmaril@264: \begin{center} insilmaril@264: \href{http://en.opensuse.org/Submit_a_bug}{http://en.opensuse.org/Submit\_a\_bug} insilmaril@264: \end{center} insilmaril@264: I build \vym regulary for openSUSE, so you may report it against a insilmaril@264: recent version there, even if you use another Operating System. insilmaril@486: Please don't forget to tell me what you are using: insilmaril@264: \begin{itemize} insilmaril@264: \item the exact steps needed to reproduce the bug insilmaril@264: \item the version and build date of \vym (see the Help \ra About insilmaril@264: \vym) insilmaril@264: \item hardware and Operating System insilmaril@264: \end{itemize} insilmaril@264: insilmaril@233: \subsection{Compiling from the sources} insilmaril@252: \subsubsection{Getting the sources} \label{getsources} insilmaril@252: You find the latest version of \vym at the project site: insilmaril@252: \begin{center} insilmaril@252: \href{https://sourceforge.net/projects/vym/}{https://sourceforge.net/projects/vym/} insilmaril@252: \end{center} insilmaril@252: There you can check them out of the source repository (CVS):\\ insilmaril@233: insilmaril@252: \begin{verbatim} insilmaril@252: cvs -d:pserver:anonymous@cvs.sf.net:/cvsroot/vym checkout code insilmaril@252: \end{verbatim} insilmaril@252: insilmaril@252: \subsubsection{The Qt toolkit} insilmaril@233: Qt is C++ toolkit for multiplatform GUI and application development. It insilmaril@233: provides single-source portability across MS~Windows, Mac~OS~X, Linux insilmaril@486: and all major commercial Unix variants. Qt is also available for insilmaril@252: embedded devices. Qt is a Trolltech product. For more information see insilmaril@252: \begin{center} insilmaril@233: \href{http://www.trolltech.com/qt/}{www.trolltech.com/qt} insilmaril@252: \end{center} insilmaril@233: insilmaril@233: insilmaril@252: \subsubsection{Compiling \vym } insilmaril@233: Make sure you have installed your Qt environment properly, see the Qt insilmaril@233: documentation for details. You need to have the Qt command {\tt qmake} insilmaril@233: in your {\tt PATH}-environment, then run insilmaril@233: \begin{verbatim} insilmaril@233: qmake insilmaril@233: make insilmaril@233: make install insilmaril@233: \end{verbatim} insilmaril@233: The last command {\tt make install} needs root-permissions. Of course it insilmaril@233: may be omitted, if you just want to test \vym. insilmaril@233: insilmaril@260: %\subsubsection*{Compiling \vym on Macs} insilmaril@450: %FIXME insilmaril@233: insilmaril@233: \subsection{\vym file format} \label{fileformat} insilmaril@486: \vym maps usually have the suffix "{\tt .vym}" and represent a insilmaril@233: compressed archive of data. If you want to have a insilmaril@233: closer look into the data structure map called "mapname.vym", insilmaril@233: just uncompress the map manually using insilmaril@233: \begin{verbatim} insilmaril@233: unzip mapname.vym insilmaril@233: \end{verbatim} insilmaril@233: This will create directories named {\tt images} and {\tt flags} in your insilmaril@233: current directory and also the map itself, usually named {\tt insilmaril@233: mapname.xml}. insilmaril@233: The XML structure of \vym is pretty self explaining, just have a look at insilmaril@233: {\tt mapname.xml}. insilmaril@233: insilmaril@233: This XML file can be loaded directly into \vym, it does not have to be insilmaril@233: compressed. If you want to compress all the data yourself, use insilmaril@233: \begin{verbatim} insilmaril@233: zip -r mapname.vym . insilmaril@233: \end{verbatim} insilmaril@233: to compress all data in your current directory. insilmaril@233: insilmaril@233: \subsection{New features} insilmaril@28: There are lots of features which might find their way into \vym. insilmaril@233: Together with \vym you should have received a directory with several insilmaril@28: maps e.g. on SUSE~LINUX this is insilmaril@28: \begin{center} insilmaril@28: {\tt /usr/share/doc/packages/vym/demos} insilmaril@28: \end{center} insilmaril@28: where you find the map {\tt todo.vym}. It lists quite a lot of things to insilmaril@233: be done in future. If you have more ideas, contact the development team insilmaril@233: at insilmaril@233: {\tt vym-devel@lists.sourceforge.net}. insilmaril@28: insilmaril@28: insilmaril@233: \subsection{New languages support} insilmaril@252: In order to add a new language to \vym you need insilmaril@252: the sources (see \ref{getsources}) and insilmaril@252: an installation of Trolltechs QT. A part of QT are the development insilmaril@252: tools, from those tools especially the translation tool "Linguist" is insilmaril@252: needed. insilmaril@252: insilmaril@252: In some Linux distributions the development tools are in an extra package, e.g. on SUSE LINUX you should have installed: insilmaril@252: \begin{verbatim} insilmaril@252: qt3-devel.rpm insilmaril@252: qt3-devel-doc.rpm insilmaril@252: qt3-devel-tools.rpm insilmaril@252: qt3-man.rpm insilmaril@252: \end{verbatim} insilmaril@252: If you don't have QT in your system, you can get it from insilmaril@252: \href{http://www.trolltech.com}{http://www.trolltech.com} Once you insilmaril@252: are able to compile vym yourself, you can translate the text in vym insilmaril@252: itself by performing the following steps: insilmaril@252: \begin{itemize} insilmaril@252: \item Let's assume now your encoding is "NEW" instead of for example insilmaril@252: "de" for german or "en" for english insilmaril@252: insilmaril@252: \item Copy the file {\tt lang/vym\_en.ts} to l{\tt ang/vym\_NEW.ts} (The code insilmaril@252: itself contains the english version.) insilmaril@252: insilmaril@252: \item Add {\tt lang/vym\_NEW.ts} to the TRANSLATIONS section of vym.pro insilmaril@252: insilmaril@252: \item Run Linguist on {\tt vym\_NEW.ts} and do the translation insilmaril@252: insilmaril@252: \item Run {\tt lrelease} to create {\tt vym\_NEW.qm} insilmaril@252: insilmaril@252: \item Do a make install to install the new vym and check your translation insilmaril@252: \end{itemize} insilmaril@252: insilmaril@252: If you feel brave, you can also translate the manual. It is written in insilmaril@252: LaTeX, you just have to change the file tex/vym.tex. (Linguist and QT insilmaril@252: are not needed, but it is useful to know how to work with LaTeX and esp. insilmaril@252: pdflatex to create the PDF.) insilmaril@252: insilmaril@252: Please mail me every translation you have done. I can also give you a insilmaril@252: developer access to the project, if you want to provide translations insilmaril@252: regulary. insilmaril@252: insilmaril@233: \subsection{New export/import filters} insilmaril@252: \vym supports various kinds of filters. Data can be written directly, insilmaril@252: inserted into templates or it can be written as XML data and then insilmaril@252: processed by XSL transformations. insilmaril@252: insilmaril@252: Most of the import/export functionality is available in the classes insilmaril@252: ImportBase and ExportBase and subclasses. All of them can be found in insilmaril@252: {\tt imports.h} and {\tt exports.h}. insilmaril@252: insilmaril@264: \subsubsection*{Direct import/export} insilmaril@252: An example for a direct export is the XML export. This method touches insilmaril@252: the implementation of nearly every object of \vym, so whenever possible insilmaril@264: you should better use a XSL transformation instead. insilmaril@252: insilmaril@252: If you still want to know how it is done, start looking at insilmaril@252: {\tt MapEditor::saveToDir} in {\tt mapeditor.cpp}. insilmaril@252: insilmaril@264: \subsubsection*{Templates} insilmaril@264: Templates have been introduced to export to opendoc format used e.g. by insilmaril@264: Open~Office. While I read the spec ($>$ 500 pages) about the format\footnote{ insilmaril@264: \href{http://www.oasis-open.org/}{http://www.oasis-open.org/}}\ insilmaril@264: I had the feeling that I did not want to write the export from scratch. insilmaril@264: It would be too complex to adapt the styles to your own wishes, e.g. the insilmaril@264: layout. insilmaril@252: insilmaril@264: Instead I analyzed existing Open~Office documents. I found out that insilmaril@264: there are lots of redundant bits of information in a standard insilmaril@264: presentation, for example each list item is contained in its own list. insilmaril@264: In the end I came up with the default presentation style, which still insilmaril@264: could be simplified, just in case you have free time\ldots insilmaril@252: insilmaril@486: The existing templates are still work in progress, before you spend too insilmaril@264: much time developing your own style, please contact me. Basically the insilmaril@264: following steps are needed to build your own style: insilmaril@264: \begin{enumerate} insilmaril@264: \item Create an example in Open Office. Use a title, authors name, insilmaril@264: page heading etc.\ which you can easily grep for in the output file. insilmaril@264: insilmaril@264: \item Unzip the Open Office document into a directory. insilmaril@264: insilmaril@264: \item The main file is called {\tt content.xml}. All data is in one insilmaril@264: single line. You can split the XML tags using the script {\tt insilmaril@264: scripts/niceXML}, which is part of the \vym distribution. insilmaril@264: insilmaril@264: \item Copy the output of {\tt niceXML} to {\tt insilmaril@264: content-template.xml}. insilmaril@264: insilmaril@264: \item Looking closer you will find lots of unused definitions, for insilmaril@264: example of styles. You can delete or simply ignore them. insilmaril@264: insilmaril@264: \item Try to find your title, authors name. \vym will replace the insilmaril@264: following strings while exporting: insilmaril@264: \begin{center} insilmaril@264: \begin{tabular}{lp{4cm}} insilmaril@264: {\tt } & title of map \\ insilmaril@264: {\tt } & author \\ insilmaril@264: {\tt } & comment \\ insilmaril@264: {\tt } & content of map \\ insilmaril@264: \end{tabular} insilmaril@264: \end{center} insilmaril@264: The content itself is generated in a similar way by inserting lists insilmaril@264: into {\tt page-template}. Here the following substitutions are made: insilmaril@264: \begin{center} insilmaril@264: \begin{tabular}{lp{7cm}} insilmaril@264: {\tt } & heading of a page insilmaril@264: (mainbranch or child of mainbranch, depending on the use of insilmaril@264: sections) \\ insilmaril@264: {\tt } & all childs of the branch above \\ insilmaril@264: \end{tabular} insilmaril@264: \end{center} insilmaril@264: \end{enumerate} insilmaril@264: Currently images are exported and notes just will appear as text insilmaril@486: without formatting and colours. insilmaril@264: insilmaril@264: insilmaril@264: insilmaril@264: insilmaril@264: \subsubsection*{XSL Transformation} insilmaril@264: \vym uses XSL transformations while exporting (e.g. XHTML) and importing insilmaril@264: data (e.g. KDE bookmarks). There is a little code needed to provide the insilmaril@264: GUI, the rest is done using the {\tt .xsl} stylesheet and calling the insilmaril@264: {\tt xsltproc} processor, which is part of libxslt, the XSLT insilmaril@264: C library for GNOME. insilmaril@233: insilmaril@233: \end{appendix} insilmaril@233: \end{document} insilmaril@28: insilmaril@125: %TODO insilmaril@125: %\subsubsection{Menus} insilmaril@125: %\subsubsection{Keyboard shortcuts} insilmaril@125: %Where does vym save its settings? -> ~/.qt/vymrc insilmaril@125: insilmaril@28: insilmaril@28: % INDEX insilmaril@28: % mapeditor insilmaril@28: % noteditor insilmaril@28: % branch insilmaril@28: % mapcenter insilmaril@28: % heading insilmaril@28: % flag insilmaril@28: % orientation insilmaril@28: % zoom insilmaril@28: % orientation insilmaril@28: % Toolbar insilmaril@28: % Zoom insilmaril@28: % Find insilmaril@28: % statusbar insilmaril@28: % link insilmaril@28: % mainbranch insilmaril@28: % subtree insilmaril@28: % reorder insilmaril@28: % scroll insilmaril@28: % fold insilmaril@104: % vymlink insilmaril@104: % xlink insilmaril@125: % modMode insilmaril@104: % context menu insilmaril@104: % Mac OS X insilmaril@28: insilmaril@28: insilmaril@28: insilmaril@125: \end{document}