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Thanks again! :)
Edit: Oops! I made a mistake in one of the listings. The HTML will need to be copied again.
Sorry about that.
Edit #2: ...and now, as I start using some of these, I see that I used the wrong White fill color. So, I'll have to fix those and re-upload the Zip. :(
OK, now I've uploaded a corrected* version of the icons, at the same link as before.
*At least, I hope I got it correct. I hope so very much. We shall soon see.
I changed your page to this:
<!--#include virtual="/index/msdisplay.php?itemid=MSbobgreenwadessvglibrary" -->
So now whatever changes you make here will automatically show up at
Okay, it's unzipped.
OK, excellent! That, at least, will save bothering you unless I have new icons. :)
Could you add images for CW and CF? And maybe a catapult and javelin?
Catapult, probably.
Javelin, not sure.
Camel-Wazir and Camel-Ferz... I certainly can (and probably will) add those to the list, though if you don't need to compound them any further you probably could just make them with wazir--camel and ferz--camel, respectively.
I have a bunch of stuff going on for the next week or so, but I can get to work on those (Javelin still being a big maybe) afterward.
I don't know how to do the combining stuff. Thanks for whatever.
It's basically what I just showed you. In the Interactive Diagram (or wherever), you can make the pieces by use entering wazir--camel for the CW, and ferz--camel for the CF for the icon to be used (be sure to use two hyphens). Something like:
camelferz:CF:CF:ferz--camel:c1
camelwazir:CW:CW:wazir--camel:k1
and that'll give you:
(depending on what colors you use, of course). They're not great like that, but they're at least identifiable.
If you're using an automated system like the PTA or Diagram Designer, just put in whatever seems right in the moment, then manually replace it with the compound.
@Fergus: I have a few more icons to switch over, including all four of Daniel's requests. (I'll edit the page for them tomorrow morning.)
Okay, I unzipped Greenwade18.zip.
With my gratitude, as always. :)
Could you add images for CW and CF? And maybe a catapult and javelin?
They're in place now. I'm not really satisfied with the Javelin (no more than I am with the Katana), but I think they should serve.
<!--#include virtual="/index/msdisplay.php?itemid=MSbobgreenwadessvglibrary" -->
Say, is there a way that I could do something similar to sort-of circumvent the file-size limits? Like, make a page with the "The Geometric Concept" business from Chess on a Tesseract, so it could be potentially included in other "on a Tesseract" games to explain just that part?
This should be the page you're looking at.
I have some more piece requests—only if it's no trouble of course. The last two are least important.
- a combined Unicorn and Pegasus
- Courier (could be a sealed letter?)
- Courier Pawn (pawn with top part like small courier)
- Guard Pawn (pawn with small shield)
- Chipmunk
Some of those are already doable as combos of existing icons. In particular, the Guard Pawn can be done with a pawn-shield combo.
And I don't even know how I'd differentiate a Chipmunk from the Squirrel, in this art style.
That said, a sealed envelope icon would be handy for at least a couple of pieces that I've seen or invented.
In case it's helpful:
@Fergus: I have a few more icons to unzip (including the envelope to help Daniel out). :)
@Fergus: I have a few more icons to unzip (including the envelope to help Daniel out). :)
Still needs to get done. :)
A Courier as a sealed letter is a bit weird for me. Although even in French a "courrier" can be understood as a "mail". The word courier is I believe from German Kurier, and, well I don't speak German so I might be wrong, I believe it is more in the sense of "runner". Because in Middle Age a piece sliding on diagonals was perceived as a piece running fast. HG, is that true?
I'm curious to know what is a Courier for you Daniel?
Okay, this is unzipped.
In Dutch we also have the word 'koerier', which I think is the same as the German Kurier. It describes the carrier of an important message, usually on a mission to deliver it fast. Michael Strogoff (of the Jules Verne story) is known in Dutch as 'de koerier van de Tsaar'. Doesn't necessarily have to be on foot; in WWII times military 'koeriers' employed motor cycles. In modern times we speak of 'drugskoeriers', who are people smuggling illegal drugs across the border by carrying those on (or usually: in) their body.
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Okay, I unzipped your images and updated the page.