From a1f9192e5c7047678bb952885862757436b85b33 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Alain Reguera Delgado Date: Jul 24 2011 14:00:24 +0000 Subject: Update `tcar-fs' documentation manual. --- diff --git a/Manuals/Tcar-fs/en_US/Trunk/identity-images-brands-types.texinfo b/Manuals/Tcar-fs/en_US/Trunk/identity-images-brands-types.texinfo index f5d5dd0..c1b1f88 100644 --- a/Manuals/Tcar-fs/en_US/Trunk/identity-images-brands-types.texinfo +++ b/Manuals/Tcar-fs/en_US/Trunk/identity-images-brands-types.texinfo @@ -2,26 +2,30 @@ @section @file{trunk/Identity/Images/Brands/Types} @cindex Trunk identity images brands types -The @file{trunk/Identity/Images/Brands/Symbols} exists to organize +The @file{trunk/Identity/Images/Brands/Types} exists to organize images related to The CentOS Symbol, in different formats (e.g., PNG, JPG, PDF, TIF, XBM, XPM) and dimensions. -The CentOS Symbol is the graphical part of The CentOS Logo. As The -CentOS Logo, The CentOS Symbol is used to ``brand'' images produced by -@value{TCPROJ} and provide a visual connection between images so they -can be monolithically recognized as part of @value{TCPROJ}. The CentOS -Symbol must be exactly the same everytime it is printed out and a -route to reproduce it in such a way must be available so as to avoid -reproduction mistakes when images are branded with it. +The CentOS Type is the typographical part of The CentOS Logo. +Comparing with both The CentOS Logo and The CentOS Symbol, The CentOS +Type by its own, provides poor visual connection between images that +intend to be recongnized as a monolithic part of @value{TCPROJ} and +shouldn't be used alone. Instead, The CentOS Logo or The CentOS Symbol +are prefered. The CentOS Symbol must be exactly the same everytime it +is printed out and a route to reproduce it in such a way must be +available so as to avoid reproduction mistakes when images are branded +with it. -The @file{trunk/Identity/Images/Brands/Symbols} directory and the files -inside it aren't under version control. +The @file{trunk/Identity/Images/Brands/Types} directory and the files +inside it aren't under version control. Files in this location are +mainly used to build The CentOS Logo from combining both The CentOS +Type and The CentOS Symbol in specific situations that might be needed +doing so. -The @file{trunk/Identity/Images/Brands/Symbols} directory contains -files used by the @file{redhat-logos} package, specifically the files -inside the @file{/usr/share/pixmaps/redhat} directory. +The @file{trunk/Identity/Images/Brands/Types} directory contains files +used by no package, as far as we've found out. -The @file{trunk/Identity/Images/Brands/Symbols} directory organizes +The @file{trunk/Identity/Images/Brands/Types} directory organizes files under directories numerically named (e.g., @file{48}, @file{64}, @file{128}, etc.). Inside these directories, image files are stored in specific heights and named as @@ -32,9 +36,9 @@ to determine the image height of files stored inside. For example, the directory @file{48} stores image files of 48 pixels height in different formats. -Content rendition inside @file{trunk/Identity/Images/Brands/Symbols} +Content rendition inside @file{trunk/Identity/Images/Brands/Types} directory takes place through the following command: @verbatim -centos-art render trunk/Identity/Images/Brands/Symbols --dont-commit-changes +centos-art render trunk/Identity/Images/Brands/Types --dont-commit-changes @end verbatim