Hm! I've also never heard of Dia--so your post is doubly valuable! I can easily see this being nice for quickie maps! Thanks for the display.
(And welcome to the Guild!!!)
Hm! I've also never heard of Dia--so your post is doubly valuable! I can easily see this being nice for quickie maps! Thanks for the display.
(And welcome to the Guild!!!)
Don
My gallery is here
__________________________________________________ _______
"Keep your mind in hell, but despair not." --Saint Silouan [1866-1938]
Hi Coleony!
I had played with Dia but ended moving to Inkscape as it seemed a bit more feature rich to me. Have you ever compared the two?
-Rob A>
Hi Rob,
I installed Inkscape and used to create one image, a 3D table. It looks very interesting, specially if you are interested in creating 3D images.
Dia is more for simple 2D battlemaps (it also supports Hex grids) like the one I posted, nothing 3D. As far as I know, Dia doesn't even have a tool to paint pixels.
So for city maps or world maps, probably some other tool, like Inkscape, would work better.
Nice map, is there any chance you could include the Inkscape source for it?
You are right, I use GIMP for my stuff on deviantart, and I had seen some of the example images done with Inkscape and they looked trully 3D, something that would be very hard to accomplish with GIMP.
The other thing that I liked about Dia was the "snap to grid" and the fact I could just quickly use the line tool to create the walls which is all I use when creating maps (aside from doors). And I also liked the fact that the layers were also very easy to use (like creating a map for the GM and another one that I print).
You may want to check out CC3 as well...but it's not free.
From everything that I have seen and heard, CC3 really is the best program for mapping available.
The reason why I actually tried using Dia, was after reading the thread "Musings, Collusion Kills and Excel Maps" and I wondered if there was another program other than CC3 or Autoream to make a simple battlemaps, that's when I tried Dia, and was surprised at how easy it was.