Killian,

I use Dia to make circuit diagrams on occasion.  There is a limit to the
complexity that is practical, and you are approaching that.  If I needed to
do a lot I would buy a program specific for it.

I have gotten pretty good with complex cabinet wiring diagrams where
grouped basic elements from the various relays, fuse and terminal blocks.
 But I just work it out so I don't need to rotate things, or I make four
versions.  However, this is a small part of my work and I can justify the
inefficiency of it on that basis.  Again, If I had to do a lot of cabinet
drawings I would opt for something else as the graphics tool.  A lot of
people use AutoCAD, I but I don't care for that either.  The Lite version
may be free.

I adapt to Dia, and work with horizontal text mostly.  That is your path of
least resistance.  A pervasive use of vertical text is more of a personal
choice than a practical one, if you like using Dia.

I think there is a valid reason to forego making text rotatable - vertical
text is nonstandard for most technical presentation formats - mechanical
drawing is where my greatest experience lies and I am aware of no drawing
standard that supports it.  With an CAD software(including very expensive
ones) there will be some sort of cranky option when sketching text for
decorations or identification on castings, molded parts, laser cut and
machined sheets, etc.  Pretty much just like what Dia offers.

When producing decals or other printed graphics, other programs are used,
Corel Draw is what most of my suppliers used to deal with.

What I use Dis for is essentially note taking about the equipment I build
and assemble.  Also instructional graphics on how to use the equipment.  In
preparing FMEAs I have found Dia to a great tool for functional block
diagrams and diagrams of the interactions between the components of an
assembly.

I often use Dia for presentation material.

These are uses where a general tool that is easy to adapt is better than a
purpose made tool that misses something I never thought of before, and
provides no way to workaround.

Dia is great for working around.


Mike

On Sat, Mar 2, 2013 at 6:42 AM, Killian De Volder <
killian.de.vol...@megasoft.be> wrote:

>  Found another workaround: Outline text, then rotate, then fill with
> desired background and set Draw Background Yes
> It's not a nice sight, but it will have to do.
>
> Killian De Volder
>
>
> On 02-03-13 12:20, Killian De Volder wrote:
>
> I have to be able to rotate text...
> My alternatives are:
>
>    - Visio
>    - Exporting the symbols to SVG and using them in Inkscape.
>    - Export the drawing as SVG and post-adding the text.
>
> Example of what is needed in the end:
>
> --
> Killian De Volder
>
>
>
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