A shortcut manager that speeds up drawing (mathematical) figures in Inkscape.
I write my lecture notes in LaTeX and I want to draw figures in real time, i.e. while the lecturer is drawing on the blackboard. While the figures I want to draw quite simple, drawing them in Inkscape with default shortcuts takes too much time to keep up with a fast paced lecture. My goal is to draw figures like this:
I created a custom shortcut manager that intercepts all keyboard events sent to Inkscape windows giving me full control of user input. The script has the following features
- Press clusters of keys (key chords) to apply common styles. Pressing d+a gives a dotted arrow, f+s fills the selection in gray and adds a stroke. You want a circle that's dotted and filled? Press f + d. Try pressing combinations of s, a, d, g, h, x, e, b, f, w. Being able to combine these common styles by pressing key chords feels quite intuitive after a while.
- Save custom styles and objects. Press Shift+S or Shift+A to give a style or object a name. Use it by pressing s or a and typing the name. For common styles that aren't covered by the key chords, this comes in handy.
- Use your editor to write LaTeX. Pressing t opens an instance of vim (or any editor you want). Write some LaTeX, close it, and the shortcut manager pastes the text in the figure. Pressing Shift+T does the same but renders the LaTeX as an svg and adds it to the document.
- Ergonomic shortcuts for frequently used functions. Press w for pencil, x to toggle snapping, f for Bézier, z to undo, Shift+z to delete and ` to dis/enable the shortcut manager.
For more details and context, feel free to read my blog post.
Note that this script only works on GNU/Linux using Python ≥ 3.6. It also has the following dependencies:
Xlib
python library to intercept keyboard eventspdflatex
andpdf2svg
to render LaTeX in Inkscapexclip
to access the clipboardrofi
for a selection dialog when saving styles and objects
Use the shortcut manager by running python3 main.py
and opening an Inkscape window.
You can configure the shortcut manager by creating a file located at ~/.config/inkscape-shortcut-manager/config.py
. You can override the rofi theme, font, editor, as well as the LaTeX template that's being used. It's merged with the default config located at config.py
. An example configuration file is located in the examples
directory.