Draw simple lines in InkscapeCreate and Edit parallel “bus” lines in InkscapeInkscape 0.91 Freehand shape issuesEdit Multiple Freehand Stroke Widths at Once in InkscapeHow to create circular “returning” arrows in InkscapeHow to snap end points of straight lines to form connected triangles?Create a simple table with some annotations (Inkscape?)Path with rounded corners in inkscapeInkscape - How to remove this lines when exporting (image example)Inkscape - Feynman DiagramsHow to make path that follows fill of existing path?

Where else does the Shulchan Aruch quote an authority by name?

Is this food a bread or a loaf?

How is it possible for user's password to be changed after storage was encrypted? (on OS X, Android)

What is the offset in a seaplane's hull?

Re-submission of rejected manuscript without informing co-authors

Is there any use for defining additional entity types in a SOQL FROM clause?

What do the Banks children have against barley water?

Could Giant Ground Sloths have been a good pack animal for the ancient Mayans?

aging parents with no investments

Information to fellow intern about hiring?

Can I find out the caloric content of bread by dehydrating it?

Pristine Bit Checking

Is it legal to have the "// (c) 2019 John Smith" header in all files when there are hundreds of contributors?

Does the average primeness of natural numbers tend to zero?

Filling an area between two curves

A poker game description that does not feel gimmicky

How to answer pointed "are you quitting" questioning when I don't want them to suspect

Is there a familial term for apples and pears?

Is every set a filtered colimit of finite sets?

Does it makes sense to buy a new cycle to learn riding?

Is ipsum/ipsa/ipse a third person pronoun, or can it serve other functions?

I’m planning on buying a laser printer but concerned about the life cycle of toner in the machine

extract characters between two commas?

What is GPS' 19 year rollover and does it present a cybersecurity issue?



Draw simple lines in Inkscape


Create and Edit parallel “bus” lines in InkscapeInkscape 0.91 Freehand shape issuesEdit Multiple Freehand Stroke Widths at Once in InkscapeHow to create circular “returning” arrows in InkscapeHow to snap end points of straight lines to form connected triangles?Create a simple table with some annotations (Inkscape?)Path with rounded corners in inkscapeInkscape - How to remove this lines when exporting (image example)Inkscape - Feynman DiagramsHow to make path that follows fill of existing path?













9















I can draw lines in Inkscape (with Bezier tool or freehand line tool), but they appear as path objects and when I save it, in the svg file they are also appear as path.
My question is: How can I draw and save lines as line and not as path with Inkscape?










share|improve this question







New contributor




Zoltán is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.




















  • Hi. Welcome to GDSE. Can I ask why you want to do that? What do you hope to gain? What specifically are you trying to do?

    – Billy Kerr
    yesterday











  • @BillyKerr I guessed he wants to give some input to some already existing program which expects SVG line commands.

    – user287001
    yesterday






  • 1





    But that can solve the problem , if the questioner has a possiblity to run Illustrator. Add it to your answer!

    – user287001
    yesterday






  • 1





    @user287001 - well this is weird. Inkscape sees a line segment, but there's no way to create one! See example line segment imported from Illustrator

    – Billy Kerr
    yesterday






  • 1





    Sorry for the late reply. As user287001 mentioned I have to give SVG as an input and it expects lines. I was wondering if Inkscape can create lines, since it sees lines and if you open an SVG containing lines, you can modify it and save it, and it remains line.

    – Zoltán
    yesterday















9















I can draw lines in Inkscape (with Bezier tool or freehand line tool), but they appear as path objects and when I save it, in the svg file they are also appear as path.
My question is: How can I draw and save lines as line and not as path with Inkscape?










share|improve this question







New contributor




Zoltán is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.




















  • Hi. Welcome to GDSE. Can I ask why you want to do that? What do you hope to gain? What specifically are you trying to do?

    – Billy Kerr
    yesterday











  • @BillyKerr I guessed he wants to give some input to some already existing program which expects SVG line commands.

    – user287001
    yesterday






  • 1





    But that can solve the problem , if the questioner has a possiblity to run Illustrator. Add it to your answer!

    – user287001
    yesterday






  • 1





    @user287001 - well this is weird. Inkscape sees a line segment, but there's no way to create one! See example line segment imported from Illustrator

    – Billy Kerr
    yesterday






  • 1





    Sorry for the late reply. As user287001 mentioned I have to give SVG as an input and it expects lines. I was wondering if Inkscape can create lines, since it sees lines and if you open an SVG containing lines, you can modify it and save it, and it remains line.

    – Zoltán
    yesterday













9












9








9








I can draw lines in Inkscape (with Bezier tool or freehand line tool), but they appear as path objects and when I save it, in the svg file they are also appear as path.
My question is: How can I draw and save lines as line and not as path with Inkscape?










share|improve this question







New contributor




Zoltán is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.












I can draw lines in Inkscape (with Bezier tool or freehand line tool), but they appear as path objects and when I save it, in the svg file they are also appear as path.
My question is: How can I draw and save lines as line and not as path with Inkscape?







inkscape






share|improve this question







New contributor




Zoltán is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.











share|improve this question







New contributor




Zoltán is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.









share|improve this question




share|improve this question






New contributor




Zoltán is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.









asked yesterday









ZoltánZoltán

1483




1483




New contributor




Zoltán is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.





New contributor





Zoltán is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.






Zoltán is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.












  • Hi. Welcome to GDSE. Can I ask why you want to do that? What do you hope to gain? What specifically are you trying to do?

    – Billy Kerr
    yesterday











  • @BillyKerr I guessed he wants to give some input to some already existing program which expects SVG line commands.

    – user287001
    yesterday






  • 1





    But that can solve the problem , if the questioner has a possiblity to run Illustrator. Add it to your answer!

    – user287001
    yesterday






  • 1





    @user287001 - well this is weird. Inkscape sees a line segment, but there's no way to create one! See example line segment imported from Illustrator

    – Billy Kerr
    yesterday






  • 1





    Sorry for the late reply. As user287001 mentioned I have to give SVG as an input and it expects lines. I was wondering if Inkscape can create lines, since it sees lines and if you open an SVG containing lines, you can modify it and save it, and it remains line.

    – Zoltán
    yesterday

















  • Hi. Welcome to GDSE. Can I ask why you want to do that? What do you hope to gain? What specifically are you trying to do?

    – Billy Kerr
    yesterday











  • @BillyKerr I guessed he wants to give some input to some already existing program which expects SVG line commands.

    – user287001
    yesterday






  • 1





    But that can solve the problem , if the questioner has a possiblity to run Illustrator. Add it to your answer!

    – user287001
    yesterday






  • 1





    @user287001 - well this is weird. Inkscape sees a line segment, but there's no way to create one! See example line segment imported from Illustrator

    – Billy Kerr
    yesterday






  • 1





    Sorry for the late reply. As user287001 mentioned I have to give SVG as an input and it expects lines. I was wondering if Inkscape can create lines, since it sees lines and if you open an SVG containing lines, you can modify it and save it, and it remains line.

    – Zoltán
    yesterday
















Hi. Welcome to GDSE. Can I ask why you want to do that? What do you hope to gain? What specifically are you trying to do?

– Billy Kerr
yesterday





Hi. Welcome to GDSE. Can I ask why you want to do that? What do you hope to gain? What specifically are you trying to do?

– Billy Kerr
yesterday













@BillyKerr I guessed he wants to give some input to some already existing program which expects SVG line commands.

– user287001
yesterday





@BillyKerr I guessed he wants to give some input to some already existing program which expects SVG line commands.

– user287001
yesterday




1




1





But that can solve the problem , if the questioner has a possiblity to run Illustrator. Add it to your answer!

– user287001
yesterday





But that can solve the problem , if the questioner has a possiblity to run Illustrator. Add it to your answer!

– user287001
yesterday




1




1





@user287001 - well this is weird. Inkscape sees a line segment, but there's no way to create one! See example line segment imported from Illustrator

– Billy Kerr
yesterday





@user287001 - well this is weird. Inkscape sees a line segment, but there's no way to create one! See example line segment imported from Illustrator

– Billy Kerr
yesterday




1




1





Sorry for the late reply. As user287001 mentioned I have to give SVG as an input and it expects lines. I was wondering if Inkscape can create lines, since it sees lines and if you open an SVG containing lines, you can modify it and save it, and it remains line.

– Zoltán
yesterday





Sorry for the late reply. As user287001 mentioned I have to give SVG as an input and it expects lines. I was wondering if Inkscape can create lines, since it sees lines and if you open an SVG containing lines, you can modify it and save it, and it remains line.

– Zoltán
yesterday










2 Answers
2






active

oldest

votes


















9














TLDR: You can't really, but you can kind of*



In Inkscape lines, or shapes (except for rectangles**), are generally constructed using the concept of vector paths, to which fills and strokes are applied. That's how the software works. There's no Line Segment Tool in Inkscape, like the one in Illustrator.



*It is possible to link or embed raster images in Inkscape and other vector image editors, but these will remain as raster images made of pixels. It's also possible to rasterize objects made in Inkscape using Edit > Make Bitmap Copy, but again these will then be made of pixels, and not vector.



*Also, you could use underscore characters to make a line, which would of course be a text object, rather than a path. But then again, strictly speaking, fonts are still made of vector paths.



**Also possible is to create a long rectangle, and fill it. Technically not a path as such, but an SVG rect object, as you will see if you examine the XML code.



Edit: further to the comments with user287001, it would seem there are other possibilities. Illustrator has a Line Segment Tool, and a line made with it, and exported as SVG, will create an SVG line object. Another possibility is to hand code the line segment. Shouldn't be too hard to hack it. And strangely enough Inkscape can see these SVG elements if you open such an SVG in Inkscape.



Here's an example SVG line segment that seems to work in Inkscape, you just can't create one with a tool, nor edit the end points with a tool using the GUI. You can rotate it, and stretch it though.



 <line
x1="37.770248"
y1="32.135063"
x2="80.329521"
y2="18.314875"
id="line1"
style="fill:none;stroke:#231f20;stroke-width:0.48102528;stroke-miterlimit:10" />





share|improve this answer

























  • Thanks for your answer.

    – Zoltán
    yesterday











  • @Zoltán that was fun!!

    – Billy Kerr
    yesterday


















5














Inkscape seems to create XML code for a path even if you draw a straight line segment with the pen tool in straight line mode. I guess some programming is needed either for converting path commands to SVG line commands or for creating a drawing tool which creates internally SVG line expressions.



Unfortunately I cannot show such Inkscape extension program and even less I can make one. But check this discussion in the sister site: https://stackoverflow.com/questions/9102563/turn-svg-path-into-line-segments



A quick search popped out also this code. https://jsfiddle.net/fq9n7f76/18/



I must admit I cannot see is it valid, but it seems to ouput polylines. Hopefully you can read and speak this language better.



Some CAD programs can export the wanted SVG lines. I have checked that at least LibreCAD does it because some CAM-tools want it. LibreCAD is freeware. Check, if you can do your drawing work there.






share|improve this answer

























  • Thanks for your answer. Yes, I can speak that language, since I'm a programmer not a designer :)

    – Zoltán
    yesterday











  • @Zoltán I found still one option more: LibreCAD

    – user287001
    yesterday











Your Answer








StackExchange.ready(function()
var channelOptions =
tags: "".split(" "),
id: "174"
;
initTagRenderer("".split(" "), "".split(" "), channelOptions);

StackExchange.using("externalEditor", function()
// Have to fire editor after snippets, if snippets enabled
if (StackExchange.settings.snippets.snippetsEnabled)
StackExchange.using("snippets", function()
createEditor();
);

else
createEditor();

);

function createEditor()
StackExchange.prepareEditor(
heartbeatType: 'answer',
autoActivateHeartbeat: false,
convertImagesToLinks: false,
noModals: true,
showLowRepImageUploadWarning: true,
reputationToPostImages: null,
bindNavPrevention: true,
postfix: "",
imageUploader:
brandingHtml: "Powered by u003ca class="icon-imgur-white" href="https://imgur.com/"u003eu003c/au003e",
contentPolicyHtml: "User contributions licensed under u003ca href="https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/"u003ecc by-sa 3.0 with attribution requiredu003c/au003e u003ca href="https://stackoverflow.com/legal/content-policy"u003e(content policy)u003c/au003e",
allowUrls: true
,
onDemand: true,
discardSelector: ".discard-answer"
,immediatelyShowMarkdownHelp:true
);



);






Zoltán is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.









draft saved

draft discarded


















StackExchange.ready(
function ()
StackExchange.openid.initPostLogin('.new-post-login', 'https%3a%2f%2fgraphicdesign.stackexchange.com%2fquestions%2f122300%2fdraw-simple-lines-in-inkscape%23new-answer', 'question_page');

);

Post as a guest















Required, but never shown

























2 Answers
2






active

oldest

votes








2 Answers
2






active

oldest

votes









active

oldest

votes






active

oldest

votes









9














TLDR: You can't really, but you can kind of*



In Inkscape lines, or shapes (except for rectangles**), are generally constructed using the concept of vector paths, to which fills and strokes are applied. That's how the software works. There's no Line Segment Tool in Inkscape, like the one in Illustrator.



*It is possible to link or embed raster images in Inkscape and other vector image editors, but these will remain as raster images made of pixels. It's also possible to rasterize objects made in Inkscape using Edit > Make Bitmap Copy, but again these will then be made of pixels, and not vector.



*Also, you could use underscore characters to make a line, which would of course be a text object, rather than a path. But then again, strictly speaking, fonts are still made of vector paths.



**Also possible is to create a long rectangle, and fill it. Technically not a path as such, but an SVG rect object, as you will see if you examine the XML code.



Edit: further to the comments with user287001, it would seem there are other possibilities. Illustrator has a Line Segment Tool, and a line made with it, and exported as SVG, will create an SVG line object. Another possibility is to hand code the line segment. Shouldn't be too hard to hack it. And strangely enough Inkscape can see these SVG elements if you open such an SVG in Inkscape.



Here's an example SVG line segment that seems to work in Inkscape, you just can't create one with a tool, nor edit the end points with a tool using the GUI. You can rotate it, and stretch it though.



 <line
x1="37.770248"
y1="32.135063"
x2="80.329521"
y2="18.314875"
id="line1"
style="fill:none;stroke:#231f20;stroke-width:0.48102528;stroke-miterlimit:10" />





share|improve this answer

























  • Thanks for your answer.

    – Zoltán
    yesterday











  • @Zoltán that was fun!!

    – Billy Kerr
    yesterday















9














TLDR: You can't really, but you can kind of*



In Inkscape lines, or shapes (except for rectangles**), are generally constructed using the concept of vector paths, to which fills and strokes are applied. That's how the software works. There's no Line Segment Tool in Inkscape, like the one in Illustrator.



*It is possible to link or embed raster images in Inkscape and other vector image editors, but these will remain as raster images made of pixels. It's also possible to rasterize objects made in Inkscape using Edit > Make Bitmap Copy, but again these will then be made of pixels, and not vector.



*Also, you could use underscore characters to make a line, which would of course be a text object, rather than a path. But then again, strictly speaking, fonts are still made of vector paths.



**Also possible is to create a long rectangle, and fill it. Technically not a path as such, but an SVG rect object, as you will see if you examine the XML code.



Edit: further to the comments with user287001, it would seem there are other possibilities. Illustrator has a Line Segment Tool, and a line made with it, and exported as SVG, will create an SVG line object. Another possibility is to hand code the line segment. Shouldn't be too hard to hack it. And strangely enough Inkscape can see these SVG elements if you open such an SVG in Inkscape.



Here's an example SVG line segment that seems to work in Inkscape, you just can't create one with a tool, nor edit the end points with a tool using the GUI. You can rotate it, and stretch it though.



 <line
x1="37.770248"
y1="32.135063"
x2="80.329521"
y2="18.314875"
id="line1"
style="fill:none;stroke:#231f20;stroke-width:0.48102528;stroke-miterlimit:10" />





share|improve this answer

























  • Thanks for your answer.

    – Zoltán
    yesterday











  • @Zoltán that was fun!!

    – Billy Kerr
    yesterday













9












9








9







TLDR: You can't really, but you can kind of*



In Inkscape lines, or shapes (except for rectangles**), are generally constructed using the concept of vector paths, to which fills and strokes are applied. That's how the software works. There's no Line Segment Tool in Inkscape, like the one in Illustrator.



*It is possible to link or embed raster images in Inkscape and other vector image editors, but these will remain as raster images made of pixels. It's also possible to rasterize objects made in Inkscape using Edit > Make Bitmap Copy, but again these will then be made of pixels, and not vector.



*Also, you could use underscore characters to make a line, which would of course be a text object, rather than a path. But then again, strictly speaking, fonts are still made of vector paths.



**Also possible is to create a long rectangle, and fill it. Technically not a path as such, but an SVG rect object, as you will see if you examine the XML code.



Edit: further to the comments with user287001, it would seem there are other possibilities. Illustrator has a Line Segment Tool, and a line made with it, and exported as SVG, will create an SVG line object. Another possibility is to hand code the line segment. Shouldn't be too hard to hack it. And strangely enough Inkscape can see these SVG elements if you open such an SVG in Inkscape.



Here's an example SVG line segment that seems to work in Inkscape, you just can't create one with a tool, nor edit the end points with a tool using the GUI. You can rotate it, and stretch it though.



 <line
x1="37.770248"
y1="32.135063"
x2="80.329521"
y2="18.314875"
id="line1"
style="fill:none;stroke:#231f20;stroke-width:0.48102528;stroke-miterlimit:10" />





share|improve this answer















TLDR: You can't really, but you can kind of*



In Inkscape lines, or shapes (except for rectangles**), are generally constructed using the concept of vector paths, to which fills and strokes are applied. That's how the software works. There's no Line Segment Tool in Inkscape, like the one in Illustrator.



*It is possible to link or embed raster images in Inkscape and other vector image editors, but these will remain as raster images made of pixels. It's also possible to rasterize objects made in Inkscape using Edit > Make Bitmap Copy, but again these will then be made of pixels, and not vector.



*Also, you could use underscore characters to make a line, which would of course be a text object, rather than a path. But then again, strictly speaking, fonts are still made of vector paths.



**Also possible is to create a long rectangle, and fill it. Technically not a path as such, but an SVG rect object, as you will see if you examine the XML code.



Edit: further to the comments with user287001, it would seem there are other possibilities. Illustrator has a Line Segment Tool, and a line made with it, and exported as SVG, will create an SVG line object. Another possibility is to hand code the line segment. Shouldn't be too hard to hack it. And strangely enough Inkscape can see these SVG elements if you open such an SVG in Inkscape.



Here's an example SVG line segment that seems to work in Inkscape, you just can't create one with a tool, nor edit the end points with a tool using the GUI. You can rotate it, and stretch it though.



 <line
x1="37.770248"
y1="32.135063"
x2="80.329521"
y2="18.314875"
id="line1"
style="fill:none;stroke:#231f20;stroke-width:0.48102528;stroke-miterlimit:10" />






share|improve this answer














share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer








edited yesterday

























answered yesterday









Billy KerrBilly Kerr

28.5k22159




28.5k22159












  • Thanks for your answer.

    – Zoltán
    yesterday











  • @Zoltán that was fun!!

    – Billy Kerr
    yesterday

















  • Thanks for your answer.

    – Zoltán
    yesterday











  • @Zoltán that was fun!!

    – Billy Kerr
    yesterday
















Thanks for your answer.

– Zoltán
yesterday





Thanks for your answer.

– Zoltán
yesterday













@Zoltán that was fun!!

– Billy Kerr
yesterday





@Zoltán that was fun!!

– Billy Kerr
yesterday











5














Inkscape seems to create XML code for a path even if you draw a straight line segment with the pen tool in straight line mode. I guess some programming is needed either for converting path commands to SVG line commands or for creating a drawing tool which creates internally SVG line expressions.



Unfortunately I cannot show such Inkscape extension program and even less I can make one. But check this discussion in the sister site: https://stackoverflow.com/questions/9102563/turn-svg-path-into-line-segments



A quick search popped out also this code. https://jsfiddle.net/fq9n7f76/18/



I must admit I cannot see is it valid, but it seems to ouput polylines. Hopefully you can read and speak this language better.



Some CAD programs can export the wanted SVG lines. I have checked that at least LibreCAD does it because some CAM-tools want it. LibreCAD is freeware. Check, if you can do your drawing work there.






share|improve this answer

























  • Thanks for your answer. Yes, I can speak that language, since I'm a programmer not a designer :)

    – Zoltán
    yesterday











  • @Zoltán I found still one option more: LibreCAD

    – user287001
    yesterday















5














Inkscape seems to create XML code for a path even if you draw a straight line segment with the pen tool in straight line mode. I guess some programming is needed either for converting path commands to SVG line commands or for creating a drawing tool which creates internally SVG line expressions.



Unfortunately I cannot show such Inkscape extension program and even less I can make one. But check this discussion in the sister site: https://stackoverflow.com/questions/9102563/turn-svg-path-into-line-segments



A quick search popped out also this code. https://jsfiddle.net/fq9n7f76/18/



I must admit I cannot see is it valid, but it seems to ouput polylines. Hopefully you can read and speak this language better.



Some CAD programs can export the wanted SVG lines. I have checked that at least LibreCAD does it because some CAM-tools want it. LibreCAD is freeware. Check, if you can do your drawing work there.






share|improve this answer

























  • Thanks for your answer. Yes, I can speak that language, since I'm a programmer not a designer :)

    – Zoltán
    yesterday











  • @Zoltán I found still one option more: LibreCAD

    – user287001
    yesterday













5












5








5







Inkscape seems to create XML code for a path even if you draw a straight line segment with the pen tool in straight line mode. I guess some programming is needed either for converting path commands to SVG line commands or for creating a drawing tool which creates internally SVG line expressions.



Unfortunately I cannot show such Inkscape extension program and even less I can make one. But check this discussion in the sister site: https://stackoverflow.com/questions/9102563/turn-svg-path-into-line-segments



A quick search popped out also this code. https://jsfiddle.net/fq9n7f76/18/



I must admit I cannot see is it valid, but it seems to ouput polylines. Hopefully you can read and speak this language better.



Some CAD programs can export the wanted SVG lines. I have checked that at least LibreCAD does it because some CAM-tools want it. LibreCAD is freeware. Check, if you can do your drawing work there.






share|improve this answer















Inkscape seems to create XML code for a path even if you draw a straight line segment with the pen tool in straight line mode. I guess some programming is needed either for converting path commands to SVG line commands or for creating a drawing tool which creates internally SVG line expressions.



Unfortunately I cannot show such Inkscape extension program and even less I can make one. But check this discussion in the sister site: https://stackoverflow.com/questions/9102563/turn-svg-path-into-line-segments



A quick search popped out also this code. https://jsfiddle.net/fq9n7f76/18/



I must admit I cannot see is it valid, but it seems to ouput polylines. Hopefully you can read and speak this language better.



Some CAD programs can export the wanted SVG lines. I have checked that at least LibreCAD does it because some CAM-tools want it. LibreCAD is freeware. Check, if you can do your drawing work there.







share|improve this answer














share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer








edited yesterday

























answered yesterday









user287001user287001

23.9k21239




23.9k21239












  • Thanks for your answer. Yes, I can speak that language, since I'm a programmer not a designer :)

    – Zoltán
    yesterday











  • @Zoltán I found still one option more: LibreCAD

    – user287001
    yesterday

















  • Thanks for your answer. Yes, I can speak that language, since I'm a programmer not a designer :)

    – Zoltán
    yesterday











  • @Zoltán I found still one option more: LibreCAD

    – user287001
    yesterday
















Thanks for your answer. Yes, I can speak that language, since I'm a programmer not a designer :)

– Zoltán
yesterday





Thanks for your answer. Yes, I can speak that language, since I'm a programmer not a designer :)

– Zoltán
yesterday













@Zoltán I found still one option more: LibreCAD

– user287001
yesterday





@Zoltán I found still one option more: LibreCAD

– user287001
yesterday










Zoltán is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.









draft saved

draft discarded


















Zoltán is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.












Zoltán is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.











Zoltán is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.














Thanks for contributing an answer to Graphic Design Stack Exchange!


  • Please be sure to answer the question. Provide details and share your research!

But avoid


  • Asking for help, clarification, or responding to other answers.

  • Making statements based on opinion; back them up with references or personal experience.

To learn more, see our tips on writing great answers.




draft saved


draft discarded














StackExchange.ready(
function ()
StackExchange.openid.initPostLogin('.new-post-login', 'https%3a%2f%2fgraphicdesign.stackexchange.com%2fquestions%2f122300%2fdraw-simple-lines-in-inkscape%23new-answer', 'question_page');

);

Post as a guest















Required, but never shown





















































Required, but never shown














Required, but never shown












Required, but never shown







Required, but never shown

































Required, but never shown














Required, but never shown












Required, but never shown







Required, but never shown







Popular posts from this blog

Reverse int within the 32-bit signed integer range: [−2^31, 2^31 − 1]Combining two 32-bit integers into one 64-bit integerDetermine if an int is within rangeLossy packing 32 bit integer to 16 bitComputing the square root of a 64-bit integerKeeping integer addition within boundsSafe multiplication of two 64-bit signed integersLeetcode 10: Regular Expression MatchingSigned integer-to-ascii x86_64 assembler macroReverse the digits of an Integer“Add two numbers given in reverse order from a linked list”

Category:Fedor von Bock Media in category "Fedor von Bock"Navigation menuUpload mediaISNI: 0000 0000 5511 3417VIAF ID: 24712551GND ID: 119294796Library of Congress authority ID: n96068363BnF ID: 12534305fSUDOC authorities ID: 034604189Open Library ID: OL338253ANKCR AUT ID: jn19990000869National Library of Israel ID: 000514068National Thesaurus for Author Names ID: 341574317ReasonatorScholiaStatistics

Kiel Indholdsfortegnelse Historie | Transport og færgeforbindelser | Sejlsport og anden sport | Kultur | Kendte personer fra Kiel | Noter | Litteratur | Eksterne henvisninger | Navigationsmenuwww.kiel.de54°19′31″N 10°8′26″Ø / 54.32528°N 10.14056°Ø / 54.32528; 10.14056Oberbürgermeister Dr. Ulf Kämpferwww.statistik-nord.deDen danske Stats StatistikKiels hjemmesiderrrWorldCat312794080n790547494030481-4