Scripts for collective performance

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  • 10:00-11:00 diving into graphviz
  • 11:00-13:00 scripts making
  • 13:00-14:00 lunch break
  • 14:00-16:00 scripts making
  • 16:00-16:30 print your scripts
  • 16:30-17:00 performing each others scripts!

Scripts for collective performance


In what way have you been involved in collective practices?
How do you understand the difference between collaborativecollective work?
What forms of collectivity in everyday life come to mind?
Which communities of practice[Susan Leigh Star] are you part of?

As Engestrom (1990) and other activity theorists note so well, activity is always mediated by tools and material arrangements. You never act in a vacuum or in a “pure” universe of doing, but it is always with respect to arrangements, tools, and material objects. (...) Here I mean “object” to include all of these things: stuff and things, tools and techniques, and ideas, stories, and memories—those objects which are treated as things by community members (Clarke and Fujimura 1992a, 1992b). They are used in the service of an action, and mediate it in some way. (...) A community of practice is defined in large part according to the co-use of such objects, since all practice is so mediated.

Susan Leigh Star, Misplaced Concretism and Concrete Situations: Feminism, Method, and Information Technology [Chapter 6] (see bootleg library!)

which collective

  1. think of a collective situation
  2. focus on one specific action that is part of this situation
  3. describe this action in 3 steps
  4. turn this into a diagram with graphviz

loopy situations

  1. think of a collective situation that involves repetition
  2. describe the repetition in 5 steps, and make sure step 5 connects back to step 1
  3. turn this into a diagram with graphviz

if or else

  1. think of an everyday situation that involves making choices
  2. describe one of such choice making moment in 3 steps:
    1. describe situation
    2. describe the 2 options that are there
    3. describe what happens when choosing option 1, and what happens when choosing option 2
  3. turn this into a diagram with graphviz

Graphviz

https://graphviz.org

Graphviz is open source graph visualization software. Graph visualization is a way of representing structural information as diagrams of abstract graphs and networks. It has important applications in networking, bioinformatics, software engineering, database and web design, machine learning, and in visual interfaces for other technical domains.

Starting in the middle of

Aesthetic Programming cover OSP workshop with etherdot Counter Cloud Action Plan So-and-sovereignty diagrams dot-to-ascii The Art of Asking Your Boss, George Perec


As part of Energy Giveaway at the Humuspunk Library, AIA, Zurich, interdependent artist/researcher Martino Morandi and Femke Snelting developped three diagrams. Thinking with nematodes and teletypes, with imbricated servers and institutional burrows, this shape-shifting diagram both traces and re-plots an ongoing conversation about modes of interdependence under the regime of The Cloud. The diagrams zoomed in on geometries and vocabularies that once seemed useful for limiting damage, creating solidarity and re-organizing collective resources, showing how they have been turned inside-out and are in need of a collective re-articulation of forms of togetherness.

what Perec discovered as he wrote out the “simultaneous” flowchart protocol was that time reinserts itself by necessity in any narrative, even when obstinately restricted to the present tense: the employee seeking a raise is a little older at each approach to his head of department whenever the arrows and choices take him back to the top of his chart. Because of this, the recursion cannot be infinite, because if algorithms exist without time, men do not, and must die. – Mainframe Experimentalism, by Hannah Higgins

Use graphviz

For example with dot:

$ dot hello.dot -Tpng -O

You can save your graphviz code to a .dot file. The command above reads this file hello.dot and renders the graph into a PNG image, which is saved with the same filename, but with the PNG extension: hello.dot.png.

Check the manual to find more options: $ man dot

Nodes and edges

Graphviz.dot.png

Graphviz works with the dot language, and works with graphs, nodes and edges.

You can change the type, color and behavior of these with attributes and shapes:

This page lists a range of examples: https://renenyffenegger.ch/notes/tools/Graphviz/examples/index

Layout engines

Graphviz comes with a set of different built-in layout engines and each of these render the graph differently:

  • dot: hierarchical
  • neato: spring
  • circo: circular
  • twopi: radial
  • fdp: force-directed placement

Each of these are installed when you install graphviz. To use them, you change use the name of the layout engine as command in the CLI:

$ dot 
$ neato
$ circo
$ twopi
$ fdp

You can check them all here: https://graphviz.org/docs/layouts/

Output formats

Graphviz uses a range of output formats, such as:

  • svg
  • png
  • jpeg
  • pdf

To change the output format, you change the -Tsvg part of your command:

-Tsvg 
-Tpng 
-Tjpg 
-Tpdf 

There is a list here: https://graphviz.org/docs/outputs/

What is nice when you export to svg is that you can use graphviz as an initial step in your workflow, and continue working on your diagram in other vector editing software, such as Inkscape or others. And! when saving as svg, your diagram stays a vector drawing, which also means you scale it, copy/paste it into a web page, and... pen plot it!

And about png: this is a good image file format if you want to render your diagram as a static image file, as it good for detailed line drawings and typography, and it support transparency.

dot language

https://graphviz.org/doc/info/lang.html

Some examples.

You create edges with an "arrow": ->:

digraph {
  hello -> xpub
}

Hello-xpub.dot.png


You can label an edge:

  hello -> xpub [label="who?"]

Hello-xpub-label.dot.png


You can use id's to assign attributes to a node:

  A [label="Hello" shape=diamond]
  B [label="XPUB" shape=box]
  C [label="1" shape=circle]

  A -> B 
  A -> C 
  A -> D

Hello.dot.png


You can use subgraphs to create multiple edges in one go:

  hello -> {XPUB1 XPUB2}

Hello2.dot.png


And you can use attributes to render your diagram in a specific way/color/font/size/...:

https://graphviz.org/docs/attr-types/style/

digraph {

  /* set graph attributes here */
  bgcolor="yellow:pink"
  gradientangle=90

  /* set node attributes here */
  A [label="hello" style=filled color=blue fillcolor="lightgreen:lightyellow" gradientangle=0]
  B [label="xpub" style=filled]

  /* set edge attributes here */
  A -> B [color=purple]

}

Hello3.dot.png

You can use a subset of HTML-like elements:

https://graphviz.org/doc/info/shapes.html#html

 A [label=<so <b>bold</b>>]
 B [label=<so <i>italic</i>>]
 C [label=<so <s>deleted</s>>]

Play with the node shapes:

https://graphviz.org/doc/info/shapes.html

 diamond [fillcolor=yellow style="rounded,filled" shape=diamond]
 house [shape=house style=filled fillcolor=pink]

Let shapes grow with linebreaks or position labels with spaces:

 biggercircle [label="\nthis is how \nyou can make \nit bigger\n"]
 align [label="        now there is more space on the left"]

Use colors:

https://graphviz.org/doc/info/colors.html
https://graphviz.org/docs/attr-types/style/

 A [label="hello" color=pink fontcolor=blue style=filled]
 B [label="XPUB" color="darkseagreen1:deepskyblue" style=filled fontcolor=red]
 
 A -> B [color=purple]

Use different fonts:

https://www.graphviz.org/docs/attrs/fontname/
https://graphviz.org/faq/font/ "why fonts are a hard problem"

 XPUB [fontname="Crickx"]

but! this font needs to be listed in your fc-list: $ fc-list

Choose how and if edges are represented:

https://graphviz.org/docs/attrs/splines/

 splines=none
 splines=line
 splines=curved
 splines=polyline
 splines=ortho

Choose where an edge connects:

https://graphviz.org/docs/attr-types/portPos/

 hello:n -> xpub:s
 hello:s -> you:nw

Increase the size of your image:

 dpi=300