Final updates to cover

This commit is contained in:
Kenneth John Odle 2025-04-05 10:19:07 -04:00
parent 1e61f8e767
commit b4dbe6ad07

View File

@ -41,15 +41,16 @@
\begin{tikzpicture}[x=1in, y=1in, remember picture, overlay]
\draw[color=white] (0,0) circle (0);
\draw[line width=2mm, color=brown8] (5.5,-0.5) -- (5.5,8.1);
\draw[line width=0.5mm, color=red7] (9,7) circle (0.5);
\draw[line width=0.5mm, color=azure5] (7,7.2) circle (0.3);
\draw[line width=0.6mm, color=cyan9] (2,2) circle (1.0);
\draw[line width=0.3mm, color=red6] (3.0,2.5) circle (0.25);
\draw[line width=0.5mm, color=red9] (9,7) circle (0.5);
\draw[line width=0.5mm, color=azure7] (7,7.2) circle (0.3);
\draw[line width=0.4mm, color=cyan9] (2,2) circle (1.0);
\draw[line width=0.3mm, color=red8] (3.0,2.5) circle (0.25);
\draw[line width=0.3mm, color=magenta8] (1.4,1.5) circle (0.6);
\draw[color=brown7, line width=0.5mm] (8.5,2.0) circle (1);
\draw[color=green8, line width=0.75mm] (7.75,1.5) circle (0.5);
\draw[color=teal9, line width=1mm] (2,6) circle (0.6);
\draw[color=violet9, line width=1mm] (2.85,5.15) circle (0.8);
\draw[line width=0.35mm, color=brown9] (8.5,2.0) circle (1);
\draw[line width=0.25mm, color=green8] (7.75,1.5) circle (0.5);
\draw[line width=0.6mm, color=teal9] (2,6) circle (0.6);
\draw[line width=0.4mm, color=violet9] (2.85,5.15) circle (0.8);
\draw[line width=0.3mm, color=violet9] (8.5,6.75) ellipse (60mm and 15mm);
\end{tikzpicture}
} % End put
}
@ -65,7 +66,7 @@
An excellent question! (Well, \textit{two} excellent questions, actually!)
Venn diagrams were invented in the 1800s by an English mathematician named John Venn. ``Invented'' may be a strong word here, since Christian Weise and Leonhard Euler had proposed similar things previously (in 1712 and 1768, respectively). But John Venn is the person who gets the credit because he wrote about them in his 1881 book \textit{Symbolic Logic}. (Truthfully, he origially wrote about them in a paper titled ``On the Diagrammatic and Mechanical Representation of Propositions and Reasonings'' which was published in the \textit{Philosophical Magazine and Journal of Science} in 1880. (If you are interested, you can read it here: \kref{https://www.cis.upenn.edu/~bhusnur4/cit592_fall2014/venn\%20diagrams.pdf}{https://www.cis.upenn.edu/\~{}bhusnur4/cit59\_fall2014/venn\%20diagr\\ams.pdf}.)
Venn diagrams were invented in the 1800s by an English mathematician named John Venn. ``Invented'' may be a strong word here, since Christian Weise and Leonhard Euler had proposed similar things previously (in 1712 and 1768, respectively). But John Venn is the person who gets the credit because he wrote about them in his 1881 book \textit{Symbolic Logic}. (Truthfully, he originally wrote about them in a paper titled ``On the Diagrammatic and Mechanical Representation of Propositions and Reasonings'' which was published in the \textit{Philosophical Magazine and Journal of Science} in 1880. (If you are interested, you can read it here: \kref{https://www.cis.upenn.edu/~bhusnur4/cit592_fall2014/venn\%20diagrams.pdf}{https://www.cis.upenn.edu/\~{}bhusnur4/cit59\_fall2014/venn\%20diag\\rams.pdf}.)
You probably don't care about any of that, though.
@ -88,6 +89,12 @@ So grab those coloring pencils, a mug of something warm and satisfying (or a gla
\end{footnotesize}
\end{tcolorbox}
\begin{center}
Made by Kenneth John Odle
\kref{https://just13.click/}{https://just13.click/}
\end{center}
\columnbreak
%% Front Cover
@ -97,11 +104,14 @@ So grab those coloring pencils, a mug of something warm and satisfying (or a gla
{\fontsize{45}{70}\selectfont {Venn\\ Diagrams}}
\vspace{30mm}
\begin{Large}
The Zine!
\end{Large}
\vspace{10mm}
(And also, the coloring book!)
\vspace*{75mm} % Needed to push the "Made with LaTeX" bug to the bottom of the left column
\vspace*{55mm} % Needed to push the "Made with LaTeX" bug to the bottom of the left column
\end{center}
\end{multicols}