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Revision as of 15:31, 19 September 2022 by Karlw (talk | contribs) (Created page with "Sometimes it is helpful to document or explain parts of your blazon, or to temporarily ignore parts, or to include parts of the blazon which cannot actually be drawn by <ds/> but you still want to have present. You may also wish to include the name of the armiger within the blazon text but obviously this should be considered part of the blazon to be drawn. <ds/> supports several mechanisms for this purpose. ===Indicating the Armiger=== To show to whom a particular coat...")
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Sometimes it is helpful to document or explain parts of your blazon, or to temporarily ignore parts, or to include parts of the blazon which cannot actually be drawn by DrawShield but you still want to have present. You may also wish to include the name of the armiger within the blazon text but obviously this should be considered part of the blazon to be drawn. DrawShield supports several mechanisms for this purpose.

Indicating the Armiger

To show to whom a particular coat of arms belongs to we often find the convention that the holder's name is shown after the blazon, and separated from it by one or two dashes. DrawShield support this, as for example in Azure semy of fleur-de-lys or -- France Ancient. Note that it is only dashes on their own that are recognised for this purpose, those within words are treated as spaces.

Words to Ignore

If there are particular words or phrases that appear in a blazon but are not supported by DrawShield they can be surrounded by round brackets, and are then ignored. For example, azure (diapered) will just be drawn as azure.

Not that parts of the blazon within round brackets are considered part of the blazon, so they are included in error messages and wherever the blazon itself is shown as text.

Program Style Comments

To