polygon¶
Draw an n-sided regular polygon, centered at x,y.
Options¶
All of these options support arrays and singleton expansion (except for range). See Squib Thinks in Arrays for deeper explanation.
- n
default: 5
the number of sides on the polygon
- x
default:
0the x-coordinate to place, relative to the upper-left corner of the card and moving right as it increases. Supports Unit Conversion and XYWH Shorthands.
- y
default:
0the y-coordinate to place, relative to the upper-left corner of the card and moving downward as it increases. Supports Unit Conversion and XYWH Shorthands.
- radius
default: 0
the distance from the center of the star to the inner circle of its points. Supports Unit Conversion.
- angle
default: 0
the angle at which to rotate the star
- fill_color
default:
'#0000'(fully transparent)the color or gradient to fill with. See Specifying Colors & Gradients.
- stroke_color
default:
:blackthe color with which to stroke the outside of the shape. See Specifying Colors & Gradients.
- stroke_width
default:
2the width of the outside stroke. Supports Unit Conversion.
- stroke_strategy
default:
:fill_firstSpecify whether the stroke is done before (thinner) or after (thicker) filling the shape.
Must be either
:fill_firstor:stroke_first(or their string equivalents).- dash
default:
''(no dash pattern set)Define a dash pattern for the stroke. This is a special string with space-separated numbers that define the pattern of on-and-off alternating strokes, measured in pixels or units. For example,
'0.02in 0.02in'will be an equal on-and-off dash pattern. Supports Unit Conversion.- cap
default:
:buttDefine how the end of the stroke is drawn. Options are
:square,:butt, and:round(or string equivalents of those).- join
default:
:mitreSpecifies how to render the junction of two lines when stroking. Options are
:mitre,:round, and:bevel.
- range
default:
:allthe range of cards over which this will be rendered. See Using range to specify cards
- layout
default:
nilentry in the layout to use as defaults for this command. See Layouts are Squib’s Best Feature.