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Situation / Problem

Lets say, I want to create a document with workout or other sports instructions. There might be video-tutorials but I do not want to use stills nor photographs. Rather, the guide should contain sketches with detailed human body postures. Obivously only the position has to be recognizable; in best case: depictions of front, side. Publications and books - that I know of - usually don't contain such figures but only photographs.

Clarification / Example

By sketch I mean something in the style of these: 1, 2, 3, 4; not necessarly (would be nice to have though) as highly detailed as this. I do not refer to some symbols like here or there.

Question

How do I best create and insert such body posture sketches into my document ?

A solution should allow arbitrary postures and optimally yield vector-graphics.

Is there a way to do this with TikZ ? Or can you recommend a way to generate such vector graphics from pictures ?

BadAtLaTeX
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  • You can download images from the internet and then use the includegraphics command to insert them into a TeX document. I don't even know a language to describe body postures, let alone software. – Benjamin McKay May 12 '19 at 14:19
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    Apparently both DOM notation and Laban notation for ballet have been implemented to some extent in software, but I don't have any experience with them, and I don't know how they would relate to TeX. – Benjamin McKay May 12 '19 at 14:27
  • My suggestion: Use Inkscape. –  May 12 '19 at 15:04
  • Use a camera to take your pose. 2. Use Sobel algorithm to detect the edges. 3. From the edges, construct the required vector graphics. Done!
  • – Display Name May 12 '19 at 16:25
  • @BenjaminMcKay I do know how to use includegraphics. I was especially looking for - as you mentioned afterwards - some kind of notation. Optimally one would have raised a TikZ-package that reads such language and displays a character. – BadAtLaTeX May 13 '19 at 11:09
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    The one person who can answer you is probably Victor Eijkhout: on his page devoted to dance notation, he points out that he was once a TeX expert: http://www.eijkhout.net/, http://www.eijkhout.net/rad/dance_offnet/notation.html – Benjamin McKay May 13 '19 at 18:31