New on CTAN: pfdicons
Date: July 25, 2021 10:35:37 AM CEST
Aaron Drews submitted the
pfdicons
package.
Version: 1.0 2021-07-23
License: lppl1.3
Summary description: Draw process flow diagrams in chemical engineering
Announcement text:
The `pfdicons` package provides TikZ shapes to represent commonly encountered unit operations for depiction in process flow diagrams (PFDs) and, to a lesser extent, process and instrumentation diagrams (PIDs). The package was designed with undergraduate chemical engineering students and faculty in mind, and the number of units provided should cover--in Turton's estimate--about 90 percent of all fluid processing operations.
The package’s Catalogue entry can be viewed at https://ctan.org/pkg/pfdicons The package’s files themselves can be inspected at https://mirrors.ctan.org/graphics/pgf/contrib/pfdicons/
Thanks for the upload. For the CTAN Team Petra Rübe-Pugliese
CTAN is run entirely by volunteers and supported by TeX user groups. Please join a user group or donate to one, see https://ctan.org/lugs
The `pfdicons` package provides TikZ shapes to represent commonly encountered unit operations for depiction in process flow diagrams (PFDs) and, to a lesser extent, process and instrumentation diagrams (PIDs). The package was designed with undergraduate chemical engineering students and faculty in mind, and the number of units provided should cover--in Turton's estimate--about 90 percent of all fluid processing operations.
The package’s Catalogue entry can be viewed at https://ctan.org/pkg/pfdicons The package’s files themselves can be inspected at https://mirrors.ctan.org/graphics/pgf/contrib/pfdicons/
Thanks for the upload. For the CTAN Team Petra Rübe-Pugliese
CTAN is run entirely by volunteers and supported by TeX user groups. Please join a user group or donate to one, see https://ctan.org/lugs
pfdicons – Draw process flow diagrams in chemical engineering
This package provides TikZ shapes to represent commonly encountered unit operations for depiction in process flow diagrams (PFDs) and, to a lesser extent, process and instrumentation diagrams (PIDs).
The package was designed with undergraduate chemical engineering students and faculty in mind, and the number of units provided should cover—in Turton’s estimate—about 90 percent of all fluid processing operations.
Package | pfdicons |
Version | 1.0a 2021-07-26 |
Copyright | 2021 Aaron Drews |
Maintainer | Aaron Drews |