![]() ![]() Exports don’t work yet, and having many lights will slow down the tool quite a lotĬlick the lightbulb button on the left to open the lighting tab. You can think of it as a ‘strength’ slider for the texture effect. Opacity: controls the opacity of the paper texture.The smaller the scale, the smaller the texture details. Scale: controls the size of the texture.You have control over the texture scale and opacity: Paper texture overlaysĬlick the crumpled paper icon in the left sidebar, then select one of the paper textures. They’ll be added as separate maps in the top right menu, so they won’t interfere with the existing dungeon. ![]() It will add any maps from the imported save file into the current one. Clicking the “Import from save file” button allows you to do this. Double click on the map names to give them helpful namesĭo you have two save files you want to combine? Or perhaps there’s a dungeon you want to copy and paste into another save file.Store multiple locations in one save file to avoid switching between tabs, or fiddling with keeping them apart in the same map. With a pro account you can also export at greater than 100 px per cell, which is useful if you want to create high-quality prints of your maps. This will send the export off to my servers to be processed and exported for you.Ĭurrently, the output image may have some extra blank space to the right and bottom - this is being worked on. If you see a warning when exporting that the exported image might be too large for the browser to handle, click “High-res export → On”. Surpass browser image export resolution limits using Dungeon Scrawl servers (required an internet connection). Set the real-world cell size - printed cells will have this width.Set the printing resolution - this controls how many pixels are in one inch.Set the margin - use the minimum margin that your printer supports.Put on your cartographing sunglasses and map away.Įxport a map across multiple PDF pages with real-world cell size and printer margins all taken care of. Dark ModeĬlick the moon icon in the top right to switch to Dark Mode □. Here’s an overview of the features that come with a Dungeon Scrawl Pro account, and how to get the most out of them. If you need assistance, you can contact our support team via our Web Form. Tomato plants sown during September and October have now reached the harvesting (function() ) If you need to quickly navigate to Dungeon Scrawl just click the link below: ROURKELA: After days of cloudy weather and rains, fear of heavy losses has gripped tomato growers of Nuagaon and other blocks in the Sundargarh district.īesides Nuagaon, the inclement weather has damaged standing tomato crops in harvesting conditions in Lahunipada, Kutra, Tangarpali and Gurundia blocks.įarmer of Nuagaon Sukra Xalxo said tomato cultivation was taken up on a large scale in around 15 gram panchayats of the block including Nuagaon, Khuntagaon, Barilepta, Sorda, Teterkela, Chitapedi and Bagdega. The harvested crops have been discoloured and developed sprouting.Ĭhief district agriculture officer Harihar Nayak said teams of Agriculture and Revenue departments are likely to submit reports on paddy crop damage in a couple of days.įollow The New Indian Express channel on WhatsApp Meanwhile, almost all 17 blocks of Sundargarh have reported damage to harvested paddy crops stacked in farm fields due to rain. As per preliminary information, damage to tomato crops was below 33 per cent.” ![]() ![]() The price cooled down to Rs 50 per kg only after tomatoes arrived from adjacent Jharkhand.ĭeputy director of horticulture, Sundargarh Sukanta Nayak said, “We are expecting damage reports in a few days. Incidentally, just a few months back, tomato price at Rourkela markets had reached Rs 160 to Rs 180 per kg due to the unavailability of local produce. With the weather condition improving from Friday, fear of disease and pest attack to standing vegetable crops has also been minimised,” Mahato added. However, the accumulated water was subsequently drained out due to high land. “Initial water-logging in farm fields could have damaged other vegetable crops including cauliflower, cow-pea, cabbage and brinjal. Before the inclement weather, tomato was being sold at Rs 30-Rs 40 per kg by local farmers. Tomato crops on hundreds of acres in scattered farm plots have started to rot following the bad weather, he claimed.Īnother farmer Deba Mahato said affected farmers have started to salvage whatever they can and sell tomatoes at throwaway prices. ![]()
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