Creation and manipulation of hand drawn objects with automatic grouping

US9285985B2 · US · B2

Patent metadata
FieldValue
Publication numberUS-9285985-B2
Application numberUS-201514643291-A
CountryUS
Kind codeB2
Filing dateMar 10, 2015
Priority dateMay 15, 2012
Publication dateMar 15, 2016
Grant dateMar 15, 2016

How to read this patent

A practical reading order for non-experts. Skip the full description unless you need deep technical detail.

  1. Title

    What the patent document calls the invention.

  2. Abstract

    A short plain-language summary of the technical disclosure.

  3. Assignees and inventors

    Who owns or filed the patent and who is credited as inventor.

  4. Key dates

    Filing, priority, publication, and grant dates set the timeline.

  5. First independent claim

    The legal scope of protection — read this for what is actually claimed.

  6. CPC / IPC classifications

    Technology tags used to group this patent with similar filings.

  7. Citations and related patents

    Prior art links and similar publications in this corpus.

Abstract

Official abstract text for this publication.

A graphical drawing includes maintaining recently drawn strokes in a wet state after the strokes are drawn, causing strokes in a wet state to transition to a dry state based on passage of time, proximity of other recently drawn strokes, and/or explicit user input directing that at least some wet strokes be transitioned to the dry state, and grouping strokes in the dry state for future user manipulation based at least in part on how the strokes transitioned from the wet state to the dry state. Wet ink strokes may transition from the wet state to the dry state in response to not adding any new wet ink strokes for a predetermined amount of time. The predetermined amount of time may be twelve hundred milliseconds.

First claim

Opening claim text (preview).

What is claimed is: 1. The method of drawing on a touch screen input of a device, comprising: maintaining recently drawn strokes in a wet state after the strokes are drawn on the touch screen input of the device, wherein the strokes are provided as vector objects; a processor causing strokes in a wet state to transition to a dry state based on at least one of: passage of time, proximity of other recently drawn strokes, and explicit user input directing that at least some wet strokes be transitioned to the dry state; grouping strokes in the dry state for future user manipulation based at least in part on how the strokes transitioned from the wet state to the dry state; a user manually selecting a group of dry ink strokes; the processor splitting the group of dry ink strokes of the graphical drawing into at least two separate portions, wherein each of the portions contains different strokes; manipulating at least one of the at least two of the portions without manipulating other ones of the portions; and regrouping the at least two separate portions based, at least in part, on a previous grouping of the at least two separate portions, wherein the processor determines the portions based on splitting the group of dry ink strokes to facilitate distinguishing between drawing and object manipulations. 2. A method, according to claim 1 , wherein proximity of other recent drawing strokes is determined by providing a bounding box that contains initial wet ink strokes and a dynamic outside rectangle outside the first bounding box and wherein the initial wet ink strokes transition from the wet state to the dry state in response to new wet ink strokes being provided outside the dynamic outside rectangle. 3. A method, according to claim 2 , wherein a triggering distance between a side of the bounding box and a corresponding side of the dynamic outside rectangle is ten percent of a diagonal size of a screen containing the graphical drawing. 4. A method, according to claim 1 , wherein wet ink strokes transition from the wet state to the dry state in response to not adding any new wet ink strokes for a predetermined amount of time. 5. A method, according to claim 4 , wherein the predetermined amount of time is twelve hundred milliseconds. 6. A method, according to claim 1 , wherein wet ink strokes transition from the wet state to the dry state in response to explicit user input. 7. A method, according to claim 6 , wherein the explicit user input includes a user selecting a dry button on a screen containing the graphical drawing. 8. A method, according to claim 1 , further comprising: using a gesture to split the group of dry ink strokes. 9. A method, according to claim 1 , further comprising: causing strokes in the dry state to transition back to the wet state, wherein drawing operations do not effect ink in the wet state that was transitioned from the dry state. 10. A method, according to claim 1 , wherein presence of wet ink inhibits selection and manipulation of any portions of the graphical drawing. 11. A non-transitory computer-readable medium containing software that provides a graphical drawing, the software comprising: executable code that maintains recently drawn strokes in a wet state after the strokes are drawn, wherein the strokes are provided as vector objects; executable code that causes strokes in a wet state to transition to a dry state based on at least one of: passage of time, proximity of other recently drawn strokes, and explicit user input directing that at least some wet strokes be transitioned to the dry state; executable code that groups strokes in the dry state for future user manipulation based at least in part on how the strokes transitioned from the wet state to the dry state; executable code that splits a group of dry ink strokes of the graphical drawing into at least two separate portions, wherein each of the portions contains different strokes and wherein the group of dry ink strokes is selected by a user; executable code that facilitates manipulating at least one of the at least two of the portions without manipulating other ones of the portions; and executable code that regroups the at least two separate portions based, at least in part, on a previous grouping of the at least two separate portions, wherein the executable code determines the portions based on splitting the group of dry ink strokes to facilitate distinguishing between drawing and object manipulations. 12. The non-transitory computer-readable medium, according to claim 11 , wherein proximity of other recent drawing strokes is determined by providing a bounding box that contains initial wet ink strokes and a dynamic outside rectangle outside the first bounding box and wherein the initial wet ink strokes transition from the wet state to the dry state in response to new wet ink strokes being provided outside the dynamic outside rectangle. 13. The non-transitory computer-readable medium, according to claim 12 , wherein a triggering distance between a side of the bounding box and a corresponding side of the dynamic outside rectangle is ten percent of a diagonal size of a screen containing the graphical drawing. 14. The non-transitory computer-readable medium, according to claim 11 , wherein wet ink strokes transition from the wet state to the dry state in response to not adding any new wet ink strokes for a predetermined amount of time. 15. The non-transitory computer-readable medium, according to claim 14 , wherein the predetermined amount of time is twelve hundred milliseconds. 16. The non-transitory computer-readable medium, according to claim 11 , wherein wet ink strokes transition from the wet state to the dry state in response to explicit user input. 17. The non-transitory computer-readable medium, according to claim 16 , wherein the explicit user input includes a user selecting a dry button on a screen containing the graphical drawing. 18. The non-transitory computer-readable medium, according to claim 11 , wherein the executable code that splits a group of dry ink strokes responds to a gesture to split the group of dry ink strokes. 19. The non-transitory computer-readable medium, according to claim 11 , further comprising: executable code that causes strokes in the dry state to transition back to the wet state, wherein drawing operations do not effect ink in the wet state that was transitioned from the dry state. 20. The non-transitory computer-readable medium, according to claim 19 , wherein presence of wet ink inhibits selection and manipulation of any portions of the graphical drawing.

Assignees

Inventors

Classifications

  • Texturing; Colouring; Generation of textures or colours (retouching, inpainting or scratch removal G06T5/77) · CPC title

  • by use of digital ink · CPC title

  • for inputting data by handwriting, e.g. gesture or text · CPC title

  • Several contacts: gestures triggering a specific function, e.g. scrolling, zooming, right-click, when the user establishes several contacts with the surface simultaneously; e.g. using several fingers or a combination of fingers and pen · CPC title

  • Selection of displayed objects or displayed text elements (G06F3/0482 takes precedence) · CPC title

Patent family

Related publications grouped by family.

External sources

Frequently asked questions

Answers are generated from the same data shown on this page.

What does patent US9285985B2 cover?
A graphical drawing includes maintaining recently drawn strokes in a wet state after the strokes are drawn, causing strokes in a wet state to transition to a dry state based on passage of time, proximity of other recently drawn strokes, and/or explicit user input directing that at least some wet strokes be transitioned to the dry state, and grouping strokes in the dry state for future user mani…
Who is the assignee on this patent?
Evernote Corp
What technology area does this patent fall under?
Primary CPC classification G06F3/04883. Mapped technology areas include Physics.
When was this patent published?
Publication date Tue Mar 15 2016 00:00:00 GMT+0000 (Coordinated Universal Time) (B2). Legal status and post-grant events are not shown on this page.
What related patents are in patentsdb?
We list 1 related publication on this page (citations in our corpus or others sharing the same primary CPC).