The button bar at the bottom of the main screen provides functions for working with the design.
The shift buttons allow the design to be shifted up, down, left or right. The left and right shifts are useful for aligning the design in the "fundamental tile" outlined in black on the tile strip. The up and down shifts are useful particularly when you decide to add rows to provide borders on the top and bottom.
The symmetry buttons determine how the fundamental tile will be replicated to fill out the rosette. The slip match stetting just translates the fundamental tile to the left and right. The book match setting reflects the fundamental tile across a vertical line as in the opening of a book. The inversion setting flips the fundamental tile across a horizontal line while repeating, and the book inversion combines the book match and inversion settings, flipping across both horizontal and vertical.
The row and column settings let you choose the number of rows and columns in the fundamental tile. The size (height or width) of each row and column can be set in the Rosette Parameters dialog box accessible through the main menu.
The drawing color can be selected by adjusting the sliders for red, green and blue; the current color is displayed in the "Current color" box below.
You'll often want to reuse a color already in your design. To do this, click the "Copy color" button below the color selection bars, and then click on the tile element in the tile strip that has the desired color. This will set the current color to that color.
The main menu contains entries for creating, saving and modifying rosettes.
Creates a new (empty) design, prompting you to save the current design if needed.
Prompts to select a file to open that contains a rosette design, prompting you first to save the current design if needed. If a file is selected that doesn't contain a valid design description, an error message will be displayed.
Save the design to a file in the tablet's storage. You can choose any location and name that you like. Note that the file generated contains an XML description of the rosette design, which is a hierarchical text description. You can view the generated XML in any text viewer, and even edit it directly if you like (but you'll need to know what you're doing, or you could end up with an invalid description that Rosette Designer won't be able to read).
Save the design in the standard Portable Document Format for printing or viewing in any PDF file viewer (Acroread, e.g.). This brings up a dialog box asking which elements of the design you'd like displayed in the document; you can include the rosette, the tile strip, and additionally an expanded map of the fundamental tile showing clearly which element color is in each row and column. The latter is especially useful to a luthier in constructing a rosette from the design.
Save the rosette as a Portable Network Graphics image file. This can be viewed with any image viewer application, including web browsers.
Brings up a dialog box that allows you to specify the inner radius of the rosette, and the width and height of the fundamental tile and/or the rows and columns. Note that editing the tile width or height will automatically adjust the row and column width and height, since these are connected through the number of rows and columns.
These show app information and quit the app, as you'd pretty much expect.