How to draw ░░░░░░░ blank with overlaid text in tikz












7















Wondering how to draw this sort of thing with tikz:



I ░░░░░░░░░░░░░░░ am a blank space.


...but with text overlaid on the dot grid. Also, instead of the dot-grid being diagonal, I would like to make it simply vertical/horizontal, and make the dots smaller and lighter so when the text goes over it it's not distracting. But it would be along these lines:



I ░Hello░World░░░ am a blank space.


But the "Hello World" would have ░ faded dots behind each letter. Just using this ░ unicode character for demo, this instead would use tikz.










share|improve this question



























    7















    Wondering how to draw this sort of thing with tikz:



    I ░░░░░░░░░░░░░░░ am a blank space.


    ...but with text overlaid on the dot grid. Also, instead of the dot-grid being diagonal, I would like to make it simply vertical/horizontal, and make the dots smaller and lighter so when the text goes over it it's not distracting. But it would be along these lines:



    I ░Hello░World░░░ am a blank space.


    But the "Hello World" would have ░ faded dots behind each letter. Just using this ░ unicode character for demo, this instead would use tikz.










    share|improve this question

























      7












      7








      7


      2






      Wondering how to draw this sort of thing with tikz:



      I ░░░░░░░░░░░░░░░ am a blank space.


      ...but with text overlaid on the dot grid. Also, instead of the dot-grid being diagonal, I would like to make it simply vertical/horizontal, and make the dots smaller and lighter so when the text goes over it it's not distracting. But it would be along these lines:



      I ░Hello░World░░░ am a blank space.


      But the "Hello World" would have ░ faded dots behind each letter. Just using this ░ unicode character for demo, this instead would use tikz.










      share|improve this question














      Wondering how to draw this sort of thing with tikz:



      I ░░░░░░░░░░░░░░░ am a blank space.


      ...but with text overlaid on the dot grid. Also, instead of the dot-grid being diagonal, I would like to make it simply vertical/horizontal, and make the dots smaller and lighter so when the text goes over it it's not distracting. But it would be along these lines:



      I ░Hello░World░░░ am a blank space.


      But the "Hello World" would have ░ faded dots behind each letter. Just using this ░ unicode character for demo, this instead would use tikz.







      tikz-pgf text






      share|improve this question













      share|improve this question











      share|improve this question




      share|improve this question










      asked Dec 23 '18 at 1:00









      Lance PollardLance Pollard

      749415




      749415






















          2 Answers
          2






          active

          oldest

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          12














          Are you looking for something like this? (If yes, all I'd have to do is to introduce a slightly more flexible pattern such that things look good also with more reasonable scale factors, if no, then this may help others to understand the question better.)



          documentclass{article}
          usepackage[margin=1in]{geometry}
          usepackage{tikz}
          usetikzlibrary{fadings,patterns}
          newcommand{PlaceCharOverDots}[2][10]{%
          begin{tikzfadingfrompicture}[name=temp]
          node[transparent!20,scale=#1]
          {bfseriessffamily textcolor{white}{#2}};
          end{tikzfadingfrompicture}%
          tikz[baseline=(X.base)]{node[inner sep=0pt,outer sep=0pt,scale=#1] (X) {bfseriessffamily
          textcolor{white}{strut#2}};
          path[pattern=dots,overlay] (X.north west)
          rectangle (X.south east);%
          path[path fading=temp,fit fading=false,overlay,pattern=dots,pattern
          color=gray!20] (X.north west)
          rectangle (X.south east);}%
          }
          begin{document}
          PlaceCharOverDots{Hello world}
          end{document}


          enter image description here



          EDIT: If you only want the text being placed over dots, all one needs to do is to define a somewhat denser dot pattern and to use it as the background of a node. I recommend tikzmarknode here because it automatically detects the mode your in (math mode, font size etc.) and has other advantages, which this however does not exploit. Of course, you may adjust inner sep to your needs and/or replace it by inner xsep and inner ysep.



          documentclass{article}
          usepackage[margin=1in]{geometry}
          usepackage{tikz}
          usetikzlibrary{tikzmark,patterns}
          % based on the rings example on p. 1060 of the pgfmanual as well as
          % https://tex.stackexchange.com/a/29367/1952 for the color
          makeatletter
          pgfdeclarepatternformonly[/tikz/radius,size]{flexible dots}
          {pgfpoint{-0.5*size}{-0.5*size}}
          {pgfpoint{0.5*size}{0.5*size}}
          {pgfpoint{size}{size}}
          {
          pgfsetfillcolor{tikz@pattern@color}
          pgfpathcirclepgfpointorigin{pgfkeysvalueof{/tikz/radius}}
          pgfusepath{fill}
          }
          makeatother
          tikzset{
          radius/.initial=0.1pt,
          size/.store in=size,
          size=0.5pt,
          }
          begin{document}
          tikzmarknode[pattern=flexible dots,inner sep=2pt]{test}{Hello world}
          end{document}


          enter image description here






          share|improve this answer


























          • Pretty much, but the Hello World would just be plain black text, not a cutout of the dots. It's as if the blank is just a background made of dots, and you are typing right over it to fill in the blank.

            – Lance Pollard
            Dec 23 '18 at 1:28













          • @LancePollard I am not sure I fully understand yet but I added a proposal that among other things comes with a more flexible dot pattern.

            – marmot
            Dec 23 '18 at 1:47











          • copy-pasting the code into pdflatex I am getting an error: ! Undefined control sequence. l.24 tikzmarknode [pattern=flexible dots,inner sep=2pt]{test}{Hello world}

            – Lance Pollard
            Dec 23 '18 at 3:18






          • 1





            @LancePollard When was the last time you updated your TeX installation? tikzmarknode has been added only a few months to the tikzmark library. The error message seems to indicate that you are using an older version.

            – marmot
            Dec 23 '18 at 3:22



















          4














          Here is one way to do it. The TikZ pattern has been adopted from https://tex.stackexchange.com/a/323867/8650. Instead of setting up a background layer, I simply draw the node twice.



             documentclass{article}
          usepackage{xcolor}
          usepackage{tikz}
          usetikzlibrary{patterns}
          pgfdeclarepatternformonly{my dots}{pgfqpoint{-1pt}{-1pt}}{pgfqpoint{5pt}{5pt}}{pgfqpoint{2pt}{2pt}}%
          {
          pgfpathcircle{pgfqpoint{0pt}{0pt}}{.4pt}
          pgfusepath{fill}
          }
          newcommand{fade}[1]{%
          begin{tikzpicture}[anchor=base, baseline]
          node[inner sep=0, outer sep=0] (node) {#1};
          fill[pattern=my dots, pattern color=black!10] (node.south west) rectangle (node.north east);
          node[inner sep=0, outer sep=0] (node) {#1};
          end{tikzpicture}}
          begin{document}
          \
          I fade{Hello World} am a blank space.\
          I Hello World am a blank space.
          end{document}


          Dot pattern behind Hello World.






          share|improve this answer


























          • @marmots answer is better - using a tikzmarknode and applying the pattern directly to that node -you just need the lighter color.

            – hpekristiansen
            Dec 23 '18 at 2:08













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          2 Answers
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          active

          oldest

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          2 Answers
          2






          active

          oldest

          votes









          active

          oldest

          votes






          active

          oldest

          votes









          12














          Are you looking for something like this? (If yes, all I'd have to do is to introduce a slightly more flexible pattern such that things look good also with more reasonable scale factors, if no, then this may help others to understand the question better.)



          documentclass{article}
          usepackage[margin=1in]{geometry}
          usepackage{tikz}
          usetikzlibrary{fadings,patterns}
          newcommand{PlaceCharOverDots}[2][10]{%
          begin{tikzfadingfrompicture}[name=temp]
          node[transparent!20,scale=#1]
          {bfseriessffamily textcolor{white}{#2}};
          end{tikzfadingfrompicture}%
          tikz[baseline=(X.base)]{node[inner sep=0pt,outer sep=0pt,scale=#1] (X) {bfseriessffamily
          textcolor{white}{strut#2}};
          path[pattern=dots,overlay] (X.north west)
          rectangle (X.south east);%
          path[path fading=temp,fit fading=false,overlay,pattern=dots,pattern
          color=gray!20] (X.north west)
          rectangle (X.south east);}%
          }
          begin{document}
          PlaceCharOverDots{Hello world}
          end{document}


          enter image description here



          EDIT: If you only want the text being placed over dots, all one needs to do is to define a somewhat denser dot pattern and to use it as the background of a node. I recommend tikzmarknode here because it automatically detects the mode your in (math mode, font size etc.) and has other advantages, which this however does not exploit. Of course, you may adjust inner sep to your needs and/or replace it by inner xsep and inner ysep.



          documentclass{article}
          usepackage[margin=1in]{geometry}
          usepackage{tikz}
          usetikzlibrary{tikzmark,patterns}
          % based on the rings example on p. 1060 of the pgfmanual as well as
          % https://tex.stackexchange.com/a/29367/1952 for the color
          makeatletter
          pgfdeclarepatternformonly[/tikz/radius,size]{flexible dots}
          {pgfpoint{-0.5*size}{-0.5*size}}
          {pgfpoint{0.5*size}{0.5*size}}
          {pgfpoint{size}{size}}
          {
          pgfsetfillcolor{tikz@pattern@color}
          pgfpathcirclepgfpointorigin{pgfkeysvalueof{/tikz/radius}}
          pgfusepath{fill}
          }
          makeatother
          tikzset{
          radius/.initial=0.1pt,
          size/.store in=size,
          size=0.5pt,
          }
          begin{document}
          tikzmarknode[pattern=flexible dots,inner sep=2pt]{test}{Hello world}
          end{document}


          enter image description here






          share|improve this answer


























          • Pretty much, but the Hello World would just be plain black text, not a cutout of the dots. It's as if the blank is just a background made of dots, and you are typing right over it to fill in the blank.

            – Lance Pollard
            Dec 23 '18 at 1:28













          • @LancePollard I am not sure I fully understand yet but I added a proposal that among other things comes with a more flexible dot pattern.

            – marmot
            Dec 23 '18 at 1:47











          • copy-pasting the code into pdflatex I am getting an error: ! Undefined control sequence. l.24 tikzmarknode [pattern=flexible dots,inner sep=2pt]{test}{Hello world}

            – Lance Pollard
            Dec 23 '18 at 3:18






          • 1





            @LancePollard When was the last time you updated your TeX installation? tikzmarknode has been added only a few months to the tikzmark library. The error message seems to indicate that you are using an older version.

            – marmot
            Dec 23 '18 at 3:22
















          12














          Are you looking for something like this? (If yes, all I'd have to do is to introduce a slightly more flexible pattern such that things look good also with more reasonable scale factors, if no, then this may help others to understand the question better.)



          documentclass{article}
          usepackage[margin=1in]{geometry}
          usepackage{tikz}
          usetikzlibrary{fadings,patterns}
          newcommand{PlaceCharOverDots}[2][10]{%
          begin{tikzfadingfrompicture}[name=temp]
          node[transparent!20,scale=#1]
          {bfseriessffamily textcolor{white}{#2}};
          end{tikzfadingfrompicture}%
          tikz[baseline=(X.base)]{node[inner sep=0pt,outer sep=0pt,scale=#1] (X) {bfseriessffamily
          textcolor{white}{strut#2}};
          path[pattern=dots,overlay] (X.north west)
          rectangle (X.south east);%
          path[path fading=temp,fit fading=false,overlay,pattern=dots,pattern
          color=gray!20] (X.north west)
          rectangle (X.south east);}%
          }
          begin{document}
          PlaceCharOverDots{Hello world}
          end{document}


          enter image description here



          EDIT: If you only want the text being placed over dots, all one needs to do is to define a somewhat denser dot pattern and to use it as the background of a node. I recommend tikzmarknode here because it automatically detects the mode your in (math mode, font size etc.) and has other advantages, which this however does not exploit. Of course, you may adjust inner sep to your needs and/or replace it by inner xsep and inner ysep.



          documentclass{article}
          usepackage[margin=1in]{geometry}
          usepackage{tikz}
          usetikzlibrary{tikzmark,patterns}
          % based on the rings example on p. 1060 of the pgfmanual as well as
          % https://tex.stackexchange.com/a/29367/1952 for the color
          makeatletter
          pgfdeclarepatternformonly[/tikz/radius,size]{flexible dots}
          {pgfpoint{-0.5*size}{-0.5*size}}
          {pgfpoint{0.5*size}{0.5*size}}
          {pgfpoint{size}{size}}
          {
          pgfsetfillcolor{tikz@pattern@color}
          pgfpathcirclepgfpointorigin{pgfkeysvalueof{/tikz/radius}}
          pgfusepath{fill}
          }
          makeatother
          tikzset{
          radius/.initial=0.1pt,
          size/.store in=size,
          size=0.5pt,
          }
          begin{document}
          tikzmarknode[pattern=flexible dots,inner sep=2pt]{test}{Hello world}
          end{document}


          enter image description here






          share|improve this answer


























          • Pretty much, but the Hello World would just be plain black text, not a cutout of the dots. It's as if the blank is just a background made of dots, and you are typing right over it to fill in the blank.

            – Lance Pollard
            Dec 23 '18 at 1:28













          • @LancePollard I am not sure I fully understand yet but I added a proposal that among other things comes with a more flexible dot pattern.

            – marmot
            Dec 23 '18 at 1:47











          • copy-pasting the code into pdflatex I am getting an error: ! Undefined control sequence. l.24 tikzmarknode [pattern=flexible dots,inner sep=2pt]{test}{Hello world}

            – Lance Pollard
            Dec 23 '18 at 3:18






          • 1





            @LancePollard When was the last time you updated your TeX installation? tikzmarknode has been added only a few months to the tikzmark library. The error message seems to indicate that you are using an older version.

            – marmot
            Dec 23 '18 at 3:22














          12












          12








          12







          Are you looking for something like this? (If yes, all I'd have to do is to introduce a slightly more flexible pattern such that things look good also with more reasonable scale factors, if no, then this may help others to understand the question better.)



          documentclass{article}
          usepackage[margin=1in]{geometry}
          usepackage{tikz}
          usetikzlibrary{fadings,patterns}
          newcommand{PlaceCharOverDots}[2][10]{%
          begin{tikzfadingfrompicture}[name=temp]
          node[transparent!20,scale=#1]
          {bfseriessffamily textcolor{white}{#2}};
          end{tikzfadingfrompicture}%
          tikz[baseline=(X.base)]{node[inner sep=0pt,outer sep=0pt,scale=#1] (X) {bfseriessffamily
          textcolor{white}{strut#2}};
          path[pattern=dots,overlay] (X.north west)
          rectangle (X.south east);%
          path[path fading=temp,fit fading=false,overlay,pattern=dots,pattern
          color=gray!20] (X.north west)
          rectangle (X.south east);}%
          }
          begin{document}
          PlaceCharOverDots{Hello world}
          end{document}


          enter image description here



          EDIT: If you only want the text being placed over dots, all one needs to do is to define a somewhat denser dot pattern and to use it as the background of a node. I recommend tikzmarknode here because it automatically detects the mode your in (math mode, font size etc.) and has other advantages, which this however does not exploit. Of course, you may adjust inner sep to your needs and/or replace it by inner xsep and inner ysep.



          documentclass{article}
          usepackage[margin=1in]{geometry}
          usepackage{tikz}
          usetikzlibrary{tikzmark,patterns}
          % based on the rings example on p. 1060 of the pgfmanual as well as
          % https://tex.stackexchange.com/a/29367/1952 for the color
          makeatletter
          pgfdeclarepatternformonly[/tikz/radius,size]{flexible dots}
          {pgfpoint{-0.5*size}{-0.5*size}}
          {pgfpoint{0.5*size}{0.5*size}}
          {pgfpoint{size}{size}}
          {
          pgfsetfillcolor{tikz@pattern@color}
          pgfpathcirclepgfpointorigin{pgfkeysvalueof{/tikz/radius}}
          pgfusepath{fill}
          }
          makeatother
          tikzset{
          radius/.initial=0.1pt,
          size/.store in=size,
          size=0.5pt,
          }
          begin{document}
          tikzmarknode[pattern=flexible dots,inner sep=2pt]{test}{Hello world}
          end{document}


          enter image description here






          share|improve this answer















          Are you looking for something like this? (If yes, all I'd have to do is to introduce a slightly more flexible pattern such that things look good also with more reasonable scale factors, if no, then this may help others to understand the question better.)



          documentclass{article}
          usepackage[margin=1in]{geometry}
          usepackage{tikz}
          usetikzlibrary{fadings,patterns}
          newcommand{PlaceCharOverDots}[2][10]{%
          begin{tikzfadingfrompicture}[name=temp]
          node[transparent!20,scale=#1]
          {bfseriessffamily textcolor{white}{#2}};
          end{tikzfadingfrompicture}%
          tikz[baseline=(X.base)]{node[inner sep=0pt,outer sep=0pt,scale=#1] (X) {bfseriessffamily
          textcolor{white}{strut#2}};
          path[pattern=dots,overlay] (X.north west)
          rectangle (X.south east);%
          path[path fading=temp,fit fading=false,overlay,pattern=dots,pattern
          color=gray!20] (X.north west)
          rectangle (X.south east);}%
          }
          begin{document}
          PlaceCharOverDots{Hello world}
          end{document}


          enter image description here



          EDIT: If you only want the text being placed over dots, all one needs to do is to define a somewhat denser dot pattern and to use it as the background of a node. I recommend tikzmarknode here because it automatically detects the mode your in (math mode, font size etc.) and has other advantages, which this however does not exploit. Of course, you may adjust inner sep to your needs and/or replace it by inner xsep and inner ysep.



          documentclass{article}
          usepackage[margin=1in]{geometry}
          usepackage{tikz}
          usetikzlibrary{tikzmark,patterns}
          % based on the rings example on p. 1060 of the pgfmanual as well as
          % https://tex.stackexchange.com/a/29367/1952 for the color
          makeatletter
          pgfdeclarepatternformonly[/tikz/radius,size]{flexible dots}
          {pgfpoint{-0.5*size}{-0.5*size}}
          {pgfpoint{0.5*size}{0.5*size}}
          {pgfpoint{size}{size}}
          {
          pgfsetfillcolor{tikz@pattern@color}
          pgfpathcirclepgfpointorigin{pgfkeysvalueof{/tikz/radius}}
          pgfusepath{fill}
          }
          makeatother
          tikzset{
          radius/.initial=0.1pt,
          size/.store in=size,
          size=0.5pt,
          }
          begin{document}
          tikzmarknode[pattern=flexible dots,inner sep=2pt]{test}{Hello world}
          end{document}


          enter image description here







          share|improve this answer














          share|improve this answer



          share|improve this answer








          edited Dec 23 '18 at 1:47

























          answered Dec 23 '18 at 1:25









          marmotmarmot

          97.3k4112214




          97.3k4112214













          • Pretty much, but the Hello World would just be plain black text, not a cutout of the dots. It's as if the blank is just a background made of dots, and you are typing right over it to fill in the blank.

            – Lance Pollard
            Dec 23 '18 at 1:28













          • @LancePollard I am not sure I fully understand yet but I added a proposal that among other things comes with a more flexible dot pattern.

            – marmot
            Dec 23 '18 at 1:47











          • copy-pasting the code into pdflatex I am getting an error: ! Undefined control sequence. l.24 tikzmarknode [pattern=flexible dots,inner sep=2pt]{test}{Hello world}

            – Lance Pollard
            Dec 23 '18 at 3:18






          • 1





            @LancePollard When was the last time you updated your TeX installation? tikzmarknode has been added only a few months to the tikzmark library. The error message seems to indicate that you are using an older version.

            – marmot
            Dec 23 '18 at 3:22



















          • Pretty much, but the Hello World would just be plain black text, not a cutout of the dots. It's as if the blank is just a background made of dots, and you are typing right over it to fill in the blank.

            – Lance Pollard
            Dec 23 '18 at 1:28













          • @LancePollard I am not sure I fully understand yet but I added a proposal that among other things comes with a more flexible dot pattern.

            – marmot
            Dec 23 '18 at 1:47











          • copy-pasting the code into pdflatex I am getting an error: ! Undefined control sequence. l.24 tikzmarknode [pattern=flexible dots,inner sep=2pt]{test}{Hello world}

            – Lance Pollard
            Dec 23 '18 at 3:18






          • 1





            @LancePollard When was the last time you updated your TeX installation? tikzmarknode has been added only a few months to the tikzmark library. The error message seems to indicate that you are using an older version.

            – marmot
            Dec 23 '18 at 3:22

















          Pretty much, but the Hello World would just be plain black text, not a cutout of the dots. It's as if the blank is just a background made of dots, and you are typing right over it to fill in the blank.

          – Lance Pollard
          Dec 23 '18 at 1:28







          Pretty much, but the Hello World would just be plain black text, not a cutout of the dots. It's as if the blank is just a background made of dots, and you are typing right over it to fill in the blank.

          – Lance Pollard
          Dec 23 '18 at 1:28















          @LancePollard I am not sure I fully understand yet but I added a proposal that among other things comes with a more flexible dot pattern.

          – marmot
          Dec 23 '18 at 1:47





          @LancePollard I am not sure I fully understand yet but I added a proposal that among other things comes with a more flexible dot pattern.

          – marmot
          Dec 23 '18 at 1:47













          copy-pasting the code into pdflatex I am getting an error: ! Undefined control sequence. l.24 tikzmarknode [pattern=flexible dots,inner sep=2pt]{test}{Hello world}

          – Lance Pollard
          Dec 23 '18 at 3:18





          copy-pasting the code into pdflatex I am getting an error: ! Undefined control sequence. l.24 tikzmarknode [pattern=flexible dots,inner sep=2pt]{test}{Hello world}

          – Lance Pollard
          Dec 23 '18 at 3:18




          1




          1





          @LancePollard When was the last time you updated your TeX installation? tikzmarknode has been added only a few months to the tikzmark library. The error message seems to indicate that you are using an older version.

          – marmot
          Dec 23 '18 at 3:22





          @LancePollard When was the last time you updated your TeX installation? tikzmarknode has been added only a few months to the tikzmark library. The error message seems to indicate that you are using an older version.

          – marmot
          Dec 23 '18 at 3:22











          4














          Here is one way to do it. The TikZ pattern has been adopted from https://tex.stackexchange.com/a/323867/8650. Instead of setting up a background layer, I simply draw the node twice.



             documentclass{article}
          usepackage{xcolor}
          usepackage{tikz}
          usetikzlibrary{patterns}
          pgfdeclarepatternformonly{my dots}{pgfqpoint{-1pt}{-1pt}}{pgfqpoint{5pt}{5pt}}{pgfqpoint{2pt}{2pt}}%
          {
          pgfpathcircle{pgfqpoint{0pt}{0pt}}{.4pt}
          pgfusepath{fill}
          }
          newcommand{fade}[1]{%
          begin{tikzpicture}[anchor=base, baseline]
          node[inner sep=0, outer sep=0] (node) {#1};
          fill[pattern=my dots, pattern color=black!10] (node.south west) rectangle (node.north east);
          node[inner sep=0, outer sep=0] (node) {#1};
          end{tikzpicture}}
          begin{document}
          \
          I fade{Hello World} am a blank space.\
          I Hello World am a blank space.
          end{document}


          Dot pattern behind Hello World.






          share|improve this answer


























          • @marmots answer is better - using a tikzmarknode and applying the pattern directly to that node -you just need the lighter color.

            – hpekristiansen
            Dec 23 '18 at 2:08


















          4














          Here is one way to do it. The TikZ pattern has been adopted from https://tex.stackexchange.com/a/323867/8650. Instead of setting up a background layer, I simply draw the node twice.



             documentclass{article}
          usepackage{xcolor}
          usepackage{tikz}
          usetikzlibrary{patterns}
          pgfdeclarepatternformonly{my dots}{pgfqpoint{-1pt}{-1pt}}{pgfqpoint{5pt}{5pt}}{pgfqpoint{2pt}{2pt}}%
          {
          pgfpathcircle{pgfqpoint{0pt}{0pt}}{.4pt}
          pgfusepath{fill}
          }
          newcommand{fade}[1]{%
          begin{tikzpicture}[anchor=base, baseline]
          node[inner sep=0, outer sep=0] (node) {#1};
          fill[pattern=my dots, pattern color=black!10] (node.south west) rectangle (node.north east);
          node[inner sep=0, outer sep=0] (node) {#1};
          end{tikzpicture}}
          begin{document}
          \
          I fade{Hello World} am a blank space.\
          I Hello World am a blank space.
          end{document}


          Dot pattern behind Hello World.






          share|improve this answer


























          • @marmots answer is better - using a tikzmarknode and applying the pattern directly to that node -you just need the lighter color.

            – hpekristiansen
            Dec 23 '18 at 2:08
















          4












          4








          4







          Here is one way to do it. The TikZ pattern has been adopted from https://tex.stackexchange.com/a/323867/8650. Instead of setting up a background layer, I simply draw the node twice.



             documentclass{article}
          usepackage{xcolor}
          usepackage{tikz}
          usetikzlibrary{patterns}
          pgfdeclarepatternformonly{my dots}{pgfqpoint{-1pt}{-1pt}}{pgfqpoint{5pt}{5pt}}{pgfqpoint{2pt}{2pt}}%
          {
          pgfpathcircle{pgfqpoint{0pt}{0pt}}{.4pt}
          pgfusepath{fill}
          }
          newcommand{fade}[1]{%
          begin{tikzpicture}[anchor=base, baseline]
          node[inner sep=0, outer sep=0] (node) {#1};
          fill[pattern=my dots, pattern color=black!10] (node.south west) rectangle (node.north east);
          node[inner sep=0, outer sep=0] (node) {#1};
          end{tikzpicture}}
          begin{document}
          \
          I fade{Hello World} am a blank space.\
          I Hello World am a blank space.
          end{document}


          Dot pattern behind Hello World.






          share|improve this answer















          Here is one way to do it. The TikZ pattern has been adopted from https://tex.stackexchange.com/a/323867/8650. Instead of setting up a background layer, I simply draw the node twice.



             documentclass{article}
          usepackage{xcolor}
          usepackage{tikz}
          usetikzlibrary{patterns}
          pgfdeclarepatternformonly{my dots}{pgfqpoint{-1pt}{-1pt}}{pgfqpoint{5pt}{5pt}}{pgfqpoint{2pt}{2pt}}%
          {
          pgfpathcircle{pgfqpoint{0pt}{0pt}}{.4pt}
          pgfusepath{fill}
          }
          newcommand{fade}[1]{%
          begin{tikzpicture}[anchor=base, baseline]
          node[inner sep=0, outer sep=0] (node) {#1};
          fill[pattern=my dots, pattern color=black!10] (node.south west) rectangle (node.north east);
          node[inner sep=0, outer sep=0] (node) {#1};
          end{tikzpicture}}
          begin{document}
          \
          I fade{Hello World} am a blank space.\
          I Hello World am a blank space.
          end{document}


          Dot pattern behind Hello World.







          share|improve this answer














          share|improve this answer



          share|improve this answer








          edited Dec 23 '18 at 2:12

























          answered Dec 23 '18 at 2:04









          hpekristiansenhpekristiansen

          5,35362865




          5,35362865













          • @marmots answer is better - using a tikzmarknode and applying the pattern directly to that node -you just need the lighter color.

            – hpekristiansen
            Dec 23 '18 at 2:08





















          • @marmots answer is better - using a tikzmarknode and applying the pattern directly to that node -you just need the lighter color.

            – hpekristiansen
            Dec 23 '18 at 2:08



















          @marmots answer is better - using a tikzmarknode and applying the pattern directly to that node -you just need the lighter color.

          – hpekristiansen
          Dec 23 '18 at 2:08







          @marmots answer is better - using a tikzmarknode and applying the pattern directly to that node -you just need the lighter color.

          – hpekristiansen
          Dec 23 '18 at 2:08




















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