KuickShow is an image browser/viewer with a nice filebrowser to select
images to be shown, slideshow support and the ability to display the
following image formats: jpg, gif, tiff, png, bmp, psd, xpm, xbm, pbm
and eim.
--
The GLE Tubing and Extrusion Library is a graphics application
programming interface (API). The library consists of a number of
"C" language subroutines for drawing tubing and extrusions. It is
a very fast implementation of these shapes, outperforming all other
implementations, most by orders of magnitude. The library is
distributed in source code form, in a package that includes
documentation, a VRML proposal, Makefiles, and full source code and
header files. It uses the OpenGL (TM) programming API to perform
the actual drawing of the tubing and extrusions.
GLE is designed for and maintained on the Linux operating system,
and is known to run on other Unix operating systems such as AIX,
IRIX, Ultrix and HPUX with OpenGL or Mesa. GLE is also known to run
on IBM OS/2 Warp, Apple Macintosh OS9, and Microsoft Windows NT and
has been used to develop screen-savers for some of these popular
PC operating systems.
WWW: http://www.linas.org/gle/
--
The OpenGL Utility Toolkit, a window system independent toolkit for
writing OpenGL programs. It implements a simple windowing application
programming interface (API) for OpenGL. GLUT is designed for
constructing small to medium sized OpenGL programs. While GLUT is
well-suited to learning OpenGL and developing simple OpenGL
applications, GLUT is not a full-featured toolkit so large applications
requiring sophisticated user interfaces are better off using native
window system toolkits like Motif.
WWW: http://reality.sgi.com/opengl/glut3/glut3.html
Submitted by Dan Weeks <danimal@danimal.org>
studio, Blender has proven to be an extremely fast and versatile
design instrument. The software has a personal touch, offering a
unique approach to the world of Three Dimensions. Use Blender to
create TV commercials, to make technical visualizations, business
graphics, to do some morphing, or design user interfaces. You can
easy build and manage complex environments. The renderer is versatile
and extremely fast. All basic animation principles (curves & keys)
are well implemented.
http://www.blender.nl/
This is a program for representing sounds visually. It goes beyond
the usual oscilliscope style program by combining an FFT and stereo
positioning information to give a two dimensional display. Some of the
shapes I have observed are:
* Drums: clouds of color, fairly high
* Clean guitar: several horizontal lines, low down
* Rough guitar: a cloud, low down
* Trumpet: Lots of horizontal lines everywhere
* Flute: A single horizontal line, low down
* Voice: A vertical line with some internal structure
* Synthesizer: All kinds of weird shapes!
Port submitted by Sebastian Stark <seb@todesplanet.de>
---
The Python Imaging Library (PIL) adds image processing
capabilities to your Python interpreter. This library
supports many file formats, and provides powerful image
processing and graphics capabilities.
- Do not depend on libgif - there are bugs which cause Imager to
crash or behave strangely after reading or writing gif images.
Assume that we do not want to link with gif to avoid port
interactiveness in the "libs" flavor.
---
This module defines RGB values for common color names. The intention
is to (1) provide a common module that authors can use with other
modules to specify colors; and (2) free module authors from having
to "re-invent the wheel" whenever they decide to give the users the
option of specifying a color by name rather than RGB value.
Rolled the following into the stable release:
--
(from dia CVS)
1.35 hallon "2000-11-29 Fredrik Hallenberg <hallon@lysator.liu.se>
* app/load_save.c (diagram_data_save):
avoid using obsoleted libxml calls (only matters
when compiling with libxml2)"
--
- allow for any version of NetPBM and Transfig to be installed.
- mirror the ImageMagick distfile locally since the author doesn't seem to
understand the concept of using version numbers on software.
Submitted by Shell Hung <i@shellhung.org>
--
This Perl extension allows you to extract meta information from
various types of image files. It currently supports JPEG, GIF, PNG
and more image types.
Imager is a perl module for creating and manipulating 24 bit
images. Examples of what can be done with it can be seen at:
http://www.eecs.umich.edu/~addi/perl/Imager/best.html
Flavors:
libs - build with t1, freetype, png, gif, jpeg, tiff
graphic libraries
--
The libmng library supports decoding, displaying, encoding, and various
other manipulations of Multiple-image Network Graphics (MNG) image files.
It uses the zlib compression library, and optionally the JPEG library
and/or lcms (little CMS), a color-management library.
* Fixed gifview bug: If every frame in an animation had a small or
zero delay, then gifview would previously enter a infinite loop and
become noninteractive.
Submitted by Peter Stromberg <home@wilfried.net>.
It's a dock-app that can show you a photo and execute a command
related to that photo. You can have many photos.
Submitted by Peter Stromberg <home@wilfried.net>.
wmGrabImage is a WindowMaker DockApp that maintains a small thumbnail copy of
your favorite image from the WWW.
- bump NEED_vERSION
- add a patch to correct example in man page, update the version
number (author left it at 0.54 by mistake), and fix typos
- take MAINTAINER
Author hasnt updated ChangeLog or README, but confirmed by email
that this is a bug-fix release for the legend rendering on line
charts.
FlashLib (libflash) distribution.
You can use it to quickly play movies without starting Netscape.
It can also play movies on root window (suitable for xscreensaver).
MAINTAINER= Peter Valchev <pvalchev@toxiclinux.org>
the following: a basic data structure to provide reference-counted images,
functions to load images synchronously from disk or progressively from
arbitrary data buffers, and convenience functions to transform pixbufs
and render them to drawables.
From: Tom Knienieder <tom@knienieder.com>
Released under the GPL licence, it comes with the full
C-source code of the library, a flexible command-line utility and a
neat graphical front-end using the Gtk+ toolkit. The supported
formats are:
Acr/Nema 2.0, Analyze (SPM), DICOM 3.0, Ecat/Matrix 6.4,
InterFile3.3 and Gif87a/89a.
The program also allows to read unsupported files without
compression, to print pixel values or to extract/reorder specified
images. It is possible to retrieve the raw binary/ascii image arrays or
to write annimated GIFs for desktop applications. The library could be
used as a framework for your own image formats.
From: Tom Knienieder <tom@knienieder.com>
the following: a basic data structure to provide reference-counted images,
functions to load images synchronously from disk or progressively from
arbitrary data buffers, and convenience functions to transform pixbufs
and render them to drawables.
From: Tom Knienieder <tom@knienieder.com>
-----------------------> tgif-4.1.39 => tgif-4.1.40 <-----------------------
1) Fix a crashing bug in Specify An Arc when the input is something like
"0.9,-,10,20". Thanks to Adrian Bridgett <adrian.bridgett@iname.com>
and Jano van Hemert <jvhemert@cs.leidenuniv.nl> for pointing out the
problem.
2) Fix a uninitialized variable bug. This causes crashes sometimes when
running tgif with -print -xbm commandline options. Thanks to
Alexander Tenbusch <alexander.tenbusch@masch-bau.uni-magdeburg.de>
for pointing out the problem.
3) Fix a bug with exporting landscape TiffEPSI files. Thanks to Geert Carron
<gca@adc-itcl.ce.philips.com> for pointing out the bug.
4) Fix a bug with displaying text objects when Color Layers are used and
some colors are turned off. Thanks to Johan Vromans
<jvromans@squirrel.nl> for pointing out the bug.
5) Add scroll support for mouse wheel. By default, mouse wheel up is mapped
to Button4 and mouse wheel down is mapped to Button5. A new X default,
Tgif.EnableMouseWheel, is added so that this can be turned off. Some
mouse wheel can generate Button2 events, and this may interfere with
scrolling; therefore, another X default, Tgif.Btn2PopupMainMenu, is added
so that Button2 events will not popup the Main Menu in the canvas window.
Thanks to Juha Takala <juha.takala@vtt.fi> for providing the information.
6) New Tgif.tmpl-cgywin file. Thanks to Simon Moore
<Simon.Moore@cl.cam.ac.uk> for providing it.
7) New Tgif.tmpl-uw7 file. Thanks to Ron Record <rr@sco.com> for providing it.
8) Add a new X default, Tgif.DeleteCmdAsCut so that <Cntrl>x can be used
Cut selected objects. (Pressing the <DEL> key on the keyboard will still
perform a regular Delete in this case.)
gimp's library search order, causing it to match older installed
libs instead of the libs just built. This can cause build failures
when the libs change. OK espie@
unnecessary. Imlib will use it anyway if it's installed without needing to
be recompiled.
- disable the dynamic loader support, it is quite problematic.