> On Sun, Jan 22, 2017 at 05:03:36AM +, Ian Munsie wrote:
> On Thu, Dec 29, 2016 at 11:35 AM Roger <[1]rogerx@gmail.com> wrote:
>
> >Back in 2006 someone made a port of Gqview to windows. It died pretty
> quickly.
> >Was this because:
> >
> ...
> >c) Windows users
On Thu, Dec 29, 2016 at 11:35 AM Roger wrote:
> >Back in 2006 someone made a port of Gqview to windows. It died pretty
> quickly.
> >Was this because:
> >
> ...
> >c) Windows users are happy with what they have, and would not bother
> >with Geeqie
>
> My bets are on option
On Thu, Dec 29, 2016 at 3:26 AM, Ian Zimmerman wrote:
> While I also much prefer Geeqie to stay just a viewer, plus maybe a kind
> of "shell" for editors [1], I disagree that Linux lacks lightweight
> viewers. feh is currently my other favorite.
>
> [1]
> On this topic, would
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Hi,
Am Do den 29. Dez 2016 um 3:10 schrieb Josef Kufner:
> Ian Zimmerman wrote, on 29.12.2016 02:26:
> > On this topic, would it be interesting to create pipelines for editors,
> > rather than just invoking them 1 by 1? For example, we could make
On 30/12/16 00:02, Alexander Antimonov wrote:
>
> I take "jpeg comment" issues: #381, #286.
>
In the Help files - in sections Overlay Screen Display and Lua
Extensions - one of the examples explains how to get the jpeg comments
into the Overlay Screen Display using a Lua script.
Of course you
On Wed, Dec 28, 2016 at 12:27 AM, Alexander Antimonov
wrote:
> On Tue, Dec 27, 2016 at 7:16 PM, Omari Stephens wrote:
>> On 12/26/2016 10:37 PM, Alexander Antimonov wrote:
>>> Is there any plan, enhancement list, users' whishlist?
>>
>> There
On Thu, Dec 29, 2016 at 4:10 AM, Josef Kufner wrote:
> ...
> I think there is a better way, but it would be a bit more complicated
> to implement. I wonder if it is a bit too complex for a simple
> use-cases. It is called "block programming". It is quite an old idea:
> ...
>
Ian Zimmerman wrote, on 29.12.2016 02:26:
> On this topic, would it be interesting to create pipelines for editors,
> rather than just invoking them 1 by 1? For example, we could make it
> possible to create a pipeline where an intricate batch imagemagick
> command is called on the current image,
On 2016-12-28 19:35, Roger wrote:
> Linux is a different story, as most easy image viewers are heavy on
> system resources or (more currently) depend upon clunky and heavy
> resource usage Python scripting. For those of us that are a little
> more computer literate, ImageMagick display does just
>Back in 2006 someone made a port of Gqview to windows. It died pretty quickly.
>Was this because:
>
>a) GTK's cross platform capability is a bit of a fiction
>
>b) Gqview/Geeqie was too complex to port successfully
>
>c) Windows users are happy with what they have, and would not bother
>with
On 24/12/16 15:39, Alexander Antimonov wrote:
> While porting to C++1x it is good chance to make Geeqie more
> cross-platform. But it seems Gtk is becoming (has become) an auxiliary
> tool for the "GnomeOS". And some of the well-known projects was/is
> migrating from Gtk. Maybe we should consider
On Tue, Dec 27, 2016 at 7:16 PM, Omari Stephens wrote:
> On 12/26/2016 10:37 PM, Alexander Antimonov wrote:
>> Is there any plan, enhancement list, users' whishlist?
>
> There is a bug list, which does have some feature requests as well:
>
On 12/26/2016 10:37 PM, Alexander Antimonov wrote:
> On Sun, Dec 25, 2016 at 6:28 PM, Klaus Ethgen wrote:
>> I for myself have technical reasons why I dislike C++. And I also have
> Could you, please, provide a list of your dislikes of C++?
>
>> concerns about
On Sun, Dec 25, 2016 at 6:28 PM, Klaus Ethgen wrote:
> I for myself have technical reasons why I dislike C++. And I also have
Could you, please, provide a list of your dislikes of C++?
> concerns about maintainability. Many times the encapsulating breaks
> necessary
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Hi,
Am Sa den 24. Dez 2016 um 18:18 schrieb Alexander Antimonov:
> > - Introduce new bugs (because big rewrites always do)
> Sure, but with C++ port we can also simplify code, and less code - less bugs.
> Now considerable part of Geeqie's code is
On 12/24/2016 05:18 PM, Alexander Antimonov wrote:
>> We should have a good expectation of improving life for our users ...
> Users are important, but with such move we could improve developers'
> life at least.
More to the point, code that is easier maintain benefits developers as
well as users.
> We should have a good expectation of improving life for our users ...
Users are important, but with such move we could improve developers'
life at least.
> - Introduce new bugs (because big rewrites always do)
Sure, but with C++ port we can also simplify code, and less code - less bugs.
Now
Is there a case for what users will get if we make these changes? We
should have a good expectation of improving life for our users or something
similarly worthy if we were to undertake the risk of such a project.
The following user effects come to mind, and they aren't overly positive:
-
Hi,
I could take part in porting Geeqie to C++1x if it is decided to do so.
I've been using different kinds of C++ (98/2003/201x) for more than 10
years. I believe the fundamental thing why C++ is better than C is C++
destructor and all the automatic actions that can be taken in it. It
is very
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Hi Omari,
Am Fr den 23. Dez 2016 um 21:42 schrieb Omari Stephens:
> It is at least hypothetically possible to port Geeqie to C++11 / GtkMM.
>
> Ignoring the inevitable ridiculous mountain of work that it would take,
> does the end state seem like
On 2016-12-23 20:42, Omari Stephens wrote:
> It is at least hypothetically possible to port Geeqie to C++11 / GtkMM.
[...snip...]
> Thoughts?
libstdc++ ABI compatibility problems?
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It is at least hypothetically possible to port Geeqie to C++11 / GtkMM.
Ignoring the inevitable ridiculous mountain of work that it would take,
does the end state seem like a good idea?
Personally, I only knew C89 and small quantities of C++98 until I
started using C++11 for work earlier this
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