This is an idea that I think would be very nice to have in GIMP. It
would probably take a bit of programming, and I can't do that unfortunately.
Definitions:
I'm not sure of the proper terms, so I will define what I mean:
Controller - A source of data that is used to modify an attribute of the
Hi Bill,
Le 05.01.2008 17:04:35, William Skaggs a écrit :
From: Jean-Luc Coulon (f5ibh) [EMAIL PROTECTED]
- I've loaded a tif file (43M)
- called Colors - Curves
- got a SIGSEGV
You can expect some instability for a while, because of the
introduction of gegl into the tools. It probably
Mark Lowry skrev:
Attached is a link to a screen capture showing the
same image opened in Windows Picture and Fax
viewer
and in GIMP 2.4. As you can see, the GIMP version
(no
editing performed) has a haze compared to the WPF
viewer version.
The reason I asked is that my goal when
post-processing is to end up with a print that looks
like my screen. When I print from Windows Picture
Fax Viewer, it looks like what I see on the screen. I
assumed that printing from GIMP would give you a print
that looked like the image that is open in
Mark Lowry vabijou at yahoo.com writes:
Two questions:
1. Shouldn't Try to use be unchecked by default
at installation? This would prevent some confusion,
at least it would have for me.
GIMP aims to be a respectable high-end graphic editor and as such should
support color management
Hi,
On Sun, 2008-01-06 at 15:15 +, Michael Grosberg wrote:
GIMP aims to be a respectable high-end graphic editor and as such should
support color management by default. The problem you encountered is the same
problem many first-time users of Photoshop encounter. Actually, Photoshop
users
On Sunday 06 January 2008 11:52:49 Mark Lowry wrote:
The reason I asked is that my goal when
post-processing is to end up with a print that looks
like my screen.
This is one goal that users should be able to achieve. But I would take it
even farther by saying I want what is on my screen to