On Fri, 13 Apr 2001 16:06:22 +0100, David Kirkby [EMAIL PROTECTED] said:
Hi, I'm trying to do something with Gimp that is perhaps a little
unusual. This is causing me a problem, but I'd like to know if it
can be overcome easily. I'm using Gimp 1.2.0 on a Sun SPARCstation
with Solaris 8.
I
On Fri, 13 Apr 2001, David Kirkby wrote:
I appreciate this is more aesthetically pleasing, but Gimp's
interpolating colours is causing me a problem. Is there any obvious way
to stop colour interpolation ?
yup!
dialogs-pallete edit-new
then choose only the colors you want and
Thanks, but I need to write the image in 24 bit mode, as the software
only reads 24-bit mode image - they are the easiest to read, so I only
implemented them.
There is also the possibility that I could want more than 256 colours. I
just need them to be what I want, without Gimp's interpolation.
Hi,
David Kirkby [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
I would like to create a bitmap (.BMP) with Gimp that can be read by a
scientific application I have written. This application looks for
specific colours such as red (0xff), black (0x00), white
(0xff) and green (0x0x00ff00).
I need
If
you are stroking the selection, use the Pencil to
stroke.
Sven,
Can you actually do this? If so, how?
Seth
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Hi,
Seth Burgess [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
If
you are stroking the selection, use the Pencil to
stroke.
Sven,
Can you actually do this? If so, how?
You can. Just make the Pencil the active tool before
stroking. The active paint tool is always used for stroking.
Only if there's