I suggest rebooting. I have a similar model of Canon BubbleJet. It goofs off
like that all the time. I think that it forgets that it's recieving an image,
and defaults to printing text. Try canceling the print job and re-sending it.
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> Sorry to bother the list with this -
The GIF format seems to use RLE compression. In other words, try selecting "no
dithering" when converting from RGB mode. The more dithered an image is, the
less it compresses. Sure it will be ugly, but that's the price you pay for
making a smaller file. Also try lowering the number of colors in th
Try putting them all in separate layers in one image file, then using
Scale Image. If Scale Image only does one layer, try Filters->Filter All
Layers and use Scale Image from there.
You could write a script to put all of the images into one file for you.
If you are using GIMP for Windows, I woul
If you compile a C program that references it, the datas will be biult
into the program. When compiled, the datas form a bitmap image.
Andrea wrote:
> Can someone explain to me te meaning of the datas in the header file
> when I save a file as header C
>
>
>
> Thanks to all
>
___
Note: These directions work in GIMP 1.2.0 for
Windows. It should work for Linux versions, but you may have to slightly vary
them because of different versions. (I do have Linux, but I've been downloading
an upgrade, and I need to get a USB hub to get my mouse working.)
Anyway, here's how: (
Menu-->Image-->Colors-->Invert on 1.1.24 and 1.2 (at least...)
- Original Message -
From: "Jim M." <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Tuesday, September 18, 2001 11:49 AM
Subject: [Gimp-user] Q: invert colors in image
> Hi,
> After capture and before print, how do i inver