2009/1/23 Wayne Watson <sierra_mtnv...@sbcglobal.net>: > Continuing. The code that is eventually used to do the save is: > =================== > def SaveGIF(self): > if self.current_path: > default_path = splitext(basename(self.current_path))[0] + ".gif" > path = asksaveasfilename(defaultextension=".gif", > title="Save as GIF", > initialfile=default_path, > filetypes=GIF_FILE_TYPES) > else: > path = asksaveasfilename(defaultextension=".gif", > title="Save as GIF", > filetypes=GIF_FILE_TYPES): > if not path: > return > gif = self.current_image.convert("RGB") > gif.save(path) > ================== > > I would think convert makes the conversion. If so, then it must know a lot > of formats. How do I know which ones it has available? If it has a small > set, is there some way to find another "convert" that produces, say, a 'pcx" > formated file. > > Apparently, "RGB" and "GIF" mean the same thing. Seems a bit odd.
Well, "RGB" stands for "Red Green Blue". I'm not much of a graphics format guy, but I think it means basically a bitmap, where each pixel has an associated tuple (red, green, blue) containing the proportion of each (on a range from 0..255). (as opposed to vector formats like EPS, or layered formats that programs like photoshop use) It is possible that the save() function inspects the file name extension and produces output appropriately. At any rate, your question seems more to do with the image library you are using, and nothing at all to do with tkFileDialog.asksaveasformat. It's probably PIL -- the Python Image Library. See the documentation here: http://www.pythonware.com/library/pil/handbook/index.htm -- John. _______________________________________________ Tutor maillist - Tutor@python.org http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/tutor