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XV 2.10 is now available for anonymous ftp on the machines 'export.lcs.mit.edu'
(in contrib/xv-2.10.tar.Z) and 'ftp.cis.upenn.edu' (in pub/xv-2.10.tar.Z).
New Features:
TIFF file i/o
PDS/VICAR file input
color gradient generation
'reload current image' on an external signal
improved 'slow24' 24-to-8 color conversion algorithm
incorporates the ppmquant 24-to-8 color conversion algorithm
displays x,y coordinates of handles in the 'graph' windows
improved GIF89 parsing
faster dithering for 1-bit B/W X displays
And of course, there's several new command line options, X resources, and more
bug fixes than I'd care to admit :-)
And no, it still doesn't display true 24-bit images on 24-bit displays. Get
back to me next year on that subject...
Brief Description:
------------------
XV is a program that displays image files in GIF87, GIF89, JPEG,
PBM/PGM/PPM, TIFF, PDS/VICAR Sun Rasterfile, and X11 Bitmap formats.
XV runs on nearly ALL X displays: 1, 2, 4, 6, 8, 16, 24, and 32-bit,
color, greyscale, and black/white.
XV displays one image at a time in an output window, or on the root
window. You can arbitrarily stretch or compress the window, and the
picture will be rescaled to fit. You can rotate the picture in
90-degree steps. You can flip the picture vertically and
horizontally. You can repeatedly 'crop' a picture (define a
rectangular 'region-of-interest' and 'throw away' the rest). You can
magnify any portion of the picture by any amount, up to the maximum
size of your screen.
XV allows you click on the picture to determine pixel RGB values and
x,y coordinates. You can perform arbitrary 'gamma correction' on the
picture both in RGB space and HSV space. You can specify the maximum
number of colors that XV should use, for some interesting visual
effects. You can have the program produce a stippled version of the
picture using black and white, or any other pair of colors.
XV can write images in a variety of formats, with many of the
modifications you may have made to the picture saved as well. You can
use XV to do format conversion. XV will also automatically uncompress
compress-ed files, as well as read files from stdin.
John Bradley University of Pennsylvania - GRASP Lab
bradley@cis.upenn.edu
March 3, 1992