Catherine Jones wrote:
> gimp -i -b '( ...)' -b '(gimp-quit 0)'
>
> always does the same thing (assuming the same variable inputs).
Of course it would. You are starting a fresh copy of GIMP each time. If you
want to change the seed each time you start GIMP, add '(srand (realtime))'
before you
Hello,
When I use the "rand" function in a script-fu script that I run
non-interactively from the command line, I get the exact same result
every time. In other words, the command
gimp -i -b '( ...)' -b '(gimp-quit 0)'
always does the same thing (assuming the same variable inputs).
This is no
Looking through the examples I noticed that B and G had a colour cast
similar to the colour produced by the filter on colour negatives. Some
months ago I spent some time turning colour negatives into a digital
form and then processing them in GIMP. Having got the original RAW
images I had a look to