On Tue, Jun 22, 2010 at 12:18 AM, Alexandre Prokoudine
wrote:
> On 6/22/10, Branko Vukelic wrote:
>
>>> Krita provides access to CMYK curves, but that's about it. And the
>>> only free libre tool that knows of UCR is Scribus. No free tool I know
>>> of handles GCR except Argyll.
>>
>> And I assume
On 6/22/10, Branko Vukelic wrote:
>> Krita provides access to CMYK curves, but that's about it. And the
>> only free libre tool that knows of UCR is Scribus. No free tool I know
>> of handles GCR except Argyll.
>
> And I assume Argyll will do all of above?
Argyl is a color management module with
On Mon, Jun 21, 2010 at 10:21 PM, Alexandre Prokoudine
wrote:
> On 6/22/10, Branko Vukelic wrote:
>
>>> In some cases you need direct access to curves. Besides, separate+ has
>>> neither GCR nor UCR.
>>
>> Um, good point. I keep forgetting that I mostly do content creation,
>> rather than old-scho
On 6/22/10, Branko Vukelic wrote:
>> In some cases you need direct access to curves. Besides, separate+ has
>> neither GCR nor UCR.
>
> Um, good point. I keep forgetting that I mostly do content creation,
> rather than old-school image processing. Are there any tools that
> provide those features?
On Mon, Jun 21, 2010 at 9:55 PM, Alexandre Prokoudine
wrote:
> On 6/21/10, Branko Vukelic wrote:
>
>> Do you have some valid reason why you cannot do a decent
>> job with separate+ and need direct editing capabilities in CMYK
>> mode?
>
> In some cases you need direct access to curves. Besides, se
On 6/21/10, Branko Vukelic wrote:
> Do you have some valid reason why you cannot do a decent
> job with separate+ and need direct editing capabilities in CMYK
> mode?
In some cases you need direct access to curves. Besides, separate+ has
neither GCR nor UCR.
Alexandre Prokoudine
http://libregrap
On Mon, 2010-06-21 at 20:13 +0200, Branko Vukelic wrote:
> Well, if you insist. I must ask you this: why? Forgive me if I err,
> but this sounds like one of those "You can't be a fancy designer if
> you can't do CMYK in your image editing app!" arguments. Do you have
> some valid reason why you can
On Mon, Jun 21, 2010 at 8:04 PM, John Culleton wrote:
> Yes I do DTP with TeX and Scribus. But my question is about CMYK
> on Gimp. When?
Well, if you insist. I must ask you this: why? Forgive me if I err,
but this sounds like one of those "You can't be a fancy designer if
you can't do CMYK in yo
On Monday 21 June 2010 13:12:19 Branko Vukelic wrote:
> On Mon, Jun 21, 2010 at 5:02 PM, John Culleton
> wrote:
>
> I've cut your message since it's been said over and over (and
over)
> again. Lots of people complaining. I've just two things to say to
all
> of you who do:
>
> 1. Get real.
> 2.
On Mon, Jun 21, 2010 at 5:02 PM, John Culleton wrote:
I've cut your message since it's been said over and over (and over)
again. Lots of people complaining. I've just two things to say to all
of you who do:
1. Get real.
2. DTP with open-source software: It's been done. Successfully.
Repeatedly.
On Mon, Jun 21, 2010 at 11:02:42AM -0400, John Culleton wrote:
> The developers of Gimp have never given the needs of print media
> a high priority. As a result most people in the world of print media
> don't use Gimp. The usual response from the developers of Gimp
> is that there is little dema
On Mon, Jun 21, 2010 at 7:02 PM, John Culleton wrote:
> Can't let this one go by.
Surely you could. But you just didn't :)
> The usual response from the developers of Gimp is that there is
> little demand for CMYK.
Is it usual? Really? I have never heard any GIMP developer stating that.
Alexan
On Sunday 17 January 2010 15:54:20 Robert L Cochran wrote:
> My suggestion is to use Gimp for what you need, and work with
a higher
> end camera that produces raw format images. Get Akkana
Peck's book and
> start with that. Post emails to this list when you need some
help. It
> also doesn't hurt
Programmer In Training wrote:
On 1/20/2010 12:08 PM, Martin Nordholts wrote:
But I think we need to keep the setting we have. Some people prefer it
the way you do, they want their image windows to hide docks, while
others don't want the docks to be hidden.
/ Martin
Then the old be
Programmer In Training wrote:
On 1/20/2010 9:23 AM, Claus Cyrny wrote:
Why do you need a 'Minimize' button for the toolbox? For 2.8,
there will be an optional singe-window mode available (the link
to the respective article was already posted in this thread).
Claus
The
Martin Nordholts writes:
> Ken Warner wrote:
> > Yeah, I hate that too. What's the point of having a floating window
> > if you can never bring it to the top of the stack?
>
> Edit -> Preferences -> Window Management, change the toolbox and dock
> hints to 'Normal window'
Except that you can't
On 01/20/2010 06:42 AM, Programmer In Training wrote:
>
> 2.6.8 and as far as I can tell, there is no way to revert to old behavior.
>
> This is the behavior I'm currently having to deal with.
> http://www.joseph-a-nagy-jr.us/images/screen-caps/gimp.png (458KB, don't
> ask me how it's that large)
>
Programmer In Training wrote:
> Then the old behavior from 2.4 should be made optional, or at least a
> reasonable facsimile.
Most people thinks having two different menubars in one application is
insane. The small amount of people that thinks it is a good idea will
have to maintain code for tha
On 1/20/2010 12:08 PM, Martin Nordholts wrote:
> But I think we need to keep the setting we have. Some people prefer it
> the way you do, they want their image windows to hide docks, while
> others don't want the docks to be hidden.
>
> / Martin
>
>
Then the old behavior from 2.4 should be ma
Ken Warner wrote:
> Thanks... Much better. Why didn't I think of that? Maybe because
> I didn't think there was three different kinds of windows. Do we
> really need three different kinds of windows? I'm just asking
Since we removed the menu from the toolbox for GIMP 2.6, we don't. In
git
Thanks... Much better. Why didn't I think of that? Maybe because
I didn't think there was three different kinds of windows. Do we
really need three different kinds of windows? I'm just asking
Martin Nordholts wrote:
> Ken Warner wrote:
>> Yeah, I hate that too. What's the point of having
Ken Warner wrote:
> Yeah, I hate that too. What's the point of having a floating window
> if you can never bring it to the top of the stack?
Edit -> Preferences -> Window Management, change the toolbox and dock
hints to 'Normal window'
/ Martin
--
My GIMP Blog:
http://www.chromecode.com/
Yeah, I hate that too. What's the point of having a floating window
if you can never bring it to the top of the stack?
Programmer In Training wrote:
> The toolbox should not be linked to the image editing window (especially
> when it is always on TOP of the image editing window) for starters. On
Ken Warner wrote:
> Well, I've experienced the same. When I close the tool window, GIMP
> exits. Really a pisser
This is fixed in git master and will be further polished for GIMP 2.8
/ Martin
--
My GIMP Blog:
http://www.chromecode.com/
"Best way to keep up with GIMP from git"
___
Well, I've experienced the same. When I close the tool window, GIMP
exits. Really a pisser
Alexandre Prokoudine wrote:
> On Wed, Jan 20, 2010 at 5:42 PM, Programmer In Training wrote:
>
>> 2.6.8 and as far as I can tell, there is no way to revert to old behavior.
>>
>> This is the behavior
On 1/20/2010 9:23 AM, Claus Cyrny wrote:
> Why do you need a 'Minimize' button for the toolbox? For 2.8,
> there will be an optional singe-window mode available (the link
> to the respective article was already posted in this thread).
>
> Claus
The toolbox should not be linked to the image editi
On 1/20/2010 8:46 AM, Alexandre Prokoudine wrote:
> Running GIMP on Windows and hating single-window mode is bloody unique :)
I've ran some flavor of Linux almost as long as I've run some version of
Windows.
> You are talking about different things, as a matter of fact. There is
> no way you can
Programmer In Training wrote:
On 1/20/2010 7:04 AM, David Gowers wrote:
On Wed, Jan 20, 2010 at 11:22 AM, Programmer In Training
So the next update will see the ability to revert back to the old
behavior? That will be nice. (:
What version are you using?
GIT HEAD (dd8b86785
On Wed, Jan 20, 2010 at 5:42 PM, Programmer In Training wrote:
> 2.6.8 and as far as I can tell, there is no way to revert to old behavior.
>
> This is the behavior I'm currently having to deal with.
> http://www.joseph-a-nagy-jr.us/images/screen-caps/gimp.png (458KB, don't
> ask me how it's that
On 1/20/2010 7:04 AM, David Gowers wrote:
> On Wed, Jan 20, 2010 at 11:22 AM, Programmer In Training
>> So the next update will see the ability to revert back to the old
>> behavior? That will be nice. (:
>
> What version are you using?
> GIT HEAD (dd8b867852efccc00eda94244ef1f27dc1a145b7 as of t
On Wed, Jan 20, 2010 at 11:22 AM, Programmer In Training
wrote:
> On 1/19/2010 6:43 PM, Alexandre Prokoudine wrote:
>> On 1/20/10, Programmer In Training wrote:
>>
itch I am scratching: I run Linux but hate to manage windows and/or
workspaces, and single-window mode will fix this for me.
On 1/19/2010 6:43 PM, Alexandre Prokoudine wrote:
> On 1/20/10, Programmer In Training wrote:
>
>>> itch I am scratching: I run Linux but hate to manage windows and/or
>>> workspaces, and single-window mode will fix this for me.
>>
>> I absolutely /hate/ the single window mode.
>
> You don't have
On 1/20/10, Programmer In Training wrote:
>> itch I am scratching: I run Linux but hate to manage windows and/or
>> workspaces, and single-window mode will fix this for me.
>
> I absolutely /hate/ the single window mode.
You don't have to like single image node either. It'll be optional.
Alexand
On 1/19/2010 1:12 PM, Martin Nordholts wrote:
> Michael J. Hammel wrote:
>> For example, they've
>> responded to requests for a single window mode from the Windows user
>> community by adding it to development for 2.8. We Linux users don't
>> need this so the developers are making this configurabl
Dotan Cohen wrote:
>> This is a common misconception. The single-window mode is just as much
>> for Linux users as it is for Windows users. It is in many ways my own
>> itch I am scratching: I run Linux but hate to manage windows and/or
>> workspaces, and single-window mode will fix this for me.
>>
> This is a common misconception. The single-window mode is just as much
> for Linux users as it is for Windows users. It is in many ways my own
> itch I am scratching: I run Linux but hate to manage windows and/or
> workspaces, and single-window mode will fix this for me.
>
Same with me, on Kubun
Michael J. Hammel wrote:
> For example, they've
> responded to requests for a single window mode from the Windows user
> community by adding it to development for 2.8. We Linux users don't
> need this so the developers are making this configurable.
This is a common misconception. The single-windo
Quote from Michael J. Hammel
> Your "batch processing" request, for example,
>isn't very clear. GIMP can already run in batch >mode so you'd need to
>clarify what your interpretation of batch processing should be.
I bet i may clarify what he asked
It is called macro recorder and is the equivale
On 18.01.2010 00:23, Michael J. Hammel wrote:
> That said, requests for feature enhancement belong in the bugzilla
> database which you can find linked from the
> http://developer.gimp.org/bugs.html.
No. Feature requests should always be discussed on the developer mailing
list first: http://lists
On Sun, 2010-01-17 at 13:07 -0800, Ken Warner wrote:
> I gave feedback and was told to "...put up or shut up...".
> Which indicates a really dumb developer base that doesn't want
> to hear what people really want, they only want to provide what
> they decide people need.
Actually, you posted that
On 1/18/10, Ken Warner wrote:
> I gave feedback and was told to "...put up or shut up...".
> Which indicates a really dumb developer base that ...
... you imagined yourself, because the person who said that isn't GIMP
developer.
Alexandre
___
Gimp-user
I gave feedback and was told to "...put up or shut up...".
Which indicates a really dumb developer base that doesn't want
to hear what people really want, they only want to provide what
they decide people need.
Good luck with that...
Robert L Cochran wrote:
> As another person said, if you are in
My suggestion is to use Gimp for what you need, and work with a higher
end camera that produces raw format images. Get Akkana Peck's book and
start with that. Post emails to this list when you need some help. It
also doesn't hurt to have a website where you can post your photos to.
I take techn
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