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In article <[email protected]>, [email protected] (Kouhia Juhana) writes: |
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>In article <[email protected]> |
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>[email protected] writes: |
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>>In article <[email protected]>, [email protected] (Kouhia |
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>>Juhana) writes: |
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>>>I wrote something about making color modifications quickly |
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>>>with 8bit quantized images and only at the saving the image to file |
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>>>process we have to make the modifications to the 24bit image. |
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>>>This makes sense, because the main use of XV is only viewing images. |
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>>>Doing many changes to image, we should keep all modifications |
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>>>in a buffer; and then before making the operations to 24bit image, |
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>>>we should simplify the operation list for unnecessary operations. |
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>>Think about what you are saying here. The 24 bit image is quantised down to 8 |
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>>bits so many 'similar' colours are mapped onto a single palette colour. This |
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>>colour gets modified in fairly arbitrary ways. You then want to apply these |
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>>modifications back to the 24 bit file, so you have to find which |
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>>colours mapped to this one palette colour. |
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>I suppose you don't know what about we have discussed. |
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>We discussed about error(s) in XV 2.21 which shows images only as 8bit, |
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>and my suggestion above works perfectly with it. |
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Look be consistent. First you post something that seems to suggest that you see |
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xv being an 8 bit program as some sort of error. |
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So I post and asy it is not a bug, it is meant to be like that. |
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So you post and say it is not a bug, you never said it was, I have misunderstood |
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etc. |
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Now you are saying: |
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>We discussed about error(s) in XV 2.21 which shows images only as 8bit, |
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If you would make up your mind what you are claiming it would make the |
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discussion a *lot* easier. |
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>So far I have seen a colormap editing window in XV -- that is, there |
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>must be a colormap anyway. The problems you present are exist anyway, |
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>and I didn't tried to solve them at all, because I would not make such |
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>problems to my programs in the first place. |
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Eh? Sorry, I don't understand what you are saying here. I am aware that English is |
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not your native language and have tried hard to fathom your meaning, but this |
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paragraph defeats me. |
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>Gamma and color corrections are easily done to 24bit image |
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>as I presented. There's no need make tricks from 8bit/quantized image |
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>back to 24 bit image. |
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Yes *as I originally said*, global changes are easily possible. |
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But this statement contradicts what you said earlier: |
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>>>I wrote something about making color modifications quickly |
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>>>with 8bit quantized images and only at the saving the image to file |
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>>>process we have to make the modifications to the 24bit image. |
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>>>>How would you suggest doing colour editing on a 24 bit file? How |
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>>>>would you group 'related' colours to edit them together? Only global |
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>>>>changes could be done unless the software were very different and |
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>>>>much more complicated. |
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>Ok, you're writing about situation that user want edit images as 24bit |
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>and user want edit individual colors -- your questions, by the way, |
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>jumps off the discussion a bit. |
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No I don't think so actually. |
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You were talking about loading a 24 bit image into xv (by quantising), |
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manipulating the colours in the colour editor, then somewhow applying these |
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changes to the 24 bit file when you exit xv. Xv lets you edit individual |
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colours. Where is this sudden jumping off the topic? |
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>My solution doesn't work, because there's no colormap withing real 24bit |
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>image |
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Yes I am aware there is no colourmap in a 24 bit file!! |
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>-- you see, user see 24bit image; going back to 8bit is silly. |
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I do not understand what this statement is supposed to mean. |
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>About changing individual colors in 8bit/quantized/rasterized image: |
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>changing individual colors in colormap is useless in most |
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>cases if the image is quantized and rasterized -- small change may |
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>make serious errors to anywhere in the image. |
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What are you saying |
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>XV allows this feature, but I don't recommend to use it with the |
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>mentioned type images. |
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Ah! now we see thew problem! First you want to extend xv to allow editing of 8 |
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bit previews of 24 bit images. Then I point out problems with this. Now you are |
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saying there is no problem because you, personally, happen not to use those |
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parts of the program that cause the problem!! |
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>Moreover, XV is not a paint program; you can only make those global |
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>changes. |
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Not sure what you are saying here. Certainly one can make local changes. |
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>In full 24bit XV, changing individual colors sounds like |
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>paint program job. |
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>If person have 8bit screen, there's need for tricks to get the |
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>original 24bit image modified. Because user don't see full 24bit |
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>image, there's need to make approximations and it is not possible to |
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>modify individual colors but individual pixels or pixel groups (if |
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>image is rasterized). To select indiavidual color, there could be 7x7 |
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>cursor window which shows true color image in cursor window area -- |
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>selecting individual color is possible from that. |
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Yes that is one possible approach. I would find a program that took such an |
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approach clumsy, however. |
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>Ok, I don't have thought very much 24bit painting programs, never seen |
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>such in good view and are not planned to make such. Not to mention |
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>24bit painting program in 8bit screen... |
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Well here we agree - you have not thought it through very much. You don't seem |
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to have a consistent point to make and contradict yourself from one post to the |
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next. OK, we all have off days - perhaps you should step back and think this one |
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through. |
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>>Yes again. What *is* (was?) wrong with xv? |
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>It saved 8bit/quantized/rasterized images as 24bit jpegs; jpeg is not |
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>designed for that. |
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As I said in the last post, JPEG is a compression algorithm. It is a way of |
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saving disk space by trading off quality against compression. I fail to see what |
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the problem is. You have not proposed any workable alternatives. |
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>Also, human expect that 24bit will be saved as 24bit image; |
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Speak for yourself. You are the *only* person I have met or spoken to who, |
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having quantised a 24 bit image down to 8 bits, expects this process to somehow |
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reverse when the file is saved; keeping all modificvations that heve been made |
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to the 8 bit image palette. |
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Perhaps that is why you yused the singular? |
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>say, |
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>person would like to crop part of the image and save it, then it is |
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>expected that the image still is the same. |
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Look, next time you import a 24 bit image into xv look carefully at the main |
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control panel - it tells you how many colours have been allocated to the 8 bit |
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image. XV makes it abundantly clear that you are not editing the original 24 bit |
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file. You are the *only* person who claims this is confusing. |
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>So, XV were designed |
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>without thinking about human interface and how human expect the |
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>program work -- design error. |
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Is a design error the same as a bug? ;-) |
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Read my lips. XV is a program for viewing and modifying 8 bit images. It lets |
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you import other images. It shows, I would say, a good deal of thought about the |
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human interface. And everyone else seems to use it happily for the purpose it |
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was designed for. It makes no false claims. |
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>I have heard XV were designed first for 8bit images/files, but |
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>it were not good idea to take full 24bit images without making |
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>major change to the original design. |
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If you would come up with a solid, logical, well argued and lucid description of |
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precisely how these proposed extensions would work, feel free to post them. So |
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far, you have not done so. |
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>So, even all screen images are 8bit, the processed images and saved |
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>images could have been 24bit very easily, instead of 8bit. |
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Argh!! After all this, a comment like that. `Very easily'. OK, go ahead and code it |
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if it is so easy. |
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Or alternatively, look up the terms `import' and 'non-reversible transformation'. |
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>Before anybody will make a note: yes, I may as well make a lift where |
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>'up' means that the lift goes down and 'down' means that the lift goes |
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>up, and put a note on this design solution to the manuals -- however, |
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>even the manuals tells the correct situation, it doesn't solve the problem. |
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>(Americans: the lift is just an example :) |
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I think this is a bit of an exageration. |
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What you are actually saying is, you got into a lift (elevator, if you are in |
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the states ;-) ) and mistakenly pressed the down button to go up. Everyone else |
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had no problem. Now you are trying to sue the manufacturer... |
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>Well, my text may be a bit hard reading, |
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you bet |
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>hopefully you suggeeded to |
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>read it. |
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Mostly. Leaving aside the language issue however, it betrays some very wooly |
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thinking (as you yourself admit) which is the same in any language. Go think |
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some more. |
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Chris Lilley |
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Technical Author, ITTI Computer Graphics and Visualisation Training Project |
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Computer Graphics Unit, Manchester Computing Centre, Oxford Road, |
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Manchester, UK. M13 9PL Internet: [email protected] |
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Voice: +44 (0)61 275 6045 Fax: +44 (0)61 275 6040 Janet: [email protected] |
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