Open GoogleCodeExporter opened 9 years ago
I don't see how we could eyedrop from the whole screen in a portable way. GIMP
manages to take a screenshot of the whole screen so at least this must be
possible.
About copying from spare, well, this seems more easy. Let's think about it.
Original comment by pulkoma...@gmail.com
on 8 Nov 2009 at 8:47
[deleted comment]
About copying colors between main and spare pages: I just found the function
"Copy to
spare - some colors" that I didn't really know. You tag a few color entries in
current palette, and their RGB values are copied into the spare's palette, at
the the
same indices.
IMO this function is very awkward. A more powerful system would be to split the
current "Copy" function in Palette into Copy and Paste:
You would open palette, select a range, Copy, exit palette, switch to spare,
select a
starting color index, Paste. The buttons could even have shortcuts control-c and
control-v.
The palette screen is very cramped, I know, but I think it would be worth it.
Original comment by yrizoud
on 26 Nov 2009 at 11:26
cramping can be solved by merging some buttons and having a function on right
click
(using a white X for the X swap, X inv, etc may work).
Original comment by pulkoma...@gmail.com
on 26 Nov 2009 at 6:33
Original comment by pulkoma...@gmail.com
on 15 Jan 2010 at 7:34
Original comment by pulkoma...@gmail.com
on 9 Aug 2010 at 9:43
https://github.com/attilam/grafx2-colorpick-osx
Something similar to this could be used to grab a color from outside GrafX2. I
don't know of a command line tool to get the color of a pixel on screen,
however?
Original comment by pulkoma...@gmail.com
on 19 Oct 2012 at 4:04
If you're going to use an external application, then some possibilities open up.
That could also enable copy+paste on some platforms
(for Linux, sending the textual content you want to copy to "xclip -selection
clipboard" copies; "xclip -selection clipboard -o" sends current clipboard
content to stdout.
There's no absolute guarantee it's installed but it's a reasonable dependency
to have.)
for color picking, we could include downloading and installing
http://www.muquit.com/muquit/software/grabc/grabc.html in the Grafx2 build
process on Linux, as it's a very simple program (7k of C code in a single file,
only dependency is X). I've tested it and it changes the cursor to a crosshair,
waits for the user to click, then outputs two lines, like:
#8ae22c
138,226,44
We could automatically patch it to only output the first, since we already have
a parser for hexcodes.
For OSes other than Linux, I have no particular idea what's available. We'd
need to research whether creating a new process is expensive on any of the
platforms we need to support. (obviously it's very cheap on Linux, and probably
also OSX. I believe on older Windows platforms like win98 it's expensive.)
Original comment by 00a...@gmail.com
on 20 Oct 2012 at 1:02
For copypaste, we can add the platform-specific code inside GrafX2. I'll have a
look at xclip sourcecode to see if we can reuse (part of) it.
As for colorgrabbing, with knowledge about grabc and the osx colorpixker
script, it's now very easy to make a brush factory script.
Original comment by pulkoma...@gmail.com
on 20 Oct 2012 at 12:13
(BTW, this is 00ai99's new account)
FYI here is a color picking script for GrafX2 using grabc. Feel free to
distribute it with GrafX2 if you can make it install only on Unix systems,
since it's so simple.
I actually have two variants: Cycling and non-cycling, I've bound each to a
hotkey (F13 for cycling, Shift+F13 for non-cycling). Cycling tends to be very
useful if you are trying to pick a ramp (eg. from GPick) rather than just a
single color.
Both variants attached.
Original comment by fintic...@gmail.com
on 24 Apr 2013 at 10:16
Attachments:
Original issue reported on code.google.com by
00a...@gmail.com
on 5 Nov 2009 at 11:21