Open Photon89 opened 4 years ago
This is definitely a very interesting idea. Due to the fact that this will cause a lot of work i cannot promise anything by now.
Thanks to AndrewLuecke for this great idea and Vadim for reporting it to GScrot.
Launchpad Details: #LPC Mario Kemper (Romario) - 2008-12-05 08:49:14 +0000
First step is done. The new drawing tool is implemented and by now it is possible to get a multi-layered screenshot manually.
1) minimize all windows and do a full screen screenshot 2) make a screenshot from every single window 3) open full screen image with the embedded drawing tool and import all other screenshots from sesssion
There is still plenty of work to do here: 1) Make it possible to make a screenshot of all open windows 2) open drawing tool automatically after taking all screenshots and integrate all image at the right places
--- tasks above should be easy
3) How do we save the multi-layered screenshot? We should reuse and support an existing format => gimp?
Launchpad Details: #LPC Mario Kemper (Romario) - 2008-12-21 22:42:58 +0000
gif, png, and xcf support make sense.
gif - make a changing gif with a user-set timeframe period, png just overlay them all, and xcf save as layers
Launchpad Details: #LPC Vadim Peretokin - 2008-12-22 02:42:49 +0000
Wonderful Idea. Use TIFF or xcf.
Launchpad Details: #LPC Samuel Gyger - 2009-01-28 13:31:07 +0000
By the way: For MAC OS is an app available which creates screenshots with multiple layers: 'Scrennshot PSD'. On the site is also a sample scrennshot available: http://txtlabs.com/
Launchpad Details: #LPC Miguel - 2012-02-25 14:52:49 +0000
Another interesting idea off Brainstorm: http://brainstorm.ubuntu.com/idea/15796/
Description Traditionally, Screenshots have been "flat" and are composed of only one layer (the visible layer). If a window is below another, you cannot see it, or parts of it, because all the layers are flattened into what you see.
I'd like a way to have a multi-layer image file, where a photo is taken of every window and placed on different layers, so you can see see the content of every window open simply by hiding/moving layers around in the photo (more of a 3D screenshot).
For graphics artists, journalists and reviewers, it means they can make small edits to the screenshots (moving windows around even after the photo is taken before it is finalised). Just like it was a real desktop!
The good:
Other considerations:
Launchpad Details: #LP301672 Vadim Peretokin - 2008-11-24 13:44:45 +0000