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GIMP Detailed Information

GIMP is a cross-platform image manipulation program, which stands for GNU Image Manipulation Program, and includes almost all the functions needed for image manipulation. GIMP is a cross-platform image manipulation program (GNU Image Manipulation Program), which includes almost all the functions needed for image manipulation, and is known as the PhotoShop for Linux. GIMP has gained a lot of popularity among graphic enthusiasts when it was launched on the Linux system, and its interface is quite lightweight, but its functionality is no less than that of a professional graphic softwares; it provides a variety of image manipulation tools, filters, and a lot of component modules, which can be useful for making a cool and dazzling web button or website logo. Web buttons or Web site Logo is a very convenient and useful drawing software, because it also provides a number of component modules, you just need to modify it a little bit, you can create a Web page buttons or Web site Logo belongs to you.

Basic Introduction Chinese name :GNU Image Manipulation Program Foreign name :GNU Image Manipulation Program ( GIMP) Overview :Cross-platform Image Manipulation Program Original Author :Peter Mattis, Spencer and Kimball Features :Can use most of the Photoshop plug-ins Supported Languages :Multi-language(23 kinds, 2017-08-24) Supported Platforms :Windows, Linux, Mac OS X, Android History,Features,Add-ons,History Versions,Tips,History GIMP original authors Peter Mattis, SpencerKimball announce the birth of GIMP version 0.54: GIMP was born out of one of the projects in the dreaded cs164 (compiler) class that required a lot of work, it was an early morning and we were in the midst of a lack of We were tired from the lack of sleep and the extreme pressure of compiling a compiler in LISP, which had long since exceeded the limits of our patience, but we had to endure it. Then it happened. When LISP couldn't allocate 17 MB for the one interpreter ya needed to generate for a simple syntax, the usual bad core dump occurred. an unbelievable moment came, everyone was disgusted, and we stopped the project. We had to write something... Anything useful, in C, that didn't rely on Nested Lists to represent bitmaps. Thus, GIMP was born. Like a phoenix from the ashes of LISP and ya, GIMP was born. Ideas came and went, we made up our minds, and GIMP began to take shape. An image processing program that everyone ****ed; a program that would at least make commercial software not the only choice under "Windoze" or "Macintory"; a program that would provide features not found in other X drawing and imaging tools; a program that would help keep UNCITRAL's image processing system in the forefront of the world's most important languages, and that would help keep UNCITRAL's image processing system in the forefront of the world's most important languages. A program that would provide features not found in other X drawing and graphic tools; a program that would help maintain the long tradition of near-perfect and free applications for UNIX. Six months later, it was in early beta. We decided to release it at this time, started working on compatibility issues and cross-platform stability, and felt that the program was now ready to be used by interested programmers who wanted to join in developing plug-ins and support for different file formats. Version 0.54 was released in February 1992 and made a big impact as the first truly professional free image processing software, and it was also the first free software that could compete with the big commercial image processing programs. Version 0.54 is a beta version, but it is stable enough for you to use it in your daily work. Nevertheless, one of the biggest drawbacks of version 0.54 is that its toolkit (sliders, dialogs, etc.) is based on a commercial toolkit, Motif. This is a big problem for Linux-like systems, because if you want to use the faster dynamically linked Gimp, you have to buy Motif, which you probably can't afford. When version 0.60 was released in July 1996, it had been under development for four months under S and P (Spencer and Peter). The main advances were its toolkits, GTK (GIMP Toolkit) and gdk (GIMP Drawing Kit), which solved the reliance on Motif. For graphic artists, version 0.60 includes a full complement of features such as: basic layers; enhanced paint tools (half-pixel sampling, brush space); a better airbrush; paint modes; and more. However, version 0.60 is a developer's release and is not intended for widespread use. It serves as a workbench for 0.99 and eventually 1.0, allowing features and enhancements to be tested, discarded, and changed. You can think of 0.60 as an alpha version of 0.99. In February 1997, 0.99 was released. Along with the other developers, S and P made several improvements to the GIMP and added more features, the main changes being the new API and PDB, which made it possible to write plug-ins; Script-Fu (or macros) to automate steps that would normally be done manually; and GTK/gdk, now called GTK+ after a change. In addition, 0.99 made it possible to open very large files in the GIMP (reading a 100 MB image is not a problem) using the new tile-based memory handling. 0.99 also introduced a new internal file format for the GIMP, XCF. The new API made it very easy to write extensions and plug-ins for the GIMP. Many new plug-ins and extensions were added to make the GIMP even more useful (e.g., SANE, which allows scanning directly into the GIMP). In the summer of 1997, the GIMP went to version 0.99.10, and S and P had to stop most of their support as they graduated and started working. Nevertheless, the other Gimp developers, under the direction of Federico Mna, continued on and prepared for their golden moment. In September 1997, GTK+ was separated from GIMP. GTK+ was considered an excellent toolkit and was used by other developers to write their own applications. The GIMP entered a feature freeze in October 1997. That is, the GIMP core library of functions and programs is no longer accepting new features. GUM version 0.5 was also released earlier in October. Development work continued on stabilizing the GIMP and making final preparations for version 1.0. GIMP 1.0 was finally released on June 5, 1998, and GIMP announced to the world that it was stable enough for professional use. GIMP 1.0 slowly evolved into the very stable and widely used version 1.2. Three years later, as the GIMP developers approached the next stable release, they weighed the changes to the program's internal basics and felt that the program was ready to be called version 2.0, and GIMP 2.0.0 was finally released on May 23rd, 2004, with a new version of GIMP 2.2 being released. For GIMP 2.2, the developers' goal was to add some important features in a short cycle that did not require changes to the lowest level of code that could lead to instability.GIMP 2.2.0 was released on December 19, 2004. WINE) A wide variety of tools including brushes, pencils, sprays, clones, etc. and the ability to customize brushes, modes, etc. Variation tools including rotate, scale, slice, and flip Use sub-pixel sampling on all drawing tools for high quality antialiasing Open Source The GIMP is released under the GPL and is free to download and use. GIMP is released under the GPL and is free to download and use. Cross-platform You can install GIMP under Linux, BSD, Windows, but as a Linux source, you will get better user experience under linux. Plugin Preview We provide plugin authors with a standard preview component that greatly reduces the amount of code needed to support previews. David Odin has integrated this component into all current filters, so that the many filters in the GIMP include previews that can be updated in real time, and these previews behave in a more uniform way. Real-time previews of transform operations Now when the transform tools (cut, zoom, perspective and rotate) are in "traditional" mode, they can show a real-time preview of the result of the operation. Previously, this was only shown when transforming gridlines. Following the GNOME HMI Manual A lot of work has been done to simplify the GIMP interface and make it more usable for newcomers. Most of the dialogs follow the GNOME HIG as closely as possible, and many of the "advanced" options in the dialogs have been split or removed and replaced with sensible defaults or hidden in extensions. Basic Vector Support The GIMP now supports the basic functionality of vector layers using the GFig plugin, which supports a number of vector graphic features such as gradient fills, Bezier curves, and curve outlining. It is also the easiest way to create regular or irregular polygons in GIMP. In GIMP 2.2 you can create GFig layers and then edit them in GFig. However, compared to specialized vector graphics programs such as Inkscape, this vector support is quite simple. GIMP And then there are... There are many more features that a relatively small user might find useful. Here is a short list of some of them. The GIMP can now be made to run in batch mode without the need for an X server. Includes a GIMP binary file (gimp-console) that is not linked to GTK+ at all. Enhanced interface for extended input devices. Editable toolbox: You can now choose which tools will be displayed in the toolbox and in which order. In particular, you can add any or all of the color tools to the toolbox if you wish. Histograms: You can see the R, G and B histograms overlaid on the luminance histogram. The histogram is calculated based on the content of the selection. Shortcuts are now *** shared in all GIMP windows. Selection tools include Rectangle, Ellipse, Free, Blur, Bézier curve and Smart Scissors GIMP Unlimited number of images open at a time, cancel and repeat multiple times while editing (limited only by disk space size) Layers, channels, full Alpha color support Supported file formats include GIF, JPEG, PNG, XPM, TIFF, TGA, MPEG, PSD, PDF, PCX, BMP, etc., can be converted to these formats, support for SVG import and export through external programs (such as Script-Fu) to invoke the internal commands of the GIMP can be extended through the plug-ins, there are more than 100 plug-ins available to choose from frame as a layer to handle, support for MNG through the GAP. Handle frames as layers, support MNG, navigate frames etc. via GAP packages Interoperability and standards support You can drag and drop or paste copies of image data in the GIMP and other programs that support image/PNG access (currently only Abiword is known) and image/xml+svg access (currently only Inkscape is known). data. This way you can copy and paste curves from Inkscape into GIMP and then drag a selection into Abiword to insert it into your document. Patterns can be in any format supported by GtkPixbuf, including png, jpeg, xbm and others. GIMP can load gradients from SVG files and color swatches from ACT and RIFF files. Drag and drop support has been extended. You can now drag and drop archives and URIs into the image viewport and they will be opened as a new layer on the existing image. Shortcut Editor You can now edit your shortcuts in a dedicated dialog, while continuing to use the little-known Dynamic Shortcuts feature (which has existed since version 1.2). Add-ons GIMP plug-ins for brushes/palettes/gradients (gimp-data-extras) GIMP plug-ins for GREYC Magic Image Converter (gimp-gmic) GIMP plug-ins for printing (gimp-gutenprint) Optional extensions to GIMP (gimp-plugin-registry) User space virtual archive (gimp-plugin-registry) registry) User-space-virtual-filesystem-backends (gvfs-backends) Command-line tools for additional data for XCF archives (xcftools) Dynamic map creation plug-in (gimp-gap) Drost effect creation plug-in (mathmap) Version history Version Minor releases Release date & Updates 0.x 0.54-0.99.31 February 15, 1996: ? 1.0.x 1.0.0-1.0.3 June 5, 1998: ? 1.2.x 1.2.0-1.2.5 December 25, 2000: UI improvements, bug fixes 2.0.x 2.0.0-2.0.6 March 23, 2004: Many new tool options, GIMP now using GTK+ 2.x Many new tool options, GIMP now using GTK+ 2.x graphical toolkit, not GTK+ 1.x. Tabs and Docks system introduced. Script-fu scripting support improved greatly. CMYK color 2.2.x 2.2.0-2.2.17 December 19, 2004: New plug-in support, keyboard shortcut editor, preview translation tool. Support for the new GIMP hardware controller. Improved Drag/drop and copy/pasteGIMP to other applications 2.4.x 2.4.0-2.4.7 October 24, 2007: Support for color management, extensible brushes, new and rewritten selection tools and comprehensive user interface (new icon theme). Added support for file formats. Full screen editing and new crop tool. Improved interface for external device input. 2.6.x 2.6.0 October 1, 2008: GEGL, first generation of UI design 2.6.1 October 9, 2008: Bug fixes, updated translations. Added "One Window Gimp" option. 2.6.2 October 30, 2008: Bug fixes, updated translation. 2.6.3 November 22, 2008: Bug fix, updated translation. 2.6.4 January 1, 2009: bug fixed, translation updated. 2.6.5 February 2, 2009: bug fixes, updated translation. 2.6.6 March 17, 2009: Bug fixes, updated translation. 2.6.6 March 17, 2009: Bug fixes, updated translation. 2.6.7 August 14, 2009: bug fixes, updated translations 2.8.0 May 14, 2012 Major highlights include: long-awaited single-window mode Ability to combine layers Improvements to the text tool New slider widget The core GEGl library is almost complete 2.10.0 April 27, 2018: image processing is almost completely ported to GEGL, allowing for high bit-depth processing, multi-execution threads and hardware-accelerated pixel processing, among other things. Color management is now a core feature, and most widgets and preview areas are color managed. Many improved tools are available, as well as some new and exciting tools such as the Warp Transform, Unify Transform and Handle Transform tools. Canvas preview on all filters ported to GEGL. Improved digital painting with canvas rotation and flipping, symmetrical painting, MyPaint brush support... Support for some new image formats added (OpenExr, RGBE, WebP, HGT), as well as improved support for many existing formats (especially more robust PSD import). Metadata viewing and editing for EXIF, XMP, IPTC and DICOM. Basic HIDPI support: automatic or user-selected icon sizes. New themes for GIMP (Light, Gray, Dark and System) and new symbolic icons meant to darken the environment and shift the focus to the content (pre-themes and colored icons), but still available in Preferences. Details Version: 2.6.11ubuntu6 (gimp) License: Open Source Update: Cononical provides a critical update to the GIMP image editor through October 2012. GIMP 2.1. What's New in GIMP 2.2 Here is a brief summary of some of the most important features of GIMP 2.2. The more minor changes that many long-time users will find and applaud (or complain about), as well as the important changes regarding plug-in programming and Script-Fu creation, are not included here. On August 25, 2012, GIMP 2.8.2 was released, which focuses on fixing a few minor bugs. Tips and Tricks GTK+ 2.4 Integration Menus use GtkUIManager to dynamically generate menu structures from XML data archives. A revamped file selector is used everywhere in the GIMP to open and save files. Its biggest advantage is that it lets you generate a series of "bookmarks" so you can quickly and easily navigate between frequently used directories. The GIMP now supports fancy ARGB cursors (when they are available on the system).