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Are there Gimp-based sweatshops? |
Posted by: Ofnuts - 11-10-2016, 10:53 PM - Forum: Watercooler
- Replies (4)
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It never ceases to amaze me that my most downloaded (and by a huge margin) script (outside the path ones) is ofn-file-next. 20-30 downloads a week and counting. And the only use of the script is processing manually long sequences of images. WTF are so many people doing with it?
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Earning money with Gimp |
Posted by: Espermaschine - 11-09-2016, 12:39 AM - Forum: Watercooler
- Replies (6)
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So i was thinking about selling stuff for Gimp and Inkscape in the future.
Do you think it is against the spirit of open source programs and the Gimp community ?
I was thinking about special tutorials, including gradients, brushes, vector elements, etc.
Of course all stuff i made myself.
Chris Hildenbrand from 2dgameartguru.com seems to have some success with it considerig the feedback he gets.
I have donated a few bucks here and there for people like him and i think its fair to give something back for all the free stuff he is sharing.
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Seeking suggestions for ofn-path-edits |
Posted by: Ofnuts - 11-07-2016, 10:35 PM - Forum: Extending the GIMP
- Replies (10)
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I'm considering repackaging together a bunch of small scripts that perform rather simple operations on paths: delete strokes, decompose the path, splice strokes, etc... to make a simple path edition toolbox.
The goal is to include simple editing steps
- that don't require dialog input
- that perform tasks that are either impossible to do by hand and that can do them significantly faster (cut-off point would be 3-4 clicks without a script)
Candidates so far:
- delete strokes: delete strokes with an end in the selection.
- extract strokes: keep strokes with an end in the selection.
- reverse strokes: swap stroke end to end (no visible result but often useful).
- splice strokes: connect together strokes with end points sufficiently close.
- cut strokes: cut strokes on the anchor point in selection (this is the opposite of the "splice" above, a stroke with thee anchors will produce two strokes of two anchors, where two anchors will coincide)
- intersect strokes: cut and splice two strokes where they intersect. The $64K question is to have a good criterion to determine which of the 4 angles to keep.
- decompose strokes: decomposes a path into its individual strokes. Unlike the rest this one would create additional paths.
- summary: show a summary of the path information (to check that what you got is actually what you see).
A question is whether a new path is generated each time or if the user will duplicate paths explicitly when needed.
Comments? Suggestions? Additions?
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Making a perspective grid |
Posted by: Espermaschine - 11-07-2016, 09:46 PM - Forum: General questions
- Replies (13)
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Coming from this thread:
http://www.gimp-forum.net/Thread-80ies-c...435#pid435
There are several problems with making a perspective grid:
1. for a real perspective you'd have to set up a horizonline and a vanishing point, right ?
2. Also for a real perspective grid, the horizontal lines would need to get closer, the more distant they are.
The perspective tool in Gimp is not a real perspective tool. It doesnt follow any perspective rules, unlike Inkscape's perspective extension or LPE.
Gimp's perspective tool is just a sort of free transform.
So lets say we throw that out of the window and make a fake perspective grid instead.
Im using a 640x400px canvas and with ofnuts' Path-grid plug-in, i set up a grid 36x36px.
I also set up guides around the edges of my canvas, and at 50% horizontally.
Heres the first problem:
i cant put guides outside the canvas, which i need as guidance and for snapping. If i want to stretch out the grid at the bottom, i have to extend the canvassize.
The perspective tool doesnt seem to give me any help with the coordinates.
So im setting up two additional guides 200px away from the edges of my original canvas after i extended my canvas.
Next problem: when i use the perspective tool in path mode, its applied to the whole canvas.
Im fixing that by alpha selecting my original canvas size.
After i applied the fake perspective to my path grid, i stroke the path on a new transparent layer.
Comments ?
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python plug-ins for paths |
Posted by: Espermaschine - 11-06-2016, 02:44 AM - Forum: Other graphics software
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Can python plug-ins that work with paths in Gimp, be modified so that they work in Inkscape, or is that a complete different approach to writing code ?
Im asking because trandoduction wrote the 'Select Area Between Paths' plug-in and it would be great to have something like this as an extension for Inkscape.
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Guides do not stay as placed |
Posted by: Yash Pal - 11-05-2016, 02:54 PM - Forum: General questions
- Replies (2)
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When I try to place the vertical guides (the ones I move from left hand ruler), they disappear as soon as I let go of the move tool. Earlier it was the horizontal guides which were playing this trick.
I have seen edit> preferences but could not make out what adjustments are wrong.
Can someone help me please to restore guides.
I almost always uncheck 'snap to guides' under 'view' when I try to place guides.
OS Ubuntu 14.04; GIMP - the version available in software centre (no addl plugins, plugouts)
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