I've used GIMP 2.8 until 5/25/2018. I upgraded to GIMP 2.10 to try to get agile in performing simple tasks like opening images, exporting, curing selection ... But the slowness persists. Until 5/23/2018 to open an image in GIMP, export, sign image, all this was instantaneous. But, now there is a nuisance of "lag" of several seconds for each task, both in GIMP 2.8, as it continues to occur with the new version 2.10 ...
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Slowness GIMP 2.10 x WINDOWS 10 64bits
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05-27-2018, 03:18 PM
You have not been forgotten.
There are reports about Gimp 2.10 being slow. Should not happen with Gimp 2.8, that indicates a hardware issue. Do you have plenty of disk space? For Gimp 2.10 some combination of how Gimp is compiled / Windows 10 / computer hardware. There is a bug report but gets technical and now is on hold. If you want to read it https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=795880 You could try uninstalling the http://www.gimp.org version Gimp 2.10 and try the version from http://www.partha.com
05-27-2018, 09:40 PM
(05-27-2018, 03:18 PM)rich2005 Wrote: Você não foi esquecido. (05-27-2018, 09:40 PM)Maria Wrote: Another change that has bothered me is the free selection tool. I have always used a lot of free selection tool to select areas of the image for modification and in GIMP 2.8, when closing the last marking point, the area was selected and ready for modification. However, with GIMP 2.10 the selection does not occur automatically, and before effecting the modification of the demarcated area, I need to trigger the contiguous selection tool. This complicated the process and made it much more time-consuming and cumbersome ... You don't need to select another tool. You need to commit the selection, by either:
Thank you, Ofnuts.
Another difficulty of adaptation relates to the colorize function in the color menu. In GIMP 2.8 I would type a color code and it would stay alive until I changed the code. This allowed me to make tonal adjustments and observe the effect on the image until I decided on the best option. In GIMP 2.10 the color is always 40bfbf and every time I experiment with my chosen color and I want to adjust hue, I need to enter the code again ...
05-29-2018, 06:18 AM
Look at the "Presets" dropdown at the top of the Colorize dialog. Gimp saves your setting automatically there. You can also put a name on specific presets.
(05-29-2018, 06:18 AM)Ofnuts Wrote: Look at the "Presets" dropdown at the top of the Colorize dialog. Gimp saves your setting automatically there. You can also put a name on specific presets. Thank you, Ofnuts. (05-29-2018, 07:24 PM)Maria Wrote:(05-29-2018, 06:18 AM)Ofnuts Wrote: Look at the "Presets" dropdown at the top of the Colorize dialog. Gimp saves your setting automatically there. You can also put a name on specific presets. I've noticed that even after installing GIMP 2.10 I still have a '.gimp-2.8' directory in C: \ Users \ Maria \ .gimp-2.8. However, GIMP 2.10 is in C: \ Program Files \ GIMP 2. My notions of programming are quite rudimentary and fragmented, so I was in doubt about the origin of the slowness to be related to the double location of plugins ... I also read this tutorial on how to re-enable the Windows 7 Photo Viewer in Windows 10 to speed up the display of images. https://www.techtudo.com.br/dicas-e-tuto...s-10.ghtml However, when I followed the steps listed on the page, I saw that there is a value related to GIMP 2.8 in the "Value data" box. It occurred to me that maybe deleting everything with Revo and reinstalling GIMP 2.10 might solve the problem of slowness. What do you guys tell me about it?
05-29-2018, 08:14 PM
(05-29-2018, 07:24 PM)Maria Wrote: I've noticed that even after installing GIMP 2.10 I still have a '.gimp-2.8' directory in C: \ Users \ Maria \ .gimp-2.8. However, GIMP 2.10 is in C: \ Program Files \ GIMP 2. My notions of programming are quite rudimentary and fragmented, so I was in doubt about the origin of the slowness to be related to the double location of plugins ... No, Gimp 2.10 totally ignore the Gimp 2.8 directories once it is installed.
05-29-2018, 11:03 PM
(05-29-2018, 08:14 PM)Ofnuts Wrote:(05-29-2018, 07:24 PM)Maria Wrote: I've noticed that even after installing GIMP 2.10 I still have a '.gimp-2.8' directory in C: \ Users \ Maria \ .gimp-2.8. However, GIMP 2.10 is in C: \ Program Files \ GIMP 2. My notions of programming are quite rudimentary and fragmented, so I was in doubt about the origin of the slowness to be related to the double location of plugins ... Does this mean that the GIMP 2.8 directories can be removed? The GIMP 2.10 interface may be slow because Windows is trying to open images with GIMP 2.8, as the screenshot I posted shows? (05-29-2018, 11:03 PM)Maria Wrote: Does this mean that the GIMP 2.8 directories can be removed? Keep C:\Users\Maria\.gimp-2.8 you might need it in the future. The way the Windows Gimp 2.10 installer works is: 1. Gimp 2.8 is uninstalled 2. Gimp 2.10 installs in the same place C:\Program Files\GIMP 2 (what was gimp 2.8) 3. The first time Gimp 2.10 is run, a new Gimp 2.10 profile is created C:\Users\Maria\AppData\Roaming\GIMP\2.10 4. Resources (scripts / plugins /brushes etc) are copied from C:\Users\Maria\.gimp-2.8 to C:\Users\Maria\AppData\Roaming\GIMP\2.10 Possible problems for you. C:\Users\Maria\AppData is a Windows 'hidden folder' to easily use it, enable hidden folders. Do a search or see: https://www.technipages.com/show-hidden-files-windows The Gimp 2.10.2 slowness is not going to be fixed by re-enabling the old Windows viewer It is a hardware problem, probably your graphics card. As a long shot you could try an alternative version, one from http://www.partha.com If that gives no improvement, I recommend going back to Gimp 2.8.22 If you lost your gimp 2.8.22 installer get it here: https://download.gimp.org/mirror/pub/gim...-setup.exe |
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