Mercurial > emacs
changeset 109865:131c45ff9c34
documented some more
author | Joakim <joakim@localhost.localdomain> |
---|---|
date | Mon, 21 Jun 2010 20:19:25 +0200 |
parents | 458fda2a5cff |
children | 73512e4aa257 |
files | README.imagemagick |
diffstat | 1 files changed, 23 insertions(+), 3 deletions(-) [+] |
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--- a/README.imagemagick Thu Jun 17 09:44:04 2010 +0200 +++ b/README.imagemagick Mon Jun 21 20:19:25 2010 +0200 @@ -13,6 +13,24 @@ ./configure --with-imagemagick +* TODO + +- image-type-header-regexps priorities the jpeg loader over the +imagemagick one. This is not wrong, but how should a user go about +prefering the imagemagick loader? The user might like zooming etc in +jpegs. + +- For some reason its unbearably slow to look at a page in a large + image bundle using the :index feature. The imagemagick "display" + command is also a bit slow, but nowhere near as slow as the emacs + code. It seems imagemagick tries to unpack every page when loading + the bundle. This feature is not the primary usecase for the + imagemagick patch though. + +- zooming the image like what is done for fonts in face-remap.el would + be a useful and demo friendly addition. + +- figure out what to do with the experimental features noted below. * TODO #B _ complete documentation drafts below @@ -102,15 +120,17 @@ The image-metadata function can be used to retrieve the total number of images in an image bundle. This is simmilar to how GIF files work. +* experimental + - :crop is used to specify a croping area: (width height x y). This is similar to the slice image specification, but has a different purpose. :crop removes the croped areas from memory, so its memory efficient if you only need to view a certain part of the image. The slice specification can be used to pick diferent parts of the same -image, so its more disk and display efficient. +image, so its more disk and display efficient. :crop works well, but +it would still be better to find a way to have :splice do the same +thing. - -* experimental - :geometry takes a geometry string as defined by ImageMagick: scale%