Hi, all.
It has been about a month since we last updated the gtk2.8 win32 library bundle. The last refresh was for adding littlecms, if you recall. The changed libs are minor releases for cairo, glib, and gtk. I think the filechooser bugfix noted in the release notes, by itself, qualifies for an update.
The bundle can be found here: http://inkscape.modevia.com/win32libs/gtk28-060502.7z
As a reality check, I did a clean build of Inkscape which appears to work fine: http://inkscape.modevia.com/win32/Inkscape0605021530.zip
bob
The new clean bundle appears to be working OK.
Erik
----- Original Message ----- From: "Bob Jamison" <rwjj@...127...> To: inkscape-devel@lists.sourceforge.net Sent: Wednesday, May 03, 2006 9:16 AM Subject: [Inkscape-devel] New win32 gtk2.8 bundle
Hi, all.
It has been about a month since we last updated the gtk2.8 win32 library bundle. The last refresh was for adding littlecms, if you recall. The changed libs are minor releases for cairo, glib, and gtk. I think the filechooser bugfix noted in the release notes, by itself, qualifies for an update.
The bundle can be found here: http://inkscape.modevia.com/win32libs/gtk28-060502.7z
As a reality check, I did a clean build of Inkscape which appears to work fine: http://inkscape.modevia.com/win32/Inkscape0605021530.zip
bob
What is the rationale for the colour swatches? They appear roughly to follow the red/orange/yellow/green/blue/indigo/violet scheme. However, I'd like to know where the names etc come from.
The grey shades do not seem to follow the normal 10% values. I would expect nine shades between black and white rather than seven as shown. And personally I find 20% black to be more meaningful than "gainsboro" (if that is 20% black).
If someone can point me to notes I would be grateful.
I am using the win version.
thanks, Erik
On May 3, 2006, at 8:44 PM, Erik Halbert wrote:
What is the rationale for the colour swatches? They appear roughly to follow the red/orange/yellow/green/blue/indigo/violet scheme. However, I'd like to know where the names etc come from.
The grey shades do not seem to follow the normal 10% values. I would expect nine shades between black and white rather than seven as shown. And personally I find 20% black to be more meaningful than "gainsboro" (if that is 20% black).
If someone can point me to notes I would be grateful.
I am using the win version.
It depends on which swatches you're talking about. There are a few different sets.
Basically we just load up whatever 'standard' palette files are around and list them. They are plain text files with [r g b name] on each line. It's the basic format that The GIMP uses.
Historically, some come from X11 color naming.
Now, if you're specifically looking at the "SVG" set, that comes straight from the SVG 1.1 standard
participants (3)
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Bob Jamison
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Erik Halbert
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Jon A. Cruz