I need to have a list of all available tools/commands name in GIMP(http://www.gimp.org/) for my research project.I have googled and also checked the source code but couldn't find any file that contains all name.
Can anyone suggest how can i get that list?
Gimp tools list
Gimp commands manual
Related
I am trying to write a program that allows the user to use the mouse to select an object of a photo by clicking points around the object. My code should create a patch around the object and then copy a the enclosed region. This functionality is exactly how the Scissor Selection tool of GIMP works. I tried to download GIMP source code to see how this feature was implemented by GIMP developers. However, there are so many packages and I could not find the source files that has the code for the Scissor Selection tool (LiveWire algorithm). Does anyone know?
Found it by searching the Github repo for "livewire":
https://github.com/GNOME/gimp/blob/b3d2324527d9b805fa88dd2c8184030eaf4ac4bf/app/tools/gimpiscissorstool.c
I am going to work with fiji (Fiji is imageJ). For that I want to learn the package IJ. I have searched a lot but I am not getting the whole document (same as JAVADOC) and its very difficult to search for each method.(I already have source of ImageJ). If any one know the link from where IJ package document can be found.
The javadoc for the ij.IJ class is here.
In addition, http://javadoc.imagej.net/ provides links to the javadocs of all ImageJ-related projects.
I've written an ePub generator by using ZipArchive in .NET and looking at the spec (in Wikipedia) & a example.
It doesn't work! But I only get a generic error so I'm unable to fix anything from here.
Where could I go to upload my ePub and be told what is wrong with it? Or is there a tool that is better for it? I'm currently using Adobe ePub reader...
I realize this is an old question, but in case others come across this I wanted to contribute. The IDPF which is responsible for the ePub standard has a tool for checking ePubs called epubcheck. It can be found at https://github.com/IDPF/epubcheck.
In addition, they have their own online validator that uses epubcheck. It is located at http://validator.idpf.org/
I found an online validator tool at http://www.epubconversion.com/ePub-validator-iBook.jsp.
There are two basic black box approaches.
First: Generate a file and put it into a validator.
Second: Take a set of in- and output without using your code (other generator, example, do it manual). Then use a file comparison tool (maybe extract zip first).
Here is a good offline checking tool for Windows, Mac or Linux OS:
http://www.pagina-online.de/produkte/epub-checker/
It's a great tool which even i used to validate and generate epub files also clearly give errors if any.
With issues gathering on bitbucket, I'd like to have a way to gather and back them up in the event that I need an offline copy, or no longer use Bitbucket, or something else. The site doesn't offer this service. Is there an alternative mechanism I can use?
From now on you can Import/Export your Issues:
Goto: -> Administration -> Import/Export
Youtube-Video: Bitbucket Issue Export
You can get your issues via the Bitbucket API.
Here is an example URL to get the issues for one of my projects:
https://api.bitbucket.org/1.0/repositories/christianspecht/bitbucket-backup/issues/
However, this returns a list of the issues in JSON format.
I doubt that you can do anything useful with a list of issues in JSON, but I don't know if there's a better file format for issues.
I just asked exactly that here on StackOverflow, because I'm dealing with the same thing at the moment:
Is there a standard file format for exporting issues from an issue tracker?
Full disclosure I am the author of Issue2Markdown because I really needed it.
As mentioned previously you can export your issues from Bitbucket project by going to Settings->Issues->Import & Export and then downloading the resultant ZIP file.
Inside that ZIP file, you will find JSON file and attachments archive. You can import those into some other issue repository. Or if you are like me you may be working with a remote team that is reluctant to use an issue tracker and would like to be able to read a human-readable version of the issues.
That is where Issue2Markdown comes in. You can use that to render your issues as a single Markdown document. You can find pre-built binaries for Linux, Windows, and MacOS under releases.
I hope that helps the next person who could not find the solution.
There doesn't currently appear to be any way to export your issues :(
You could export issues from settings in the repository. Then download the and extract the zip file, that would give you a json that you just could parse any way you prefer
I wrote a small python script to convert issues json file to excel that you can find it here. Hope it gives you some ideas:
https://github.com/anath2/bitbucket-issues-to-excel
Is there a indexing plugin for GDS that allows for source code search? I see some for specific types (Java, C++, ...) and one for "any text". These are nice, but I would like one that allows for many/configurable extensions (HTML, CSS, JS, VB, C#, Java, Python, ...). A huge bonus would be to allow for syntax highlighting (http://pygments.org/) in the cache.
I just found Dropout and it seems to work great. Put Dropout in any folder and it will index all files in that folder. I put it in my Projects folder and it crawled all my code. Very fast and flexible search. Dropout
You could use OpenGrok or some other code-specific search engine instead.
I wrote a quick review of some of them some time ago.
It has been a long time, but the last time I tried to use Google Desktop Search for searching code, I found it quite inappropriate for that task, as I outlined at [http://perlmonks.org/?node_id=490310], the gist of which is that GDS (silently) only indexed a tiny fraction of many source code files (and made it quite a challenge to figure out why searching so often failed to find so much of what was in source code files).
I found Copernic Desktop Search worked better on code files (but I also had trouble with later versions of it being buggy in not finding all matches so I've been staying with version 2.1.1). But these days I don't use it much (mostly because I don't have permission to install such things on the laptop provided by my new employer).
You can try out Larry's Any Text File Indexer. You can specify a list of extensions at install time and it will do full text search on those file types.
Im just giving this a go:
http://desktop.google.com/plugins/i/java.html?hl=en
..also you can search for things in your Java tree using the following syntax in Google Desktop:
<YOUR SEARCH> filetype:java under:"C:\hft\trunk"
..where I keep my code in "C:\hft\trunk"
This is not a Google Desktop plugin, but works for what we need.
We have started using http://svnquery.tigris.org/ and it seems to work and is very fast. I wish it supported multiple repositories per site. We have a repository per project, so currently I have to create a virtual directory for each project we have. Not a show stopper, just something we need to automate in our project setup script.