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- Graphic Workshop
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-
- If you like this program, please:
-
- Send us $40.00, the normal user fee for Graphic Workshop.
-
- Registered users of Graphic Workshop are entitled to phone support,
- notification of upgrades and good karma. When you register it,
- we'll send you a copy of the latest version. Please tell us the
- version number of your copy of Graphic Workshop when you register. Our
- address can be found in the Registration section of this
- document.
-
- NOTE: You can register Graphic Workshop with a Visa card by
- calling 1-800-263-1138 (toll free) from the United States or
- 1-416-729-4969 from other places. (The area code for Alchemy
- Mindworks' non-800 numbers will change from 416 to 905 after
- October 4, 1993.)
-
- NOTE: British users of Graphic Workshop should contact our UK
- distributor, The Public Domain & Shareware Library Ltd.,
- Winscombe House, Beacon Road, Crowborough, Sussex, TN6 1UL,
- England, telephone 0892 663298, FAX 0892 667473, BBS 0892 661149.
-
- NOTE: Danish users of Graphic Workshop should contact Prof
- Shareware, Benloese Skel 4 G, DK 4100, Ringsted, Denmark.
-
- NOTE: French users of Graphic Workshop should contact our French
- distributor, DP Tool Club, 102 rue des fusilles, 59650 Villeneuve
- d'Ascq, France, telephone (33) 20 56 55 33, fax (33) 20 56 55 25.
-
- NOTE: German users of Graphic Workshop should contact our German
- distributor, PD-SERVICE-LAGE, Postfach 1743, D-4937 Lage, West
- Germany.
-
- NOTE: We now have a bulletin board system. See the section on
- contacting Alchemy Mindworks for more information.
-
-
- WARNING: Do not use earlier versions of GWS.RES with this version
- of Graphic Workshop.
-
-
- CONTENTS
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-
- Introduction
-
- Hardware and Software
-
- File Formats
- Macpaint
- GEM/IMG
- PC Paintbrush PCX
- CompuServe GIF
- TIFF
- WordPerfect Graphics WPG
- Deluxe Paint/Amiga IFF/LBM
- PC Paint Pictor PIC
- Truevision Targa
- Windows 3 BMP
- Microsoft Paint MSP
- Encapsulated PostScript EPS
- Self-displaying EXE pictures
- Text files
- Halo CUT
- Windows 3 RLE
- PFS:First Publisher Art files
-
- 24-bit files
-
- Using the Main Menu
- Help
- Control keys
- Viewing and colour adjustment
- Printing
- Conversion
- Dithering
- Getting file information
- Cropping
- Reversing
- Transforming
- Special effects
- Scanning
-
- Configuration
- Runtime editing
- Screen driver selection
- Printer driver selection
-
- DesqView, QEMM and Other Environments
-
- Script Language
-
- Ventura Tricks
-
- Corel Draw Tricks
-
- A Word About Memory
-
- A Word About Mice
-
- If you Encounter a Problem
-
- Contacting Alchemy Mindworks Inc.
-
- Shareware Registration
-
- Bundling Graphic Workshop
-
- Source Code and Books
-
- Graphic Workshop Accessory Disk
-
- Shareware Distributors
-
- Revision History
-
- Legal Dogma
-
-
- INTRODUCTION
- ▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀
- Graphic Workshop is a program for working with bitmapped graphic files. It
- will handle most of the popular formats, as listed in the
- contents section of this document.
-
- Graphic Workshop is a simple, menu driven environment which will
- let you perform the following operations on the aforementioned
- files.
-
- - View them.
- - Convert between any two formats (with a few restrictions).
- - Print them to any LaserJet Plus compatible or PostScript laser
- and many dot matrix printers. Graphic Workshop can print colour
- pictures to colour PostScript and inkjet printers.
- - Dither and threshold the colour ones to black and white.
- - Reverse them.
- - Rotate and flip them.
- - Scale them.
- - Reduce the number of colours in them and do colour dithering.
- - Sharpen, soften and otherwise wreak special effects on them.
- - Crop them down to smaller files
- - Scan in completely new files, assuming that you have a
- supported scanner.
- - Adjust the brightness, contrast and colour balance of the
- colour ones.
-
- Using Graphic Workshop, you can have your image files in the
- formats that your software recognizes, all without keeping track
- of numerous funky utilities. In addition, using the halftoning
- and dithering facilities of Graphic Workshop, you can convert
- full colour digitized photographs for use as superb black and
- white clip art, suitable for inclusion in your documents.
-
- Graphic Workshop will handle image files of any size. It will use
- extended or expanded memory if you have some, and disk space if
- you don't. It has a fast and easily understood user interface.
- Hopefully, it lacks even the merest vestiges of bugs... a likely
- story, but we hope so.
-
- Graphic Workshop will work with a Microsoft-compatible mouse if you
- have a suitable mouse driver loaded in your system prior to
- running GWS.EXE.
-
- Graphic Workshop will drive all of the popular display cards. A
- complete discussion of display cards can be found later in this
- document.
-
- As it comes out of the box... or out of the ZIP...
- Graphic Workshop is configured like as follows. If you want to
- change some of these parameters, see the installation section of
- this document.
-
- - It attempts to autodetect the display card type.
- - It uses virtual memory.
- - It uses colour text.
- - It prints titles on its hard copy.
- - It uses the commonly required file format defaults.
-
-
- HARDWARE AND SOFTWARE
- ▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀
- Graphic Workshop will run on any PC compatible system with at
- least 384 kilobytes of memory. We strongly recommend that you
- have at least 640 kilobytes. A few megabytes of extended or
- expanded memory will make Graphic Workshop a lot faster and more
- useful if you'll be working with large files.
-
- In the absence of extra memory, a lot of free hard drive space
- will help.
-
- Graphic Workshop can drive most graphics cards. A more complete
- discussion of graphics cards can be found later in this document.
- If you have a CGA, EGA, stock VGA or Hercules card in your
- system, Graphic Workshop will probably be able to detect it and
- set itself up accordingly. If you have a super-VGA card in your
- system, Graphic Workshop must be configured to use it. If you do
- not do this, it will default to treating it as a stock VGA card.
-
- Configuration is discussed in detail later in this document.
-
- Graphic Workshop will run under DOS 2.0 or better. We recommend
- that you use at least DOS 3.3. You will need a suitable expanded
- or extended memory driver in your system for Graphic Workshop to
- recognize your extra memory.
-
- You should have received the following files in the
- Graphic Workshop package:
-
- - GWS.EXE - The Graphic Workshop program itself.
- - GWS.RES - The Graphic Workshop resource file.
- - GWS.DOC - Yes, you're reading it now.
- - GWSHELP.RES - The on line help resource.
- - GWSDRV.RES - All the super-VGA screen drivers.
- - GWSPDR.RES - All the dot matrix printer drivers.
- - GWSSCN.RES - All the scanner drivers.
- - GWSINSTL.EXE - The Graphic Workshop configuration utility.
- - EXAMPLE1.BMP - A monochrome picture file.
- - EXAMPLE2.GIF - A sixteen-colour picture file.
- - EXAMPLE3.GIF - A 256-colour picture file.
- - VGACARD.COM - A tool to help select a screen driver.
- - VGACARD.DOC - Read this before you use VGACARD.COM.
-
- There is no EXAMPLE4, a 24-bit picture file, as the smallest one
- we could find ran to over 400 kilobytes. There are several 24-bit
- files on our bulletin board, should you want one to look at.
-
-
- FILE FORMATS
- ▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀
- Graphic Workshop works exclusively with bitmapped image files.
- This is as opposed to vector or line art files. Vector files
- include DXF, GEM, CDR, Harvard Graphics, Lotus PIC and CGM files,
- among others. Graphic Workshop does not support vector files, nor
- is it likely to in the immediate future.
-
- In most cases, the specifications for image files are pretty
- standardized, and Graphic Workshop will reliably import image
- files in its supported formats without difficulty. There are a
- few exceptions to this, as will be discussed in detail throughout
- this section.
-
- Each of the formats listed here also includes the maximum number
- of bits of colour the format will support. You can work out the
- number of colours this represents as 2 to the power of the number
- of bits. Hence, an eight-bit file has 2^^8 possible colours, or
- 256. Twenty-four bit files have essentially an infinite number of
- possible colours.
-
-
- MACPAINT FILES - MAXIMUM BITS: 1
- ───────────────────────────────────────
- These can come in two flavours. The most common one is straight
- ported MacPaint files, that is, files having the "MacBinary"
- header. The other is "headerless" files, these being the ones
- used with PFS:First Publisher. Graphic Workshop reads both types,
- but if you convert a file from a different format to MacPaint
- format the file will be written in accordance with the setting of
- the MacBinary header field in GWSINSTL. You can override this
- with the appropriate command line switches.
-
- Files converted to the MacPaint format from other formats will be
- cropped or padded out as necessary to fit in the MacPaint
- format's 576 by 720 format. Only monochrome files can be
- converted to MacPaint files, since MacPaint in a monochrome-only
- format.
-
-
- GEM/IMG FILES - MAXIMUM BITS: 24
- ───────────────────────────────────────
- There are actually quite a few variations on IMG files... they
- handle monochrome and grey level images. The primary application
- for IMG files is as the bitmapped image file format of Ventura
- Publisher. Graphic Workshop supports files with up to 256 levels
- of grey and 24-bit colour IMG files. Note that 24-bit IMG files
- are only read and written by Ventura Publisher version 4.0 or
- better.
-
-
- PCX FILES - MAXIMUM BITS: 24
- ───────────────────────────────────
- These are the files used to hold images for Z-Soft's PC
- Paintbrush package. These can range from monochrome to 24-bit
- images. All the various formats are supported by
- Graphic Workshop.
-
- Note that some FAX boards which export PCX files do so in a
- peculiar way... they include one fewer lines of image data than
- the files purport to contain. Graphic Workshop regards these as being
- corrupted files. If you encounter these files, the PCXPATCH
- utility available on the Graphic Workshop accessory disk,
- discussed elsewhere in this document, will fix the problem.
-
-
- GIF FILES - MAXIMUM BITS: 8
- ──────────────────────────────────
- These can range from monochrome to 256-colour images in any size
- you can find 'em. Graphic Workshop supports both the 87a and 89a
- versions of the GIF standard. It will read the first image of GIF
- files having multiple images.
-
- The Details function of the Get Info box will display the entire
- structure of a GIF file. Many newer GIF files contain text
- information along with their images.
-
- By default Graphic Workshop writes GIF 89a files. If you require
- GIF 87a files, use the /G87 command line switch.
-
-
- TIFF FILES - MAXIMUM BITS: 24
- ────────────────────────────────────
- The TIFF options in Graphic Workshop can get a bit involved. The
- TIFF format offers lots of options to make it applicable to a
- wide variety of applications... which entails a certain amount of
- confusion, as well. Registered users of Graphic Workshop are
- welcome to contact us for help in unraveling the TIFF options if
- needs be.
-
- Graphic Workshop supports monochrome, colour and grey scale TIFF
- files. Grey scale TIFF files can be created by converting any
- colour format into TIFF with Graphic Workshop set up to produce
- grey scale TIFF files, either through GWSINSTL or by using the
- /TCG switch. These import into desktop publishing packages such
- as Ventura for sharp looking PostScript halftones.
-
- Note that as of this writing Ventura will read grey scale TIFF
- files correctly. It seems to invert colour TIFF files.
-
- Colour TIFF files are useful in Corel Draw, among other places.
- Corel Draw 2.0 will import colour TIFF files for inclusion in
- CDR graphics. This is preferable to importing colour PCX files,
- as the size of a TIFF file in Corel Draw is preserved.
-
- Some applications have trouble reading grey scale TIFF files
- which have been compressed... Gray F/X chokes on them as of this
- writing, for example. Others read 'em fine. For this reason,
- Graphic Workshop defaults to creating compressed grey scale TIFF
- files but you can tell it not to compress them if you're not sure
- that whatever you'll be importing them into will read them. There
- are command line switches to set up these options.
-
- Note that due to the wide variations among the programs which
- produce TIFF files, Graphic Workshop would be lying rather badly
- if it claimed to be able to read all TIFF files. Specifically,
- it does not read Huffman or LZW compressed TIFF files as yet, as
- we haven't devised code to do this in a reasonable amount of
- space. Colour TIFF files are another area in which
- Graphic Workshop only handles files from some sources.
-
- When you're creating TIFF files which will be used as desktop
- publishing art or in other situations wherein they'll be printed
- to a PostScript printer, you should create them with greyscale
- expansion enabled. If they will be displayed on a monitor or
- edited in a paint program, you may want to create them with
- greyscale expansion disabled.
-
- Whether you create colour or grey scale TIFF files will be
- largely dependant on the application you want your TIFF files to
- be read by. Here are a few guidelines:
-
- - If you want to import TIFF files into Ventura or PageMaker so
- they'll output as halftones to a PostScript printer, use grey
- scale TIFF files with grey scale expansion enabled.
-
- - If you want to import colour TIFF files into Corel Draw to
- print to a colour output device, use colour TIFF files... the
- grey scale expansion doesn't matter.
-
- - If you want to import colour TIFF files into Corel Draw to
- print to a monochrome output device, use grey scale TIFF files
- with the grey scale expansion enabled.
-
- - If you want to import grey scale TIFF files into a paint or
- image editing package, such as ImageIn or Desktop Paint 256,
- use grey scale TIFF files with the grey scale expansion
- disabled.
-
- Note also that Graphic Workshop packs TIFF files with an eye to
- maximum unpacking speed, rather than for optimum compression. As
- such, pictures with between 32 and 256 colours will be promoted
- to 256 colours. Pictures with between four and sixteen colours
- will be promoted to sixteen colours.
-
- We have found a fairly small number of applications which will
- read colour TIFF files, and hence have not had much opportunity
- to test the colour TIFF facility of Graphic Workshop with real
- world software. The TIFF files it works with are correct
- according to the TIFF specifications... but this rarely means a
- lot. We will be most grateful for any feedback in this area.
-
-
- WPG FILES - MAXIMUM BITS: 8 (OR MAYBE 4)
- ───────────────────────────────────────────────
- These are the native import graphic files for WordPerfect. These
- files can contain both bitmaps and line art, or vector graphics.
- Graphic Workshop can only deal with the bitmapped parts of them.
- If you view, print or convert a WPG file containing both
- bitmapped and vector elements, the vector elements will be
- discarded.
-
- WPG files which refuse to read with Graphic Workshop are usually
- those which contain only vector elements and no bitmaps. If you
- use the F4 function on a WPG file which does not read, the
- comments field of the file information box will say "Vector file"
- if this is the case.
-
- Graphic Workshop will deal with WPG files having one, four or
- eight bits of colour information, that is, monochrome files,
- sixteen-colour files and 256-colour files.
-
- The WPG specification allows for 256-colour files. As of this
- writing, WordPerfect itself would not read them. If you wish to
- use 256-colour images in a WordPerfect document, you might want
- to either reduce them to sixteen colours or dither them to
- monochrome, depending upon what you'll be outputting them to.
-
-
- MSP FILES - MAXIMUM BITS: 1
- ──────────────────────────────────
- These are the image files used by the paint program which came
- with Microsoft Windows version 2. Don't confuse these with PCX
- files... some versions of Windows 2 came with a Windows
- implementation of PC Paintbrush from ZSoft as well. The two
- programs... and the two file formats... are not compatible. MSP
- files are monochrome only.
-
-
- IFF/LBM FILES - MAXIMUM BITS: 8
- ──────────────────────────────────────
- These started out on the Amiga. The IFF file standard is
- extremely flexible, and allows all sorts of things besides
- images to be stored in IFF files. IFF files are found on the PC
- having been ported from Amiga systems. They are also created on
- the PC by several applications such as Electronic Arts' Deluxe
- Paint package and Digital Vision's Computer Eyes video scanner
- board. In the first case they are given the extension LBM. In
- the second they are given the extension CE. The basic file
- structure is the same, however.
-
- Deluxe Paint is a bit of a problem in the way it deals
- with IFF files, actually. This affects 256 colour files. Its
- native format is a subclass of IFF called PBM, and compresses its
- images as bytes. It's somewhat unique to Deluxe Paint, and
- Electronic Arts won't tell anyone quite how it works. You can
- actually work it out to a large degree, but every so often a file
- created in this format in the way it seems like it should be done
- refuses to load into Deluxe Paint.
-
- The standard form for IFF image files is called ILBM,
- compressing all images as planes. This is much slower, but it
- means that files thus compressed will be readable by pretty well
- all IFF readers... even if you port 'em back to the Amiga. This
- is how Graphic Workshop creates IFF files. Unfortunately, there's
- a problem with old versions of Deluxe Paint which will
- occasionally cause them to stop reading one of these files part way
- through the image. This happens to IFF files from sources other
- than Graphic Workshop, so it's probably a bug in these versions
- of Deluxe Paint. It appears to have been rectified in more recent
- releases.
-
- If you encounter an image which, when converted into an
- IFF file will not read into Deluxe Paint, use the /IFN command
- line switch when you run Graphic Workshop. This will disable the
- IFF compression. Uncompressed files read into Deluxe Paint with
- no difficulty.
-
- You can permanently set IFF compression off when you install
- Graphic Workshop if you like.
-
- Note that Graphic Workshop only reads "pure" IFF files, and will
- not handle the countless variations on the format which have
- appeared on the Amiga. Specifically, it does not read hold and
- modify, or HAM, files.
-
-
- BMP FILES - MAXIMUM BITS: 24
- ───────────────────────────────────
- These are the files which are used as "wallpaper" under Windows
- 3. They can be created using the version of PC Paintbrush
- supplied with Windows.
-
- BMP files use no image compression, as the intention appears to
- be to make them fast to load. Plan on your BMP files being very
- large.
-
- There is a very important aspect of colour BMP files which you
- should bear in mind when you use this format. Windows uses a
- fixed palette which Windows Paint cannot go about changing, as
- doing so would make the screen and border colours change too.
-
- This means that transferring an image to the BMP format will
- generally result in some colour shifts when BMP files are
- imported into Windows applications.
-
- The BMP format can support 24-bit files, which Graphic Workshop
- does generate. However, as of this writing importing a 24-bit
- BMP image into Windows Paint results in a noticeable colour
- shift. This appears to be a peculiarity of Windows Paint.
-
-
- PIC FILES - MAXIMUM BITS: 8
- ──────────────────────────────────
- These should not be confused with Lotus 1-2-3 PIC drawing files.
-
- PIC files are created by PC Paint (not PC Paintbrush) and are
- used by Grasp, among other things. They come in many flavours.
- Graphic Workshop has been tested with the most common ones. In
- theory it should support them all, but that's only a theory.
-
- PIC files are structured exceedingly weirdly, especially in their
- sixteen-colour manifestations. For this reason, it's necessary
- for Graphic Workshop to create a temporary scratch file while
- it's packing or unpacking a sixteen-colour PIC file. You will
- note that upon beginning to read or write one, the bar graph will
- appear to pause for a few seconds before it starts to move.
-
- By default, the temporary file will be written to the current
- directory. However, you can direct it to somewhere else by
- including the following line in your environment, for example:
-
- SET TEMP=H:\
-
- This will cause the temporary file to be written to the root
- directory of drive H:. You can, of course, specify any path you
- like. If drive H: is a RAM drive, this will speed up the packing
- and unpacking of sixteen-colour PIC files considerably.
-
-
- TGA FILES - MAXIMUM BITS: 24
- ───────────────────────────────────
- The Truevision Targa format is used by several high end paint
- programs and things like ray tracing packages. It can handle
- images with up to sixteen million unique colours. You might want
- to read the discussion of images with 24-bit colour elsewhere in
- this document.
-
- There are a lot of variations on TGA files, and Graphic Workshop
- does not handle them all as yet. Specifically, it only handles
- uncompressed and run length compressed files. It ignores all
- alpha channel information.
-
- You can configure Graphic Workshop to write 24-bit images to the
- Targa format with either 24 or 16 bits of colour. Selecting 24
- bits will give you the best colour fideltiy, but it will also
- create pretty large fils. Selecting 16 bits will reduce the file
- size by about a third, at the the cost of a bit of colour
- resolution. In practice, it takes a pretty good eye to tell the
- difference. If you're using a high colour screen driver with
- Graphic Workshop you won't be able to tell the difference at all,
- as high colour boards only show you 16 bits of colour.
-
-
- EPS FILES - MAXIMUM BITS: 8
- ──────────────────────────────────
- The EPS format... encapsulated PostScript... isn't really a
- bitmapped format at all. However, it may contain bitmapped data.
-
- PostScript cannot be interpreted directly by most PC
- applications. As such, an EPS file which is to be imported into
- an application such as Ventura Publisher or PageMaker also
- includes a "preview". A preview is a small black and white TIFF
- image which will show you a rough idea of what the EPS file will
- look like.
-
- If you import an EPS file into Ventura, for example, the screen
- image you see will be the preview but the data printed to your
- printer will be the PostScript data itself.
-
- Graphic Workshop can transform other file formats with between
- one and eight bits of colour information... between two and 256
- colours... into EPS files. Images with more than two colours will
- be turned into PostScript halftones.
-
- If you attempt to view or otherwise read an EPS file from within
- Graphic Workshop, you will see the preview image, not the actual
- PostScript data. This will look the same as the source data if
- you have translated a monochrome file to EPS, and it will look
- like a very coarse Bayer dither of the source otherwise.
-
- Please note that the EPS files which Graphic Workshop creates are
- only intended to be printed. You cannot read them into
- applications such as Corel Draw or Adobe Illustrator. These
- applications will not accept the large mounts of bitmapped data
- which a Graphic Workshop EPS file contains.
-
- For the most part, using EPS files in this way is no longer
- necessary. Applications which import EPS files will usually allow
- you to import TIFF files as well, which will provide you with
- much better halftoning and screen control.
-
- If you tell Graphic Workshop to include a preview image in the
- EPS files it creates, it will write a temporary file to your disk
- while it's writing the actual PostScript data. You will
- note that the bar graph will pause for a while at the end of its
- travel during the write process.
-
- By default, the temporary file will be written to the current
- directory. However, you can direct it to somewhere else by
- including the following line in your environment, for example:
-
- SET TEMP=H:\
-
- This will cause the temporary file to be written to the root
- directory of drive H:. You can, of course, specify any path you
- like. If drive H: is a RAM drive, this will speed up the packing
- and EPS files with preview images considerably.
-
- Note that if you attempt to convert or print an EPS file under
- Graphic Workshop, the TIFF preview image will be read, not the
- actual EPS information.
-
- Note also that if you attempt to read an EPS file without a
- preview, Graphic Workshop will tell you that it has encountered a
- file read error. The EPS file itself may be fine...
- Graphic Workshop however, can only read previews.
-
-
- EXE FILES (SELF DISPLAYING PICTURES) - MAXIMUM BITS: 8
- ─────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────
- You can convert images with between two and 256 colours to files
- with the extension EXE. Such files are self displaying pictures.
- For example, if you have a file called PICTURE.GIF and you use
- Graphic Workshop to translate it to PICTURE.EXE, typing PICTURE
- from the command line will cause the picture to display on your
- screen.
-
- Pictures written into the EXE format can subsequently be read
- back into any other format. However, note that Graphic Workshop
- can only read EXE files which it has created. Use the F4 key to
- check out EXE files if you aren't sure whether they're pictures
- or programs.
-
- Graphic Workshop will not read self displaying pictures written
- by applications not created by Alchemy Mindworks.
-
- In order for an EXE picture to display, the system which you
- attempt to run it on must have a card which supports enough
- colours to show the picture under Graphic Workshop. Specifically,
- you will need a VGA card to display an EXE picture with 256
- colours, at least an EGA card to display one with 16 colours and
- so on.
-
- EXE picture files support CGA, EGA, VGA and Hercules cards only.
-
- Pictures displayed by converting them to EXE files and running
- them can't be panned around, even if they're larger than your
- screen. Hitting any key will return you to DOS.
-
- An EXE picture created by Graphic Workshop will attempt to
- autodetect the display card type in the machine it's run on. Some
- cards are sufficiently weird that this isn't always possible. The
- VGA cards in PS/2 systems are an example of this... IBMs are no
- longer really IBM compatible in this regard. To get around this,
- you can run EXE pictures with display card command line
- overrides. These are the command line switches an EXE picture
- will accept:
-
- /CGA - Assume there's a CGA card in the system.
- /EGA - Assume there's an EGA card in the system.
- /VGA - Assume there's a VGA card in the system.
- /HER - Assume there's a Hercules card in the system.
- /VER - Display the version number of the EXE file.
- /PAR - Assume there's a Paradise card in the system.
- /ATI - Assume there's an ATI card in the system.
- /TNG - Assume there's a Tseng 4000 card in the system.
- /TRI - Assume there's a Trident 8900 card in the system.
- /OAK - Assume there's an Oak Technologies card in the system.
- /DIS - Disable the return to text mode.
- /Wnn - Wait nn (00 through 99) seconds and then return to DOS.
- /KEY - Allow keyboard hits to abort waiting
- /FAD - Fade in and out (VGA cards only)
-
- If you run an EXE picture with a question mark as its command
- line argument, it will display a list of its command line
- switches, just like Graphic Workshop itself.
-
- The command line switches assume that you're using DOS 3.0 or
- better.
-
- In its standard VGA or autodetection modes, an EXE picture will
- only display 256 colours at 320 by 200 pixels. If you use one of
- the super VGA override switches from the list above, your picture
- will display in 640 by 480 pixels at 256 colours. This assumes
- that you select the appropriate switch, that your card has at
- least 512 kilobytes of memory in board and that your monitor will
- sync at this resolution.
-
- You can create EXE picture files either compressed or
- uncompressed. This can be selected either permanently through
- GWSINSTL or by using the appropriate command line
- switches when you run GWS.EXE. Uncompressed files
- display quickly but take up a lot of disk space. Compressed files
- usually save space but display a bit slower. Note that especially
- in complex scanned or dithered images, you might find that
- compression actually results in a larger file than leaving an
- image uncompressed.
-
- If you don't have need of self booting pictures, you might wish
- to remove the EXE resource from Graphic Workshop's resource file,
- as it will cause the main file finder screen to become cluttered
- with other, unrelated EXE files which may be lying around your
- directories. One EXE file looks pretty much like another until
- Graphic Workshop attempts to unpack it. See the section on
- resources in the accessory disk for help in doing this.
-
- Note that when you hit a key to end the display of a picture, the
- ASCII code of the key will be returned as a DOS error level,
- which can be trapped in a batch file. If your picture terminates
- because of the /Wnn switch instead, the error level will be zero.
-
- You can use the /DIS, /Wnn, /KEY and /FAD switches to create
- slide shows and interactive displays. Use a batch file to set up
- the pictures you want to work with. The /DIS switch will make the
- transition between images clean... just make sure you omit it
- from the last image you display.
-
- Here's a typical batch file:
-
- ECHO OFF
- PICTURE1 /FAD /DIS /W10
- PICTURE2 /FAD /DIS /W10
- PICTURE3 /FAD /W10
-
- Note that if you use the /W00 switch, your image will return
- immediately to DOS or to whatever application spawned it. This is
- useful, for example, should you want to use an EXE picture to
- display an image and then have the program that called it further
- modify the screen contents.
-
- The /FAD switch times its fades based on the vertical refresh
- rate of your monitor, something which doesn't change from system
- to system. As such, its fades should take about the same amount
- of time no matter what machine you run your EXE pictures on.
- Likewise, the time delays set by the /Wnn switch are based on the
- system clock, and are processor independent.
-
-
- TXT FILES (TEXT FILES) - MAXIMUM BITS: 1
- ───────────────────────────────────────────────
- Graphic Workshop will create a 640 by 400 pixel, two colour image
- from any ASCII text file. The text will by truncated at 80
- columns and 25 lines if exceeds either dimension. It can contain
- both alphabetic characters and high order IBM block graphic
- characters. Tabs are expanded and all other control characters
- except for carriage returns are ignored.
-
- Note that a suitable text file must be in pure ASCII, not a
- proprietary word processor format. It must have the extension
- TXT.
-
- Note that the TXT format is only capable of reading files. You
- cannot write a TXT file from Graphic Workshop... there's no
- sensible way for Graphic Workshop to create a text file from a
- graphic.
-
- Note that as long as you're attempting to read files, you can
- treat text files just like other monochrome graphic files from
- within Graphic Workshop. As such, you can view them, convert from
- TXT and so on.
-
- As with the EXE file format, you might wish to remove the TXT
- resource from Graphic Workshop if you don't need it and find it's
- causing a lot of spurious TXT files to be displayed in the
- Graphic Workshop file finder screen... assuming you use the TXT
- extension for something.
-
-
- HALO CUT FILES - MAXIMUM BITS: 8
- ───────────────────────────────────────
- The CUT format is exceedingly awkward, and Graphic Workshop makes
- a few assumptions about how CUT files will be used in order to
- make it workable. To begin with, CUT files don't know how many
- colours they have in them. They rely on a second file, called a
- PAL file, to define their colours.
-
- Graphic Workshop looks for a PAL file to decide whether a CUT
- file has two bits or eight bits of colour. If it doesn't find a
- PAL file with the same name as your CUT file, it assumes that the
- CUT file in question only has two bits of colour. Otherwise, it
- assumes that there are 256 colours in the file.
-
- Files written to the CUT format from Graphic Workshop will appear
- as two-colour files if they started out that way or as 256-colour
- files if they had more than two colours initially.
-
- If you're using CUT files and have any suggestions to improve
- Graphic Workshop's handling of them, or if you encounter problems
- with its CUT files, please get in touch with us. The CUT format,
- while occasionally requested, turned out to be very weird.
-
- You can use the CUT format to fool Graphic Workshop into
- promoting monochrome pictures to 256 colour pictures. Here's how
- to do it. In this example, we'll convert the EXAMPLE1.IMG file
- included with this package to a 256-colour GIF file.
-
- 1. Convert EXAMPLE1.IMG to EXAMPLE1.CUT.
- 2. Convert EXAMPLE2.GIF to EXAMPLE2.CUT
- 3. Hit S to shell to DOS.
- 4. Rename EXAMPLE2.PAL to EXAMPLE1.PAL.
- 5. Type EXIT to return to Graphic Workshop.
- 6. Convert EXAMPLE1.CUT to EXAMPLE1.GIF.
-
- Having done this, EXAMPLE1.GIF will prove to have 256 colours.
- You can delete all the CUT and PAL files involved.
-
- This procedure works because it creates a PAL file for
- EXAMPLE1.CUT, even though by rights it shouldn't have one.
- Graphic Workshop will thereupon assume that EXAMPLE1.CUT is a
- 256-colour image, since there's a PAL file for it.
-
- The original EXAMPLE2.GIF's palette has black for colour zero and
- something approaching white for colour one... these are the
- colours that will be assigned to the original black and white
- pixels in EXAMPLE1.CUT. If you have Desktop Paint 256 or some
- other paint package that will let you change colour values
- around, you might want to create a version of EXAMPLE2.GIF with
- its first colour set to pure black and its second colour set to
- pure white for this procedure.
-
-
- WINDOWS RLE FILES - MAXIMUM BITS: 8
- ──────────────────────────────────────────
- The RLE format is actually a variation on the BMP format
- discussed previously. It has two primary uses under Windows. It
- can be used to create compressed wallpaper files and it can be
- used to replace the opening Windows logo screen with one of your
- own choosing.
-
- The RLE format uses compression, unlike BMP files, and as such
- wallpaper created as RLE files will occupy less space on your
- disk. At least, it should. If you store very complex scanned or
- dithered images in the RLE format, they may confuse the run
- length encoding procedure and actually result in larger files
- than they would have created as BMP files.
-
- To use an RLE file as wallpaper, place the file you wish to use
- in your \WINDOWS subdirectory. Use the Windows control panel to
- select your wallpaper file as you normally would... the only
- difference is that you will have to type in the name of the RLE
- file you wish to use, as the file selector in the control panel
- only looks for BMP files.
-
- Technically, RLE files used as wallpaper should take a little
- longer to load. In practice, this is rarely noticeable.
-
- Using an RLE file to change the startup Windows logo is a bit
- tricky, but it's arguably worth the effort if you're tired of
- looking at the Microsoft ad. You will need a sixteen-colour RLE
- image of the dimensions 640 by 480... 640 by 350 if you use an
- EGA card. The RLE file should be no larger than 40 or 50
- kilobytes, and smaller if possible. For this example, we'll allow
- that the file is called NEWLOGO.RLE, located in the \WINDOWS
- subdirectory.
-
- Go to the \WINDOWS\SYSTEM subdirectory and issue the following
- command at the DOS prompt.
-
- COPY /B WIN.CNF+VGALOGO.LGO+C:\WINDOWS\NEWLOGO.RLE C:\WINDOWS\WIN2.COM
-
- This will create a new program called WIN2.COM. If you start
- Windows by typing WIN2, rather than WIN, you will see your logo
- rather than Microsoft's. This will not affect your normal WIN.COM
- program.
-
- There are several things to be aware of in this procedure. The
- most important is that the resulting WIN2.COM cannot be bigger
- than 65535 bytes, which is why you must keep your RLE file down
- to a modest size. If it exceeds these limits, WIN2.COM will
- refuse to run.
-
- Secondly, if your RLE file is of dimensions other than those of
- your screen, it will appear incorrectly placed.
-
- Thirdly, if you will be using an EGA card, replace the
- VGALOGO.LGO file, above, with EGALOGO.LGO.
-
- Note that when a file is converted to the sixteen-colour RLE
- format by Graphic Workshop, it is permanently remapped to the
- Windows default palette. This may result in a noticeable colour
- shift for some images.
-
- Graphic Workshop will read most RLE files from other sources. One
- known exception is the VGALOGO.RLE file provided with Windows
- 3.1.
-
-
- PFS ART FILES - MAXIMUM BITS - 1
- ───────────────────────────────────────
- These are files used by Spinnaker's PFS applications. They store
- graphics as uncompressed monochrome images. Graphic Workshop will
- only read and write uncompressed ART files. The F4 function will
- tell you if you have a compressed ART file.
-
-
- 24-BIT FILES
- ▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀
- Most of the image file formats commonly found in use on a PC
- which support colour do so using a palette structure, as this is
- the way most PC full colour display cards work. An image stored
- in a palette structure file will have a maximum of 256 unique
- colours, drawn from a potential palette of 16 million. In fact, a
- VGA card can only support a potential palette of about a quarter
- of a million colours. There is some theoretical loss in colour
- resolution in displaying, say, a GIF file on a VGA card.
-
- For practical purposes this colour arrangement is sufficient to
- reproduce pretty convincing colour photographs. However, for a
- number of reasons, high end photographic manipulation software,
- colour separation software and so on works better with a non-
- palette image, one in which every pixel is represented as a
- distinct colour. In these images, every pixel consists of three
- bytes of colour information, one each for the red, green and blue
- components of the pixel's colour. Such pictures are referred to
- as RGB or 24-bit pictures.
-
- Among the formats which currently support 24-bit images are
- Targa, PCX, BMP and TIFF.
-
- Viewing a 24-bit image on a PC equipped with a VGA or super-VGA
- card presents Graphic Workshop with something of a problem. Such
- an image can have up to sixteen million different colours in it,
- while a VGA card can support only 256 different colours at a
- time.
-
- In order to deal with 24-bit images, Graphic Workshop must
- "dither" them. Dithering involves creating a simplified... albeit
- coarser... version of the source image. Dithered images in the
- view mode of Graphic Workshop will give you an idea of what you
- 24-bit picture looks like, but they're always an approximation.
-
- If you attempt to view a 24-bit image on a system equipped with
- an EGA or VGA card, a menu will appear to ask you how you'd like
- the 24-bit file to be handled. You can display it as a grey scale
- image if you just want to see what the picture looks like. This
- is the fastest way to view such a picture. Alternately, you can
- choose the Bayer colour dithering option
-
- Note that the Bayer colour screen dither has been designed to be
- reasonably fast, rather than accurate. When you create a 256-
- colour dither, as discussed in the next paragraph, the results
- will be a whole lot nicer to look at.
-
- In order to convert a 24-bit image into a palette based format...
- for example, to convert a 24-bit PCX file into a GIF file... you
- must use the colour reduction function of the F9 special effects
- key. This will perform a full 256-colour dither, which will
- usually result in a 256-colour image which is almost as good as
- the original 24-bit image was.
-
- The colour reduction function also contains options to allow you
- to reduce a 24-bit file to lesser numbers of colours. Choosing
- fewer than 256 colours will produce a smaller file in some cases,
- but it will also leave you with a less faithful representation of
- your original colour image.
-
- The fixed eight colour option will produce a destination image
- file dithered something like the eight colour screen preview.
- These files have a fixed eight colour palette with the colours
- black, cyan, magenta, yellow, red, green, blue and white.
-
- It's also worth noting that this is the same dither used to print
- files to impact and inkjet colour printers, such as the Hewlett-
- Packard PaintJet. A fixed eight colour dither will look more or
- less like the colour hard copy from one of these printers.
-
-
- A WORD ABOUT MEMORY
- ▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀
- Graphic Workshop will use whatever memory you have going. If you
- ask it to do something which needs a large amount of memory, it
- will try to use your normal DOS memory, which is fastest. If
- there isn't enough DOS memory, it will use extra memory.
-
- There are three sorts of "extra" memory which Graphic Workshop
- can use, to wit, extended, expanded and virtual. Extended memory
- is also called XMS memory, and is only available on AT and 386
- systems. Expanded memory, also called EMS or LIM memory, is
- available if you have a LIM board and driver in your machine.
- Virtual memory means using a big disk file and making believe
- it's memory. Virtual memory is very slow compared to real
- memory.
-
- You must tell Graphic Workshop what to do about extra memory
- when you install it. See the section on installation.
-
- In addition to the three foregoing types of extra memory,
- Graphic Workshop can be configured to use "extended or virtual" or
- "expanded or virtual" memory. If one of these options is chosen,
- Graphic Workshop will attempt to allocate a buffer from extended
- or expanded memory if it can't do so with DOS memory. If it's
- unable to allocate a buffer in extra memory, it will switch to
- virtual memory and see if its luck improves. If there's no room
- for a virtual memory buffer, it will give up and return an error
- saying that it can't allocate memory.
-
- By default, Graphic Workshop configured to use virtual memory
- will use the current drive and directory to write its temporary
- files. You can change this by adding a line to your environment
- with the SET command such as:
-
- TEMP=H:\
-
- In this case, any virtual memory temporary files which
- Graphic Workshop wants to create will be written to the root
- of drive H:. If you have a RAM disk, you should use the TEMP
- environment variable to tell Graphic Workshop to use it for virtual memory
- operations, as this will speed things up considerably.
-
- Graphic Workshop can run in restricted memory, such as that
- which is found on a really old PC or when running "shelled out"
- of another program. However, it can do nasty things when it's
- really starved for memory. Some virtual memory operations will
- not work in this condition, and if it's really stuck for RAM...
- if there's only a few tens of kilobytes free... it may manage to
- crash. Try not to run it when there's almost no room left for it
- to store things. The help menu will tell you how much memory is
- free.
-
- Graphic Workshop frequently swaps blocks of code and data in and
- out of memory. In addition to the memory required for your
- pictures, Graphic Workshop must have memory to manage its
- resources and to allocate small scratch buffers. This is called
- memory "overhead". It's possible for Graphic Workshop to allocate
- a lot of DOS memory for a picture file and subsequently be unable
- to allocate enough memory for the resource which will manipulate
- the picture.
-
- To avoid this situation, Graphic Workshop reserves a fixed amount
- of memory for its own use before it attempts to allocate an image
- buffer. The amount of this fixed memory is adjustable through the
- GWSINSTL program, as is discussed in the section on installation.
- As it's set in the distribution version of the software, it
- should be adequate for all the operations the package can
- perform. There are a few hypothetical cases in which this might
- not prove true, for example, in unpacking enormously wide GIF
- files. If you run into problems with allocating scratch buffers or
- resource buffers, try increasing the memory overhead.
-
- Note that Graphic Workshop comes configured to use virtual memory.
- Use GWSINSTL to change this when you're sure what sort of extra
- memory is in your system.
-
- Finally, note that in order to access the extended or expanded
- memory in your system, Graphic Workshop must be able to locate a
- suitable extended or expanded memory driver. Simply having
- several megabytes of chips on your motherboard will not make that
- memory accessible unless you have the appropriate driver in place
- and working.
-
-
- A WORD ABOUT MICE
- ▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀
- With the 6.1r release of Graphic Workshop, you can now use a mouse to
- operate the software, as well as the conventional keyboard
- interface. Because Graphic Workshop is primarily a text mode application,
- there are limits to what the mouse support can provide. We've
- tried to apply mouse functions where they made sense and to
- ignore the mouse where having it available would have really
- meant stretching a point.
-
- You most have a Microsoft-compatible mouse driver loaded for the
- mouse to work under Graphic Workshop. This will be handled by
- running MOUSE.COM... usually a fixture of your AUTOEXEC.BAT
- file... or by having MOUSE.SYS included in your CONFIG.SYS file.
- If no mouse functions are available under Graphic Workshop, you
- don't have a mouse driver loaded or your mouse is not Microsoft
- compatible.
-
- The mouse cursor will appear as a white diamond. Note that there
- are two other mouse options available... no mouse support at all
- or the conventional text mode block cursor. Alternate drivers to
- handle these are available on the Graphic Workshop accessory disk,
- discussed elsewhere in this document.
-
- Here's a quick overview of what the mouse does under Graphic Workshop.
-
- - You can select a file from the main menu by clicking on it.
- - You can toggle a file's tagged status by double clicking with
- the left mouse button.
- - You can view a file by double clicking with the right mouse
- button.
- - You can select "Yes" for any dialog that prompts you for a
- decision by clicking inside the box and "No" by clicking
- outside it.
- - You can banish a message box by clicking anywhere on the
- screen.
- - You can invoke the function of any key with a prompt by
- clicking on the prompt.
- - You can page up in the main menu by clicking at the right side
- of the screen and page down by clicking at the left side of the
- screen.
- - You can exit the View mode by clicking with the right mouse
- button.
-
-
- IF YOU ENCOUNTER A PROBLEM
- ▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀
- While we have tested Graphic Workshop thoroughly, it's possible
- that you may encounter a situation we hadn't anticipated, and
- perhaps a file which will not read. If this happens, we would be
- interested in knowing about it so we can deal with it in the next
- release of Graphic Workshop. Here's how to report a problem to
- us.
-
- Copy your CONFIG.SYS and AUTOEXEC.BAT files onto a floppy.
- Include a screen dump of each page of GWSINSTL as it was set up
- when the problem occurred. Alternately, write down the settings.
-
- Copy the image files which resulted in the problem and provide a
- description of what you did and what happened.
-
- If we can't recreate it, we probably won't be able to fix it.
-
- Before you contact us with a problem in Graphic Workshop, please
- make sure you've read this document thoroughly and that you
- understand how the software should work. Many problem reports
- which receive aren't problems with the software at all.
-
- You can also ZIP up your problem files and upload them to our
- bulletin board.
-
-
- USING THE MAIN MENU
- ▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀
- Graphic Workshop always shows you all the names of the image
- files it knows how to deal with in the current directory, along
- with all the visible subdirectory names, if any are present. If
- you are in a subdirectory, you will also see a subdirectory entry
- which is two periods.
-
- The cursor mover keys will move the file selector bar around. If
- you move it to a directory entry... shown in dim text... and hit
- Enter, you will move into that directory. If you select the two
- period entry, you will move back up your directory tree by one
- step.
-
- If there are too many files in your current directory to see all
- at once, Graphic Workshop will organize them into pages. The PgUp
- and PgDn keys will step you through the pages. Clicking at the
- right and left sides of the main menu screen will also invoke the
- paging functions.
-
- Here are the keys which Graphic Workshop recognizes for basic
- file handling and session functions. Clicking in the appropriate
- prompts if you have a mouse will perform the same functions.
-
- Hitting the question mark or clicking in the "? for Help" message
- at the top of the screen will cause Graphic Workshop to display
- a menu of the keys which control the main file screen
- of Graphic Workshop. This box also tells you how much free DOS
- memory is available, the display card you have Graphic Workshop
- configured to use and the type of extra memory it's set up for.
-
- The Esc key will allow you to quit Graphic Workshop and return to
- DOS.
-
- If you hit "T" the currently selected file name will be
- "tagged". The "U" key will untag it. The batch operations
- described below will work with multiple files if you have some of
- them tagged. If you hit "C", all the tags will be cleared.
- Clicking on a file name with the left mouse button will toggle
- its tagged status.
-
- Note that for the graphic functions of Graphic Workshop... the
- ones accessed by the function keys... the currently selected file
- will be processed if there are no tagged files. Otherwise, each
- of the tagged files will be processed in turn.
-
- If you hit "L" Graphic Workshop will allow you to log in a new
- disk drive. A box will appear prompting you for the drive letter
- you want to log into.
-
- If you hit "D" you will be prompted to delete the current file.
- Note that this is not a batch command... it only works on one
- file at a time.
-
- If you hit "R" you can rename the current file. Note that it the
- renamed file will have the same extension as the old one, no
- matter what extension you give it.
-
- If you hit "S", Graphic Workshop will attempt to shell out to the
- DOS prompt. If you do this, Graphic Workshop will still be in
- memory. Type EXIT at the DOS prompt to return to it right where
- you left off. If you change drives or subdirectories while you
- have the DOS prompt active, Graphic Workshop will restore the
- previous drive and subdirectory when you return to it.
-
- The alphabetic control keys can be upper or lower case. Other
- keys will be ignored.
-
-
- HELP
- ───────────
- If you get lost, hit ? for help, or click in the help prompt in
- the upper right corner of the screen. Hit ? again or click in the
- quick help screen for detailed topical help.
-
- When the detailed help window opens, select a topic by using the
- cursor mover keys to position the highlighted item selector or
- just click on one of the dimmed topic names with the left button
- of your mouse.
-
- Clicking with the right button of the mouse or hitting Esc will
- move backward through help topics. Clicking with the left mouse
- button outside the help window will close the help and return to
- the main menu of Graphic Workshop. Clicking in the prompts at the
- bottom of the help window will invoke their functions.
-
-
- VIEWING FILES AND ADJUSTING COLOUR
- ─────────────────────────────────────────
- If you place the selector bar on a file name and hit Enter,
- Graphic Workshop will attempt to show you the file. It will start
- by showing you a wait box, which has a bar graph in it to
- indicate the status of what you've asked Graphic Workshop to do.
- When the picture is fully unpacked, Graphic Workshop will switch
- to your display card's graphic mode and show you the picture.
-
- Double clicking on a file name with your right mouse button will
- also invoke the View function.
-
- You can always abort any operation when the wait box is visible
- by hitting the Esc key.
-
- If the picture is larger than your screen, the cursor keys will
- allow you to pan around it. Normally you will pan around in small
- increments. If you hold down either shift key when you hit a
- cursor key, you will move around in increments of half your
- screen dimensions.
-
- Esc will return you to the main screen, as will clicking with
- your right mouse button.
-
- If the Ctrl key is held down when a file is selected for viewing,
- you can control the screen mode it's displayed in... assuming
- that your display card has more than one display mode. If your
- card is supported by a driver of version 2.0 or lower, holding
- down the Ctrl key will force the screen into its lowest
- resolution mode. For example, if you're looking at a 256-colour
- picture on a super VGA card, holding down the Ctrl key will force
- the screen into the 320 by 200 pixel standard VGA mode.
-
- If you're using a driver of version 2.1 or better, holding down
- the Ctrl key will cause a menu to appear offering you a choice of
- the available display modes with the most appropriate one
- highlighted. Select a mode and hit Enter or hit Esc to let
- Graphic Workshop select the most appropriate mode, that is, what
- it would have done had you not held down the Ctrl key.
-
- Note that you must take your finger off the Ctrl key before you
- try to move the menu item selector. Note also that the Ctrl key
- must be held down when you hit Enter to select a file... you can
- release it thereafter. The menu will not appear until the wait
- bar finishes its travel.
-
- You can see what version your screen driver is by looking in the
- "?" box from the main menu. Also, be aware that some drivers only
- have one screen mode available. In this case, no menu will
- appear.
-
- Several things can go wrong in viewing a file. If you have
- installed Graphic Workshop for the wrong kind of display card,
- you might see random characters rather than a picture. In this
- case, check your installation.
-
- If Graphic Workshop could not find enough memory to unpack your
- picture into, it will abort the process and say so.
-
- Finally, if your picture requires more colours than your card can
- display, Graphic Workshop will tell you this. Specifically, it
- will pop up a menu which will ask you how you want it to deal
- with the colour problem. The available options will vary with the
- type of display adapter you're using and the number of colours in
- your source image.
-
- You can force this menu to appear when you view an image by
- holding down the left Shift key when you hit the Enter key. You
- might wish to do this to view some pictures in ways other than a
- normal displayed. For example, you can preview an image dithered
- this way.
-
- This is what the menu options do:
-
-
- Display normally
- ----------------------
- This will display the picture as if you hadn't reached this menu.
- This option will always be disabled if the menu pops up by
- itself.
-
-
- Display as grey
- ---------------------
- This is the fastest way to see what a picture with too many
- colours looks like. It will show you the image in grey scale.
-
-
- Bayer dither mono
- -----------------------
-
- Floyd dither mono
- -----------------------
-
- Burkes dither mono
- ------------------------
-
- Stucki dither mono
- ------------------------
- These four options will dither your image down to monochrome. You
- might want to see the discussion on dithering later in this
- document to better understand them.
-
-
- Threshold
- ---------------
- This will display your image as a high contrast black and white
- picture.
-
-
- Bayer dither colour
- -------------------------
- This option will display your image as a fixed eight-
- colour dither. It's a pretty reasonable representation of a
- colour image for a quick 'n nasty preview. Dithering a 24-bit
- file down 256 colours will result in a much better display, but
- it will take considerably longer.
-
-
- Display reversed
- ----------------------
- This option will display your image reversed. Colour images will
- appear as negatives.
-
- In the sixteen and 256 colour display modes, you can make
- adjustments to the VGA colour palette while a picture is being
- displayed. The 'r' and 'R' keys will increase and decrease the
- amount of red in a picture, the 'g' and 'G' keys will adjust the
- amount of green, the 'b' and 'B' keys will adjust the amount of
- blue. The 'i' and 'I' keys will adjust the overall intensity of
- the picture. The 'c' and 'C' keys will adjust the contrast. The
- '=' key will return the picture to its normal state. Note that
- these adjustments only affect the original picture that you're
- viewing... they do not alter the palette in the file on your disk
- unless you save the changes to a new file.
-
- If you hold down the left shift key when you hit the Esc key to
- leave the view mode, a file format menu will pop up. Select a
- format and you can save the file you've viewed and adjusted the
- colours of. The new file will be saved with "A_" before the file
- name... if your viewed and adjusted PICTURE.GIF, it would be
- saved as "A_PICTUR.GIF". In fact, you can have it saved as any
- suitable file type.
-
- If you hit the Esc key when the file format menu pops up your new
- file will not be saved.
-
- You can zoom in on a graphic in view mode by hitting the Z key.
- This will cause it to be scaled to fill your screen. In fact, the
- scale factor will be fiddled a bit such that it will usually fill
- your screen in one dimension only, such that it isn't distorted.
- Hitting Z again will unzoom it back to its normal perspective.
- The zoom mode will allow you to see an overview large graphics
- without a lot of panning around.
-
- Note that there is a loss of displayed resolution when you zoom
- in on graphics, especially if you image has been dithered.
-
- None of the colour adjustments or panning functions will work
- while an image is zoomed in. If you hit Shift ESc to save a file
- while in zoomed mode, the un-zoomed image will be saved. To
- create a permanently zoomed file, use the scale function.
-
-
- PRINTING - F1
- ────────────────────
- You can print to any sort of LaserJet Plus compatible printer
- with one megabyte of memory or more or any sort of PostScript
- printer. You can print to any dot matrix or inkjet printer which
- is supported by a Graphic Workshop external printer driver. Note
- that if you attempt to print PostScript data to a LaserJet or a
- dot matrix printer you'll get reams of meaningless ASCII text.
-
- Graphic Workshop comes with built in PostScript and LaserJet
- print drivers. This includes colour PostScript and LaserJet II
- and III series printers. You only need an external print driver
- if you wish to print to a dot matrix or inkjet printer.
-
- Graphic Workshop allows you to print a picture in four
- resolution modes to laser printers. These allow you to print your
- pictures in four possible sizes. You might want to experiment
- with them to see what they can do.
-
- If you want your picture to fill as much of the printed page as
- possible, select the appropriate autosize mode. This will cause
- Graphic Workshop to choose the resolution and orientation which
- is most appropriate for each picture you print. Note that it will
- still select one of the four available resolutions, so your
- picture probably will not print right to the edge of the page.
-
- Colour and grey scale pictures printed to black and white
- PostScript printers will be reproduced as halftones. If you
- attempt to print a colour or grey scale picture to a LaserJet or
- dot matrix printer, the image will be dithered for you. The
- dither type is set using GWSINSTL. You might want to consult the
- section on dithering elsewhere in this document to help you
- choose a suitable dither.
-
- Colour images can be printed in colour to a colour PostScript
- device and to a colour inkjet or dot matrix printer with a
- suitable driver. Colour PostScript printing can be enabled
- through GWSINSTL or with the appropriate command line switches.
-
- Graphic Workshop will drive several colour ink jet printers though
- external drivers, as loaded through GWSINSTL, notably the
- Hewlett Packard Desktjet 500C and PaintJet printers. Note that
- these work a bit differently than monochrome printing does. They
- run at the maximum resolution of the printer, and dither the
- images. If you select a higher expansion factor, each pixel of
- the source image will be presented by a larger dither block, and
- as such will come closer to the source colour. This means that
- printing pictures larger will not only result in output that
- looks sharper, but it will also print with more accurate colours.
-
- The inkjet drivers will also handle monochrome graphics, although
- the results aren't usually all that good. You can do
- substancially better using the Hewlett Pasckard inkjet printers
- if you use the black ink cartridge and select one of the internal
- LaserJet drivers.
-
- Laser output can be printed in either portrait or landscape
- mode. You can set this up using GWSINSTL or the appropriate
- command line switches. Note that if you print to a PostScript
- printer in landscape mode, the printer itself will rotate the
- image data. This isn't actually all that fast for many printers.
- If you have a lot of images to print in landscape mode, you'll
- probably find that it's quicker to have Graphic Workshop rotate
- them and then print the rotated files.
-
- The orientation setting has no effect for dot matrix printing.
-
- You can print to ports LPT1, LPT2 or LPT3. The default printer
- port can be set up using GWSINSTL or the appropriate command line
- switches. Note that the printer port settings are ignored by
- some external printer drivers. All of the standard dot matrix
- drivers included with Graphic Workshop print to LPT1. The inkjet
- drivers will print to the printer port selected through
- GWSINSTL.
-
- You can cause Graphic Workshop to print to a file, rather than
- directly to the disk, by using the appropriate command line
- switch. The command line switches are discussed elsewhere in this
- document. Print files are named using the name of your source
- image file and the extension PRN. Note that you can only print to
- a file for laser printer output. Dot matrix and inkjet drivers
- will ignore the print to file switch.
-
- Each page of Graphic Workshop output can include any combination
- of data about the picture on it you like. See the installation
- section for more information about enabling this feature.
-
- The size and resolution of dot matrix printing is determined by
- the driver being used.
-
- Note that if you have a printer for which there is no driver
- available, one of the Epson FX-80 drivers will probably work, as
- most dot matrix printers support the Epson FX-80 standard. The
- print might not be as good as your printer can manage, but it'll
- be better than a blank sheet of paper.
-
- Printing is a batch function. If you tag multiple files and then
- hit F1, each will be printed.
-
-
- CONVERTING - F2
- ──────────────────────
- Graphic Workshop allows you to convert a file of any format into
- a file of any other format... with a few restrictions. The new
- file will have the same name as the original but a new extension.
- Converting PICTURE.MAC into an IMG file will create PICTURE.IMG.
- PICTURE.MAC will not be affected.
-
- You can batch convert any mixture of file types using
- Graphic Workshop. Any files which are inappropriate for the
- conversion you've requested will simply be ignored. The ongoing
- status will appear at the bottom of the screen.
-
- You cannot convert pictures having more bits of colour than the
- destination format can handle. For example, you cannot convert a
- 24-bit Targa file directly to an 8-bit GIF file. You would have
- to use the F9 colour reduction facility to do this. Likewise, to
- convert a colour file to a monochrome one, you'd have to use the
- F3 dithering function.
-
- There are a few other useful things to note about conversion. You
- can't convert to TXT files. You can convert from EXE files,
- provided they were created by Graphic Workshop. You can convert
- from EPS files, but the resulting image will be the monochrome
- TIFF preview, and probably won't look very good. You can't
- convert from files which Graphic Workshop won't read. For
- example, you can't convert from a vector WPG file.
-
-
- DITHERING - F3
- ─────────────────────
- Dithering is a sort of magical process by which colour images can
- be converted into pretty attractive black and white versions for
- reproduction on a monochrome screen or a black and white laser
- printer.
-
- Note that source files for dithering must have more than one bit
- of colour information.
-
- Dithering often works a lot better if you scale the original
- image up. Graphic Workshop lets you dither with images of
- anywhere from "size as" up to 500 percent expansion if you have
- enough memory.
-
- You can see what an image will look like dithered by using the
- view options menu in the view mode.
-
- Note that the F3 function only dithers to monochrome. Colour
- dithering is handled by one of the functions of the F9 key.
-
- Dithering is a fairly slow process, and the better the dithering
- algorithm, the slower it gets. Big files and really good
- dithering can take half an hour or more on a slower computer,
- although the results are usually worth it.
-
- At its best, dithering can look better than halftoning, and a
- dithered file can be printed on both PostScript and LaserJet
- printers. Dithered files sent to a PostScript printer will print
- faster than halftoned files.
-
- If you have Graphic Workshop dither a file, it will create a new
- file for you of the type selected and with "D_" before the name.
- Thus PICTURE.GIF could be dithered to D_PICTUR.IMG, for example.
- PICTURE.GIF would be left untouched.
-
- The simplest... and fastest... form of dithering is a Bayer
- dither. This does not produce great results, but it's extremely
- quick.
-
- The remaining three dithering algorithms use what is called
- "error diffusion". These produce really nice looking dithers, but
- they're quite slow. The fastest... and least attractive... is
- Floyd-Steinberg. The best... and by far the slowest... is Stucki.
- The Burkes dither is somewhere in the middle.
-
- All three of these dithers come in two flavours, UD...
- unidirectional... and BD... bidirectional. These options will
- produce slightly different results.
-
- You should plan to experiment with the dithering options of
- Graphic Workshop a bit to see what it's capable of.
-
- Dithering scans an image line by line, starting in the upper left
- corner and working down to the lower right corner. For this
- reason, you will find that if you rotate an image by ninety
- degrees, dither it and then rotate the dithered version by a
- further two hundred and seventy degrees, you'll get different
- results than you would have had you dithered the original image.
-
- The dithering function also includes a thresholding option. This
- will reduce a colour or grey scale image to a high contrast black
- and white graphic. If you select this option, you will see a menu
- allowing you to select the threshold level. This is the source
- pixel intensity above which destination pixels will be white.
- Setting it higher will make your destination image darker.
-
- Dithering is a batch function. You can tag a number of files and
- then set them up to dither unattended.
-
-
- GET INFO - F4
- ────────────────────
- This box will show you some basic information about one or more
- selected files. Among other things, it will tell you how much
- memory the file needs to unpack into. You can use this number to
- figure out whether the file in question will fit in your
- available DOS memory or whether extra memory will be required, as
- was discussed previously. The amount of available DOS memory is
- available by hitting the "?" key from within the main screen.
-
- Having said this, it's worth mentioning that this number actually
- represents the lowest memory requirement for the image in
- question. Some functions will require significantly more memory.
-
- The last field in the Get Info box displays the file comments if
- there were any. The comments vary from format to format. In some
- cases, having nothing better to say, they'll tell you what
- software created the file.
-
- Some file formats actually contain a lot more information than
- can be displayed in the normal Get Info box. TIFF files, for
- example, can contain the name of the artist responsible for them,
- the type of software used to create them and so on. You can get
- at this sort of optional information for formats which support it
- by using the "details" option of the F4 box when it's available.
- The arrow keys will scroll you through the detail window. Details
- are available, for example, if you get information about GIF,
- TIFF or IFF/LBM files.
-
- If the "F4 for Details" prompt is visible, clicking in the Get
- Info box will invoke the details option too. Once the details
- appear, clicking in the upper half of the box will scroll up and
- clicking in the lower half will scroll down.
-
- Note that the Get Info and details information for EPS files
- actually pertain to the TIFF preview.
-
- You may need some external assistance in fully interpreting the
- details.
-
-
- CROPPING - F5
- ────────────────────
- This function will prompt you for a destination file type and
- then display your selected file on a dithered monochrome cropping
- screen. Your image will be scaled to fit the screen, no matter
- how big it is in real life. Initially, the exterior of the image
- will be framed by a cropping box. If you hold down the left shift
- key, the four arrow keys will adjust the upper left corner of the
- box. Note that you'll have to use the down and right keys before
- the up and left keys will do anything. If you hold down the right
- shift key, the arrow keys will move the lower right corner of the
- box. If you hit the Home key, the box will snap back to its
- original position. The co-ordinates of the upper left and lower
- right corners as well as the dimensions of the cropped fragment
- will be displayed at the top of the screen.
-
- If you hit F10, your cropped fragment will be written to a new
- file. The file will have the name of your original file with "C_"
- appended to the front of it and the extension of the destination
- format you selected.
-
- If you hit Esc no destination file will be written.
-
- The cropping function requires a revision two screen driver.
- Most of the current Graphic Workshop screen drivers will work...
- a few of the unusual ones may not have been updated. The revision
- level of revision two drivers can be found in the screen driver
- installation screen of GWSINSTL.
-
- Cropping is a batch function. Note that if you use Esc to abort
- one cropped file in a batch, the rest of the batch will be
- aborted.
-
- The Crop function does not have mouse support.
-
-
- REVERSE - F6
- ───────────────────
- This function will create a reversed version of any image file.
- The new file will have the same name as the original file, with
- "R_" appended to the front of it. Thus, reversing PICTURE.MAC
- will leave you with R_PICTUR.MAC. If you reverse a colour image,
- you'll get a colour negative. These look weird... we haven't
- found a use for them as yet.
-
- Reversing is a batch function.
-
-
- TRANSFORM - F7
- ─────────────────────
- This key will pop up a menu offering you five image
- transformations. You can rotate an image in ninety degree
- increments and you can flip it horizontally or vertically. These
- functions work on images of any number of colours.
-
- Note that the ninety and two hundred and seventy degree rotation
- functions will take a very long time if your images are large and
- require the use of virtual memory... this assumes that you lack
- extended or expanded memory. Them's the breaks.
-
- Transformed images will be stored in files with "T_" in front of
- the names. Thus PICTURE.GIF will become T_PICTUR.GIF after any of
- the five transformations have been wrought upon it. If you rotate
- it and then flip the rotated image, for example, it will become
- T_T_PICT.GIF, and so on, with intermediate files along the way.
-
- Transforming is a batch function.
-
-
- SCALE - F8
- ─────────────────
- This key will allow you to scale files from 25 to 500 percent or
- to a specific dimensions.
-
- Your original files will not be altered when you scale them. New
- files with the prefix "S_" will be created. Thus, PICTURE.GIF
- will produce S_PICTUR.GIF after scaling.
-
- Scaling a picture can produce some really ugly results, depending
- on what you scale. Bear in mind that scaling by integral
- values... down to seventy five or fifty percent, up to two
- hundred percent and so on... will produce less ugly results than
- scaling by arbitrary values.
-
- There are three scaling modes available... proportional,
- anamorphic and by size. Proportional scaling will scale files by
- a percentage in both directions. Anamorphic will scale them by
- different percentages in each direction. Scaling by size will
- scale files by whatever percentages are necessary to make them
- fit in a defined number of pixels.
-
- The scaling values you enter will be rounded to the nearest lower
- integral value. Thus, 42.5 percent will really be 42 percent.
-
- You can scale by size to any dimensions in the range of 16 though
- 32767 pixels.
-
- Scaling is fairly time consuming.
-
- You should probably avoid scaling dithered monochrome pictures
- down. Nothing terribly bad will happen, but for reasons which
- will become obvious if you think about it, the results will
- almost always be really ugly.
-
- Note that the scaling percentage you enter determines the size of
- the destination image relative to the source image, not the
- actual percentage of scaling. Thus, entering 25 will produce a
- destination image which is one quarter... 25 percent... of the
- original image. Entering 200 will create a destination image
- twice as big... 200 percent of... the original. Entering 100 will
- produce a destination image identical to the source image.
-
- By default, scaling will be the same in both dimensions. If you
- hit F8 while the scaling box is visible, you will be able to
- enter independent horizontal and vertical values. Hit F8 again
- and you will be able to enter the actual dimensions you want your
- destination image scaled to.
-
- Scaling is a batch function.
-
-
- SPECIAL EFFECTS - F9
- ───────────────────────────
- This function has a submenu which will allow you to access a
- number of special tools for working with colour image files under
- Graphic Workshop.
-
- All of these are batch functions. The destination files will have
- "X_" in front of their names. Note that these functions require
- substantial amounts of memory.
-
-
- Colour reduction
- ----------------------
- This function allows you to create destination files with fewer
- colours than the source files they're derived from. You can use
- this function, for example, to reduce a 256-colour file down to a
- 16-colour one. It's particularly useful for reducing 24-bit files
- down to 256-colour files.
-
- Whenever you reduce the number of colours in a file, some image
- information will get lost. The simplest form of colour reduction
- is "remapping". This simply means that the destination image will
- have the best colour palette it can, and that all the pixels in
- it will be replaced with colours from that palette. The results
- aren't usually very attractive.
-
- Colour dithering, also available in this function, can produce
- decidedly better results. With colour dithering, you can reduce
- 24-bit files down to eight bits with very little loss of detail
- or colour resolution.
-
- The palette used in colour reduction can be either quantized or
- fixed. A quantized palette is derived from the source image,
- while a fixed palette is predefined. In theory a quantized
- palette should be preferable, but in fact this is not always the
- case. A picture with a wide range of colour or small details
- which are markedly different from the rest of the image can fool
- the quantization algorithm into assigning too few colours to
- parts of your image you're interest in. In many cases you'll find
- that the "256 colour orthogonal" palette choice will produce the
- most attractive results.
-
- The "Windows 16 colours" choice will use a palette identical to
- the one used by a sixteen-colour Windows screen driver. This is
- useful if you're creating files to be used as Windows wallpaper,
- or in other applications wherein they'll be displayed by Windows
- in sixteen colours.
-
-
- Grey scale
- ----------------
- This function creates a grey scale destination image from a
- colour source image. The number of bits of colour will remain the
- same.
-
-
- Sharpen
- -------------
- This function will create a destination image with more contrast
- than its source image.
-
-
- Soften
- ------------
- This function will create a destination image with less contrast
- than its source image. This function is particularly useful for
- minimizing the effects of scanning moire patterns caused when you
- attempt to scan a previously screened original. In less technical
- terms, if you scan pictures of nude women from magazines,
- softening the image files will reduce the interference patterns.
-
-
- Smudge
- ------------
- This function will create a destination image which looks like
- it's being viewed through water drops.
-
-
- Spatial posterization
- ---------------------------
- This function will create a destination image in which the image
- is made up of large square areas. This effect is similar to the
- one used by television news to obscure the faces of people whose
- identities are to be kept secret.
-
-
- Promote to 24 bits
- ------------------------
- This function will create a 24-bit file with the same image
- information as a file with fewer colours.
-
-
- SCANNING - F10
- ─────────────────────
- This function will inhale images into Graphic Workshop from a
- scanner, assuming that you loaded a suitable scanner driver when
- you installed the software.
-
- Note that scanner drivers are pretty specific to the scanners
- they're written for. The Scanjet Plus driver, for example, will
- only drive a Scanjet Plus and will be of no real use if you have
- a different sort of scanner. We will be creating more scanner
- drivers in time... check with the Alchemy Mindworks bulletin
- board for more information about new drivers.
-
- All the current drivers check to see if they're really connected
- to the scanners they were designed for.
-
- If you select the Scan function, a menu will pop up with the
- following functions:
-
-
- Scan
- ----------
- This item will cause the current image to be scanned using the
- existing settings.
-
-
- Set mode
- --------------
- This item will allow you to choose the number of bits of colour
- to scan your image with. Some of the options may be inaccessible,
- depending upon the capabilities of your scanner.
-
-
- Set area
- --------------
- This item will allow you to have only a portion of your image
- scanned. In effect, it allows you to crop a coarse pre-scanned
- image and then applies this window to an image with higher
- resolution. See the section of cropping elsewhere in this
- document for instructions on using this window.
-
-
- Set resolution
- --------------------
- This item will allow you to select the number of dots per inch at
- which your scanner will scan the current image.
-
-
- Test scanner
- ------------------
- This item will allow you to make sure your scanner is still
- working properly. This test is performed every time you select
- the Scan function, so you need not perform it explicitly unless
- you think something has gone wrong.
-
-
- Check error
- -----------------
- This item will display the most recent error message from your
- scanner. Most of the time this will be "No error".
-
-
- Get info
- --------------
- This item will tell you how big a file your current image would
- create if it were to be scanned as well as the number of colours
- or grey levels it would contain. Note that the "Packed size"
- field of this box is largely meaningless.
-
-
- Reset scanner
- -------------------
- This item will reset the scanner to its power-up defaults. It
- will also delete any image data you have in memory from a
- previous scan... be warned.
-
-
- Set intensity
- -------------------
- This item will allow you to set the brightness of the current
- scan. It must be set prior to scanning.
-
-
- Set contrast
- ------------------
- This item will allow you to set the contrast of the current
- scan. It must be set prior to scanning.
-
-
- Save file
- ---------------
- This item will allow you to select a format to save your current
- file in. It will then save it and return you to the main screen.
- Any formats which are incapable of supporting your current image
- will be inaccessible.
-
-
- Abort
- -----------
- This item will leave the scanning menu without scanning or saving
- anything. If you have previously scanned an image which has not
- been saved it will ask if you want to save it before you go. The
- Esc key also works.
-
-
- Other Options
- -------------------
- The items after Save file in the scanning menu are defined by the
- scanner driver for your scanner. See your manual for more
- information about how to use them. As a rule, they default to
- safe values.
-
-
- SCRIPT LANGUAGE AND COMMAND LINE MODE
- ▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀
- In addition to being run through its menus, Graphic Workshop can
- handle script files. A script file is a list of Graphic Workshop
- commands. Having been given a script file to work with,
- Graphic Workshop can perform a number of functions and then
- return to DOS or to the program which called it.
-
- The Graphic Workshop script language facility is primarily for
- use in situations in which another application wishes to call
- Graphic Workshop, have it convert, print, view or otherwise
- manipulate some files in the background and then return control
- to the program which called it.
-
- The Graphic Workshop script language and command line mode are
- discussed in detail in the documentation for the Graphic Workshop
- accessory disk, as found elsewhere in this document.
-
-
- CONFIGURATION
- ▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀
- Making permanent changes to the modifiable features of
- Graphic Workshop involves using the installer, GWSINSTL.EXE.
- The configuration of Graphic Workshop is handled by a separate program in
- order to keep GWS.EXE as small as possible, leaving lots of
- memory for putting graphics in.
-
- The GWSINSTL program actually modifies GWS.EXE. In order for it
- to work, GWS.EXE and GWSINSTL.EXE must be in the same directory
- and must be so named. Both programs must be of the same version.
- Be aware that as it directly modifies GWS.EXE, there is the
- outside chance that a bug in the installer might crop up and kill
- GWS.EXE beyond repair. Make sure you have a virgin copy of
- GWS.EXE somewhere before you use the installer.
-
- Place GWSINSTL.EXE and GWS.EXE in the same directory and type
- GWSINSTL. A menu will appear which will let you edit the runtime
- settings, add or change your screen driver and add or change your
- dot matrix printer driver.
-
- Note that the screen drivers are contained in a file called
- GWSDRV.RES. The printer drivers are contained in a file called
- GWSPDR.RES. These files must be in the same directory as GWSINSTL
- for it to be able to find them. If one or both of them is
- missing, the corresponding options in the main screen of GWSINSTL
- will not be available.
-
-
- EDIT RUNTIME - F1
- ────────────────────────
- If you select this option, you'll see a screen which will allow
- you to fine tune Graphic Workshop's performance to suit your
- requirements and hardware. You can use the up and down arrow keys
- and the Home and End keys to move through the items of this
- screen. Hitting Enter when the cursor is over an item which toggles
- will change its state. Hitting Enter when the cursor is over an
- editable field will allow you to type in a new data.
-
- Note that you can run GWSINSTL and select this screen as often as
- you want to adjust the settings of its various parameters.
-
- When you're done changing things, hit F10 to get back to the main
- GWSINSTL menu.
-
- Note that these items can be overridden by using command line
- switches when you run GWS.EXE, should you need them set
- differently from time to time.
-
-
- Screen colours
- --------------------
- This item allows you to set the screen colours. By default, there
- are two sets of screen colours, to wit, a colour set which is
- predominantly blue and a monochrome set. If you don't like either
- of these, hit F1 when the cursor is on this item to create a
- custom set.
-
-
- Memory type
- -----------------
- Hit Enter when the cursor is on this item to move through the
- available extra memory options. See the section dealing with
- memory elsewhere in this document for more information about
- selecting the correct memory type.
-
-
- Display type
- ------------------
- This item allows you to select the type of video card your system
- will be using. It defaults to AUTODETECT, which will cause
- Graphic Workshop to attempt to figure out what sort of card is in
- your system. You may have to change this if you have a multiple
- mode card which causes it to guess incorrectly. You will have to
- change it if you have a super VGA card wish to use it in its
- higher resolution modes.
-
- If you have a super VGA card, set this field to SUPER VGA &
- OTHER and use the screen driver setup screen, discussed later in
- this section, to select a suitable driver.
-
-
- Printer port
- ------------------
- This item selects which parallel printer port to print images to.
- Note that you can only select LP1, LPT2 or LPT3. Note also that
- this selection only affects laser printers. See the section on
- printing elsewhere in this document for more information.
-
-
- Memory overhead (Kbytes)
- ------------------------------
- This is an editable item. It selects the number of kilobytes of
- memory overhead which Graphic Workshop will reserve. See the
- section on memory elsewhere in this document for more
- information.
-
-
- Colour PostScript printing
- --------------------------------
- This item selects whether to assume that your PostScript printer
- can print in colour.
-
-
- Default print dither
- --------------------------
- This item selects the type of dithering to use if you attempt to
- print a colour or grey scale picture to a LaserJet or dot matrix
- printer. This defaults to BAYER, which is fast but ugly. Select
- one of the other options if you'd like better results.
-
-
- PostScript orientation
- ----------------------------
- This item selects the default orientation for printing graphics
- to a PostScript printer.
-
-
- Print filenames
- ---------------------
-
- Print dates
- -----------------
-
- Print image size
- ----------------------
-
- Print image colours
- -------------------------
-
- Print output resolution
- -----------------------------
- These items allow you to determine what, if anything, will be
- printed at the bottoms of pages which Graphic Workshop prints.
-
-
- Graphic Workshop path
- ---------------------------
- This should be a complete path to the subdirectory and drive
- where GWS.EXE and GWS.RES live. For example:
-
- C:\GRAPHICS\
-
- When this item is set correctly, you will be able to run
- Graphic Workshop from anywhere on your hard drive if its location
- is in your DOS path.
-
- This field will initially default to the current directory when
- you run GWSINSTL for the first time. This will be correct in most
- situations.
-
-
- Registration name
- -----------------------
- When you have registered Graphic Workshop, type your name into this field.
- This, in conjunction with the registration number provided when
- you registered the software will disable the closing beg notice.
- Note that you must enter your name exactly as it is written on
- the page with your registration number. Case, spaces and
- punctuation matter.
-
-
- Registration number
- -------------------------
- Enter your registration number in this field.
-
-
- EDIT FORMATS - F2
- ────────────────────────
- This page will let you fine tune the way Graphic Workshop writes
- some types of files.
-
-
- MacPaint header
- ---------------------
- This item allows you to determine whether MacPaint files
- generated by Graphic Workshop will have MacBinary headers in
- them. Leave this on if you don't know what these are. Note that
- this does not affect how Graphic Workshop reads MacPaint files...
- it will handle both types no matter you set this item.
-
-
- IFF/LBM compression
- -------------------------
- This item determines whether IFF/LBM files will be compressed.
- Some old versions of Deluxe Paint choked on compressed files.
-
-
- EPS preview
- -----------------
- This item determines whether EPS files will be created with TIFF
- previews.
-
-
- TIFF compression
- ----------------------
- This item determines whether TIFF files will be created
- compressed. Some applications, such as Gray F/X, don't like
- compressed files.
-
-
- TIFF grey scale expansion
- -------------------------------
- This item determines whether TIFF grey scale files should be
- created with their grey scales expanded. This should be set ON if
- you'll be importing grey scale files into a desktop publishing
- package or otherwise using them to print with and to OFF if
- you'll be editing them.
-
-
- TIFF colour/grey scale
- ----------------------------
- This item determines whether TIFF files with more than one bit of
- colour will be created as colour or grey scale images. The grey
- scale expansion item will be ignored if this item is set to
- COLOUR.
-
-
- EXE file compression
- --------------------------
- This item determines whether self-displaying EXE pictures will be
- compressed. See the section on EXE pictures elsewhere in this
- document for more information.
-
-
- GIF file type
- -------------------
- This item allows you to determine whether Graphic Workshop should
- write old-style GIF87a files or the newer GIF89a files.
-
-
- Targa true colour bits
- ----------------------------
- This item allows you to determine whether 24 bit images written
- to Targa files should be written with 24 or 16 bits of colour.
- See the discussion of Targa files elsewhere in this dcoument for
- more information.
-
-
- EDIT SCREEN DRIVER - F3
- ──────────────────────────────
- This page will allow you to select a super-VGA screen driver. You
- must select a driver which is in keeping with the super VGA card
- you have in your system. If you attempt to display a large
- graphic in Graphic Workshop and the display misbehaves, chances
- are you have the wrong super-VGA screen driver installed.
-
- Note that some drivers are intended for use with cards having a
- half megabyte or more of memory. If you have a 256 kilobytes VGA
- card, choose a suitable 256 kilobyte driver.
-
- Note that not all the drivers support higher resolution modes. If
- you have a card which can display pictures in 1024 by 768 pixel
- resolution, you also need a driver which can drive it in that
- mode. As a rule, all the super VGA drivers will handle 640 by 480
- pixels. Some can do better than this, but not all of them. We're
- working on improving the high end drivers.
-
- Note that the cropping and scanning functions require revision
- 2.0 screen drivers or better. The F2 screen display will show you
- the revision numbers of drivers with revision two or better.
-
- Finally, as of version 6.1e of Graphic Workshop, the drivers
- can set up a menu to allow you to select a screen mode if you
- hold down the Ctrl key when you go to view a file. This facility
- is only available if you have a driver of version 2.1 or better
- for your card. New drivers are coming... if your card is not
- supported by a version 2.1 driver yet, please be patient. All the
- other driver based features will still be available.
-
- The following are some details about the drivers. Some of these
- drivers have been written by users of Graphic Workshop. If you'd
- like to write a driver, see the section on the Graphic Workshop
- accessory disk.
-
-
- Amstrad 16 colour 640x200
- -------------------------------
- This driver was developed by Marcel Ward in Aberystwyth, Wales.
- It allows owners of Amstrad PCs having the custom sixteen-colour
- display cards supplied with these systems to look at colour
- images. We haven't tested this driver, lacking an Amstrad, but
- the source code looks right.
-
-
- VGA in pseudo 640x480
- ---------------------------
- This is a very clever driver by Gregory Weeks which displays 640
- pixel wide 256-colour files on a 320 pixel wide screen by leaving
- out every alternate pixel. As the author notes, nothing is free
- and some detail is lost. However, if you have a VGA card with no
- 640 pixel wide, 256-colour mode... or one which there is no
- driver for as yet... you'll find that this driver is often
- preferable to the stock 320 by 200 pixel MCGA mode.
-
-
- Ahead B
- -------------
- This is a driver for the Ahead B super VGA cards by David
- Mikelson of Solvang, California. This is a fairly basic driver...
- it does not support cropping, but it does handle the Ahead B
- super VGA modes. The author notes:
-
- This driver is for the SVGA card commonly referred to as
- an "AHEAD B" card. The card might also be referred to as
- a "Standard Technologies VGA800C", an "Ahead Systems VGA
- V-5000B", or a "Standard Technologies VGA CARD, REV B".
-
- The card must have at least 512K memory on board.
-
- Note that an "AHEAD B" card is NOT the same as an "AHEAD
- A". An Ahead A card uses different video modes, so this
- driver won't work for an AHEAD A card.
-
- Thanks to all these authors for their drivers.
-
-
- Orchid Fahrenheit 1280
- ----------------------------
- This is a driver to support most Orchid Technologies Fahrenheit
- 1280 cards... some of the really early ones with very funky VESA
- implementations may not behave themselves. This driver assumes
- that your card has one megabyte of memory and a Sierra DAC for
- the high colour modes. We've only been able to test it on a
- limited number of Orchid cards, and we know that there have been
- a lot of revisions to this hardware. Let us know if you have
- difficulties with it. Also, note that Orchid Technologies was
- providing free BIOS upgrades as of this writing for the older
- cards... this cures a multitude of problems.
-
- This driver supports high colour as well as the usual super VGA
- modes, that is, you can view 24-bit image directly with it.
-
- Users of other cards with VESA BIOSs should note that the Orchid
- driver is a VESA driver at heart, with some modifications to make
- it behave itself in this implementation. It has some facilities
- which our standard VESA driver does not, most notably high
- colour support. If you have a high end card with a VESA BIOS,
- you might want to try this driver.
-
-
- General VESA
- ------------------
- The VESA standard is supported by a number of super VGA cards in
- addition to their own proprietary standards. If your card
- supports VESA, either directly or through the use of a TSR, you
- can use this driver. This is especially handy if your card is not
- supported by a dedicated driver as yet. This card provides 256-
- colour resolution out to 1280 by 1024 pixels assuming your card
- supports this mode. Note that the driver will only attempt to
- select display modes which your card actually supports... if you
- call for a mode which does not exist on your card, the nearest
- available mode will be used.
-
- If you have a fairly new display card and are uncertain whether
- it supports VESA, try this driver. If you attempt to view
- EXAMPLE3.GIF and only see the frog... with no text... your card
- does not support VESA.
-
- This driver does not work with some fairly flaky VESA
- implementations, such as the one on the Orchid Fahrenheit 1280
- card.
-
-
- Oak Tech 640 by 480
- -------------------------
-
- Oak Tech 800 by 600
- -------------------------
- These drivers support cards which use the Oak Technologies chip
- set. The higher resolution drivers also support the lower
- resolution modes, and will select the appropriate mode
- automatically.
-
-
- Tseng 4000 640 by 480
- ---------------------------
-
- Tseng 4000 800 by 600
- ---------------------------
-
- Tseng 4000 1024 by 768
- ----------------------------
-
- Tseng 4000X 1024 by 768
- -----------------------------
- These drivers support cards which use the Tseng Labs chip set.
- The higher resolution drivers also support the lower resolution
- modes, and will select the appropriate mode automatically. The
- Tseng 4000X driver will support 1024 by 768 pixels at 256
- colours, and 640 by 480 or 800 by 600 pixels of 24-bit colour.
- You'll need a Tseng 4000 board with the Sierra DAC on it to use
- this driver. It will allow you to view 24-bit images directly.
-
-
- Hercules TIGA 31.5k
- -------------------------
- This driver supports the Hercules Graphic Station card. Note that
- unlike a Graphic Station card, a VGA card only actually does 18-
- bit colour. The 24-bit colour mode of the Graphic Station card
- has a resolution of 512 by 480 pixels. Its aspect ratio isn't all
- that good, but you can fiddle the monitor controls... for most
- monitors... to get pretty reasonable pictures. This driver should
- work on other cards supporting the Texas Instrument TIGA chip,
- but no promises. Note that this is a VGA level driver only... it
- does not do 24 bits directly.
-
-
- Trident
- --------------
- Drivers are included to drive Trident 8900 series cards to 1024
- by 768 pixels in 256 colours and 800 by 600 in sixteen colours and
- monochrome. Choose the one which is appropriate for your
- hardware. The two lower resolution drivers have also been tested
- on the older 8800 series Trident chips.
-
-
- Video Seven 1024i
- -----------------------
- This is a driver for the Headland Technologies Video Seven VRAM
- and Video Seven 1024i cards. It supports the 640 by 480 line 256-
- colour mode.
-
-
- Paradise Plus Card
- ------------------------
- This is a full featured driver for the Western Digital Paradise
- Plus card. This driver also works with the Dell super-VGA card,
- which is actually a Paradise sixteen-bit card.
-
-
- Paradise Pro Card
- -----------------------
- This is a driver for the Paradise Professional card (and clones
- thereof). It supports both the 640 by 400 and 640 by 480 pixel,
- 256 colour modes.
-
-
- Paradise D 640 by 480
- ---------------------------
-
- Paradise D 800 by 600
- ---------------------------
-
- Paradise D 1024 by 768
- ----------------------------
- These are drivers for the newer Paradise cards which use the D
- series chips. You can tell if you have one by the markings on the
- large chip... you'll find the number 90C30 thereon. The 1024 by
- 768 driver requires a megabyte on board. It supports the Paradise
- true colour mode, which means that if you have a RAMDAC on your
- card it will allow you to look at 24-bit images directly in 640
- by 480 and 800 by 600 pixel resolution. Stunning.
-
-
- Dell Super VGA 256K
- -------------------------
- This is a version of the Paradise Plus driver, above. It has been
- modified so as not to use the 800 by 600 pixel EGA and monochrome
- modes of the Paradise card, as this causes the super-VGA monitor
- on a Dell to click a (loud) internal relay every time it changes
- modes. If you don't mind the relay, or you want the 800 by 600
- modes, use the Paradise Plus driver.
-
-
- Dell Super VGA 512K
- -------------------------
- This is a 512K version of the Dell Super VGA driver, that is, a
- Paradise driver with the 800 by 600 pixel monochrome mode
- disabled.
-
- Note: rumour has it that some Dell systems have been shipped with
- Headland Video 7 cards rather than Paradise cards. If your Dell
- system is so equipped... or if you can't get GWS to work in the
- super-VGA modes with one of the above two drivers... try
- VIDEO7.DRV.
-
-
- ATI VGA Wonder
- --------------------
- Drivers are included to drive ATI VGA Wonder series cards to 1024
- by 768 pixels in 256 colours and 800 by 600 in sixteen colours and
- monochrome, as well as to various lesser resolutions. Choose the
- one which is appropriate for your hardware. There is also a
- driver for the ATI-XL card, which adds 24-bit colour support at
- 640 by 480 pixels. This requires a full megabyte of memory on
- your card.
-
-
- Standard VGA 320 x 400
- ----------------------------
- This is a "gadget" driver for a stock VGA card which reprograms
- the beast into an undocumented 320 by 400 line mode. It should
- work on any VGA card, but being undocumented one cannot be sure.
- In any case, while interesting, this mode has such a squashed
- aspect ratio that it's not really useful for anything. In
- addition, having heavily interlaced memory, it's painfully slow
- to update.
-
-
- Standard VGA 360 x 480
- ----------------------------
- This is another undocumented mode. It gets still more on the
- screen, with still more distortion.
-
-
- EDIT EXTERNAL PRINTER DRIVER - F4
- ────────────────────────────────────────
- This page will allow you to select an external printer driver.
- You do not need an external printer driver if you will be
- printing to a PostScript printer or any sort of LaserJet or
- LaserJet compatible printer.
-
- For the most part, external printer drivers are used to drive
- black and white dot matrix printers. Graphic Workshop does
- support external colour printers. At present, the only colour
- driver available is for the Hewlett-Packard PaintJet and Kodak
- Diconix inkjet printers.
-
- If you don't find a driver for your printer in the available list
- of drivers, you can probably use the Epson FX-80 driver. Most dot
- matrix printers emulate this standard. If you'd like to write a
- driver, see the section on the Graphic Workshop accessory disk
- elsewhere in this document.
-
- Note that the Epson LQ and LX drivers, the IBM ProPrinter drivers
- and the Panasonic and Roland drivers were all written by Chris
- Rogers of Ashtree Software. They're particularly slick, in that
- they will ask you what resolution you want to print at. We have
- not tested these, but they look to be well written.
-
-
- EDIT SCANNER DRIVER - F5
- ───────────────────────────────
- This page will let you select a scanner driver. At present, only
- the Hewlett-Packard Scanjet Plus and Scanjet IIC are supported.
- We will be creating more scanner drivers if registrations
- indicate that this feature is of interest.
-
-
- COMMAND LINE SWITCHES
- ▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀
- When you run Graphic Workshop by typing GWS at the command line,
- it will run using the default settings, as configured by
- GWSINSTL. There may be times when you'll want to override these
- settings temporarily, and rather than running the installer, you
- can use the command line switches. These only change the
- configuration of Graphic Workshop when they're used. The next
- time you run Graphic Workshop, it will return to its default
- configuration.
-
- As a rule, command line switches should only be required in
- special circumstances.
-
- You can always see a complete list of the command line switches
- by running Graphic Workshop as
-
- GWS ?
-
- In using the command line switches, make sure that each one is
- separated on the command line by a space. Note that they are not
- case-sensitive. For example, this is a legal invocation of
- Graphic Workshop with some command line switches.
-
- GWS /SVG /vir /Psc
-
- This has told Graphic Workshop to work with a super VGA card,
- virtual memory and a colour PostScript printer.
-
- If you're using Graphic Workshop both under DOS and under
- Windows, you can add command line switches to the command line
- field of the Windows PIF file for Graphic Workshop to adjust its
- configuration if needs be.
-
- The following are the command line switches which
- Graphic Workshop recognizes. Most of these options correspond to
- installation options in GWSINSTL.
-
-
- MEMORY SWITCHES
- ──────────────────────
- /VIR - use virtual memory
- /EMS - use expanded memory
- /XMS - use extended memory
- /XMV - use extended or virtual memory
- /EMV - use expanded or virtual memory
-
-
- VIDEO DRIVER SWITCHES
- ────────────────────────────
- /CGA - use the CGA card driver
- /EGA - use the EGA card driver
- /VGA - use the VGA card driver
- /HER - use the Hercules card driver
- /SVG - use the currently installed super VGA driver (if any)
-
-
- PRINTER SWITCHES
- ───────────────────────
- /PFN - enable printing filenames
- /PDT - enable printing dates
- /PPS - enable printing image size
- /PCL - enable printing number of colours
- /PRS - enable printing resolution
- /PRD - disable all the foregoing print options
- /POR - print in portrait orientation on PostScript printers
- /LAN - print in landscape orientation on PostScript printers
- /PFN - print to a file, rather than to the printer
- /PSM - assume a monochrome PostScript printer
- /PSC - assume a colour PostScript printer
- /PHn - set print dither (n=B:Bayer, F:Floyd-Steinberg, U:Burkes, S:Stucki)
- /LPn - set printer port (n=1,2 or 3)
- /Snn - set Postscript screen size (n=10, 20, 30, 40, 50, 60, 70 or 80)
- /SDF - set PostScript halftone screen to the printer's default
-
-
- FILE FORMAT SWITCHES
- ───────────────────────────
- /EPP - enable EPS preview creation
- /EPN - disable EPS preview creation
- /IFN - No compression on IFF files
- /IFC - RL compression on IFF files
- /MBH - MacPaint MacBinary header on
- /MBN - MacPaint MacBinary header off
- /TCL - Create colour TIFF files
- /TCG - Create grey TIFF files
- /TGN - TIFF files no compression
- /TGC - TIFF files RL compression
- /TXP - Expand TIFF grey scale
- /TXN - Do not expand TIFF grey scale
- /EXC - Compress EXE pictures
- /EXN - Do not compress EXE pictures
- /G87 - Write GIF files as GIF 87a
- /G89 - Write GIF files as GIF 89a
- /T16 - Write true colour Targa files with 16 bits of colour
- /T24 - Write true colour Targa files with 24 bits of colour
-
-
- DESQVIEW, QEMM AND OTHER ENVIRONMENTS
- ▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀
- Graphic Workshop has not been written to run under DesqView, and
- in some cases may not do so reliably. It gets into trouble when
- it switches into a super-VGA graphics mode, which DesqView is
- unable to detect. Quarterdeck maintains that it does behave
- itself under recent releases of their package in other
- circumstances... we have not had the opportunity to test this as
- of this writing.
-
- Because of the way Graphic Workshop uses memory, we don't
- recommend running it under multi-tasking or task switching
- environments, with the exception of Windows 3. Things like
- Double-DOS, GeoWorks and such may cause it to misbehave.
-
-
- VENTURA PUBLISHER TRICKS
- ▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀
- Graphic Workshop is great for getting images into Ventura
- Publisher documents. Here are a few tips for getting the most out
- of it.
-
- Monochrome bitmapped images should be converted into IMG files
- for use with Ventura. Note that while Ventura will import colour
- PCX files with up to 16 colours, the results are rarely pretty.
- You'll do much better to halftone or dither colour PCX files for
- use with Ventura.
-
- Having poured an image into a frame, use the Sizing and Scaling
- box in the Frames menu to select "By Scale Factors." Set the
- scale width to the natural size of the image... as it defaults
- to... or to some integral multiple of it. This will eliminate
- distortion or plaiding of the image.
-
- You can create halftones from colour images by converting them to
- grey scale TIFF files. Ventura allows you a great deal of control
- over the way the grey scale and screening information is handled
- in a TIFF file.
-
- You can also create halftones in Ventura by converting colour and
- grey scale files to IMG files and importing these. The only
- drawback to this over using grey scale TIFF files is that the
- grey scale and screening information will not be adjustable. Note
- that as of this writing the Windows and Macintosh implementations
- of Ventura did not seem to like IMG files with more than one bit
- of colour.
-
- If you use the Define Colours option of the Frame menu to display
- colours as shades of grey rather than as colours... and if you're
- using an EGA or VGA monitor... grey scale TIFF files will appear
- in your chapters as pretty slick little photographs.
-
- Note that if you will be creating grey scale TIFF files for use
- with Ventura, you should enable grey scale TIFF and grey scale
- expansion.
-
-
- CORELDRAW TRICKS
- ▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀
- If you import bitmapped images into Corel Draw, you can decide
- how they'll be handled once they get there by choosing the image
- type you use. Imported PCX files will be scaled to an arbitrary
- size upon entering Corel Draw, with the result that it's almost
- impossible to adjust them to get a one to one relationship
- between the image pixels and the printer pixels. This will make
- many PCX files print badly.
-
- TIFF files, on the other hand, import initially with one to one
- scaling. If you use TIFF files and leave them at their initial
- size, or stretch them to integral multiples of their original
- sizes, they'll print without distortion or plaiding.
-
- Grey scale TIFF files imported into Corel Draw come up as
- PostScript halftones... these can look very slick as part of a
- line drawing. Colour TIFF files are useful if you'll be
- outputting your Corel Draw files to a colour output device or if
- you'll be getting them separated.
-
- You might want to check out "Mastering Corel Draw 3" by Steven
- William Rimmer, published by Sybex Books.
-
-
- GRAPHIC WORKSHOP ACCESSORY DISK
- ▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀
- The Graphic Workshop accessory disk provides you with tools to:
-
- - Write a custom super-VGA screen driver for Graphic Workshop
- - Write a custom scanner driver for Graphic Workshop.
- - Write a custom external printer driver for Graphic Workshop
- - Use the command line and script language of Graphic Workshop.
- - Manipulate the resource files of Graphic Workshop.
- - Fix problems with PCX files generated by some FAX boards.
- - Change the way Graphic Workshop uses your mouse.
- - Remove the on line help to speed up Graphic Workshop booting.
-
- The disk includes the source code for a skeletal super-VGA
- driver, the source code for a printer driver, the source code for
- a scanner driver and a script resource, among other things. You
- will need MASM and LINK or TLINK to create drivers in addition to
- the tools provided with this disk. You'll also need a moderate
- level of ability in 8088-series assembly language programming to
- write drivers.
-
- Complete instructions for using the script language interface are
- also included.
-
- The Graphic Workshop accessories disk is available to registered
- users of Graphic Workshop for $10.00 if it's ordered at the time
- you register, or for $20.00 afterwards.
-
-
- CONTACTING ALCHEMY MINDWORKS INC.
- ▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀
- We hope you'll contact us to register Graphic Workshop... see the
- section about registering your software elsewhere in this
- document.
-
- You can contact us by mail by writing to us at:
-
- Alchemy Mindworks Inc.
- P.O. Box 500
- Beeton, Ontario
- L0G 1A0
- Canada
-
- You can register Graphic Workshop with a Visa card by calling
- 1-800-263-1138 from the United States or 1-416-729-4969 from
- other places. Please note that this number is for ordering only.
- (The area code for Alchemy Mindworks' non-800 numbers will change
- from 416 to 905 after October 4, 1993.)
-
- We will attempt to answer questions from unregistered users who
- write to us to the extent that their answers are needed for you
- to fully determine whether this software will suit your
- requirements.
-
- We can also be reached through the Alchemy Mindworks bulletin
- board. It's available twenty-four hours a day at (416) 729-4609.
- As of this writing, the protocol was 300, 1200 or 2400 baud, or
- 9600 baud v.32bis, eight data bits, no parity and one stop bit.
- (The area code for Alchemy Mindworks' non-800 numbers will change
- from 416 to 905 after October 4, 1993.)
-
- The bulletin board always has the most recent versions of all our
- shareware on it, plus bug fixes, drivers and other relevant
- information. It only exists to support Alchemy Mindworks'
- shareware... it does not have a general file area.
-
- If you encounter problems with a file, you're welcome to upload
- the errant file to our bulletin board. Actually, you can upload
- any picture files you like to the board... we enjoy getting
- pictures.
-
- If you have a question about Graphic Workshop, feel free to leave it
- on the bulletin board. We try to answer all questions within
- twenty-four hours. Note that you must call back to retrieve your
- answer... please don't ask us to phone you or to leave the answer
- on another bulletin board.
-
- Registered users of Graphic Workshop will receive our voice number
- for immediate technical support. The voice number is only
- available for use from 10:00am to 5:00pm EST. If you call and get
- our answering machine... it does happen... please leave us a
- message or call back later. We are only able to return long
- distance calls if we can call you collect. In this regard, please
- note that as of this writing Canada has a very peculiar
- electronic voice mail collect call system... if the phone
- company's computer starts talking when you pick up the phone,
- it's probably us returning your call.
-
- We ask that in contacting us you appreciate that we are a small
- company with limited resources. If you have not registered this
- software we will not tell you to go to hell, but please don't ask
- us for half an hour of free technical support.
-
-
- REGISTRATION
- ▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀
- If you like Graphic Workshop and find it useful, you are requested to
- support it by sending us $40.00. This will entitle you to
- telephone support, notification of updates, a free copy of the
- latest version of this software and other worthwhile things. It
- will also avail you of a registration number to shut off the
- closing beg notice. More to the point, though, it'll make you
- feel good. We've not infested Graphic Workshop with excessive beg notices,
- crippled it or had it verbally insult you after ten days. We
- trust you to support this software if you like it.
-
- If you want to see additional features in Graphic Workshop, register
- it. If we had an Arcturian mega-dollar for everyone who has said
- they'd most certainly register their copy if we'd add just one
- more thing to it, we could buy ourselves a universe and retire.
-
- Oh yes, should you fail to support this program and continue to
- use it, a leather winged demon of the night will tear itself,
- shrieking blood and fury, from the endless caverns of the nether
- world, hurl itself into the darkness with a thirst for blood on
- its slavering fangs and search the very threads of time for the
- throbbing of your heartbeat. Just thought you'd want to know
- that.
-
- Our address is:
-
- Alchemy Mindworks Inc.
- P.O. Box 500
- Beeton, Ontario
- L0G 1A0
- Canada
-
- You can register Graphic Workshop with a Visa card by calling
- 1-800-263-1138 from the United States or 1-416-729-4969 from
- other places. (The area code for Alchemy Mindworks' non-800
- numbers will change from 416 to 905 after October 4, 1993.)
-
- If you have previously registered Graphic Workshop, you can update
- your copy to the current release for $20.00.
-
- If you have a FAX number, please include it in your registration.
- We're hoping to be able to handle notification of future updates
- of this software by FAX where we can. This is both considerably
- faster and a lot cheaper than mail.
-
- You can FAX your order to us at (416) 729-4156. You'll find an
- order form in this ZIP to make this easier. (The area code for
- Alchemy Mindworks' non-800 numbers will change from 416 to 905
- after October 4, 1993.)
-
- When you register Graphic Workshop, please specify the disk size you
- require. In addition, please state whether you require dual
- density disks... some of our packages normally ship on quad
- density disks. You should only require dual density disks if
- you're using an old-style 8088-based XT system.
-
- Please note that we are not able to accept purchase orders for
- fewer than six copies of Graphic Workshop at a time. We cannot
- ship software COD.
-
-
- CANADIAN USERS
- ─────────────────────
- The registration fee for Graphic Workshop is $40.00 (CDN) plus
- seven percent GST, or $42.80. We sincerely regret collecting this
- tax on behalf of several levels of government which will only
- squander it. If you sincerely regret having to pay it, we urge
- you to express your regret by voting in the next federal and
- provincial elections.
-
-
- AMERICAN USERS
- ─────────────────────
- The registration fee for Graphic Workshop is $40.00 (US). The
- exchange on US funds pretty well covers the extra postage to the
- States.
-
- Please note that when you send us your order... and then when we
- send you your update back... two distinct post offices get to
- deal with the ensuing mail. It can take a few weeks for things to
- get through this system... we ask that you be patient. We don't
- fully understand why it takes less time for a package to get to
- Australia than it does to send one to Cleveland... some things
- are best left as mysteries.
-
-
- OTHER USERS
- ──────────────────
- The registration fee for Graphic Workshop is $40.00 (US). If you pay
- us by cheque, please make sure that it's a cheque drawn on an
- international bank, and that it will be negotiable in Canada. If
- there's no bank clearance number along the bottom of the cheque,
- it will not clear.
-
- Payment from countries outside Canada must be in US dollars.
-
-
- PAYING BY CREDIT CARD
- ────────────────────────────
- We can accept payment by Visa only. We need your Visa card number
- and expiry date and the name which appears on your card. We also
- need written authorization to debit your Visa account for the
- specific amount you're sending us.
-
- We cannot accept MasterCard, American Express or other credit
- cards.
-
-
- SOURCE CODE AVAILABILITY AND BOOKS
- ▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀
- It isn't.
-
- After considerable meditation and several bad experiences, we
- have decided not to release the source code for Graphic Workshop.
- We do license parts of them for specific applications... if you
- want more information about using some of the functions of
- this package in your software, please contact us.
-
- If you're interested in writing programs which use graphics,
- you'll find everything you need to know in Bitmapped Graphics,
- second edition, by Steven William Rimmer. It's published by TAB
- Books, (TAB book 3558). It features code to pack and unpack
- MacPaint, IMG, PCX, GIF and TIFF files, as well as chapters on
- screen drivers, dithering and printing.
-
- An additional book on this subject, Supercharged Bitmapped
- Graphics, (TAB Book 4102), discusses the GIF 89a, WordPerfect,
- BMP, IFF/LBM, TGA, MSP, 24-bit PCX and colour TIFF file formats,
- as well as such subjects as colour dithering and colour printing.
-
- If you'd like to write applications which use menus, icons,
- windows and all the other paraphernalia of a graphical user
- interface, you might find the book PC Graphical User Interfaces
- handy. It's published by TAB Books (TAB Book 3875). It includes
- the C source for a complete graphical user interface library,
- related code to manage fonts and bitmaps and a tiny paint
- program.
-
- Bitmapped Graphics for Windows, by Steven William Rimmer,
- published by TAB Windcrest, will be available at the end of 1992.
- It deals with the most popular image file formats in a Windows
- environment.
-
- A complete discussion of graphic file formats for use in word
- processing documents and desktop publishing chapters can be found
- in The Graphic File Toolkit, by Steven William Rimmer, published
- by Addison-Wesley. This is an invaluable reference for anyone who
- wants to use graphic files but does not want to become a
- programmer in the process.
-
- If your local bookstore doesn't have these books, they can be
- mail or phone ordered from Christies of Cookstown, P.O. Box 392,
- Cookstown, Ontario L0L 1L0, Canada. Their phone number is (705)
- 458-1562. It has a FAX machine on it after hours. As of this
- writing, they're open seven days a week.
-
-
- BUNDLING GRAPHIC WORKSHOP
- ▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀
- If you'd like to include Graphic Workshop with your product, please
- get in touch with us. We have several ways to help you do this so
- your users get the most out of our software and we won't have to
- set our leather winged demon of the night on 'em.
-
-
- SHAREWARE DISTRIBUTORS
- ▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀
- We will, at our discretion, send out disks of our shareware
- applications to shareware distributors. Alternately, you can
- download the current versions of our applications from CompuServe
- in the PICS forum or from our bulletin board at (416) 729-4609.
-
- We encourage you to use our bulletin board, as it will allow you
- to keep your copies of our applications up to date.
-
- If you obtain current copies of our shareware, you have our
- permission to distribute them under the following terms. No
- written permission from us is required if you abide by these
- terms.
-
- - That nothing be added to, deleted from or changed in the
- archive files which contain our packages. This includes adding
- ZIP file comments to them.
-
- - That our shareware is not included in or bundled with other
- hardware or software without our written permission.
-
- - That no printed documentation regarding our shareware is
- included with the package without our written permission.
-
- - That hard copy explaining that our packages are shareware is
- included with the disks.
-
- - That no more than $10.00 (US) be charged for the distribution
- of whatever package our applications are part of. If you will
- be charging more than this, please get in touch with us for
- bundling rates.
-
- You do have our permission to copy the ZIP files from our quad
- density disk to multiple lower density disks for distribution.
-
- Please note that if you would like to distribute Graphic Workshop
- in "rack" packaging, that is, in a store rather than directly
- from a shareware distributor, we request that you contact us for
- permission to do so. We will require a proof copy of the
- packaging you intend to use prior to giving our consent for rack
- packaging.
-
-
- OTHER ALCHEMY MINDWORKS SHAREWARE
- ▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀
- The following are the other shareware packages we have available
- as of this writing. Our newsletter, available for the asking,
- will list all the current ones.
-
-
- GRAPHIC WORKSHOP
- ───────────────────────
- This is the last word in image programs. It converts, prints,
- views, dithers, thresholds, transforms, flips, rotates, scales,
- crops, colour adjusts, scans, quantizes and wreaks special
- effects on MacPaint, GEM/Ventura IMG, PCX, GIF, TIFF, WPG, MSP,
- IFF/LBM, BMP, RLE, Halo CUT, Targa, ART, EXE, TXT and EPS files.
- It drives CGA, Hercules, EGA, VGA and pretty well all super VGA
- cards. It will drive PostScript and LaserJet Plus laser printers,
- colour PostScript printers, colour inkjets and most dot matrix
- printers. It features batch processing, extended and expanded
- memory support, an intuitive user interface and easy to follow
- menus. It allows you to convert colour image files into superb
- black and white clip art for desktop publishing, among other
- things.
-
-
- GRAPHIC WORKSHOP FOR WINDOWS (RELEASE 1.1)
- ─────────────────────────────────────────────────
- Offering the same functionality as Graphic Workshop for DOS, the
- Windows implementation of this package offers a traditional
- Windows interface, multitasking and lots of things to click on.
- It converts, prints, views, dithers, thresholds, transforms,
- flips, rotates, scales, crops, colour adjusts, scans, quantizes
- and wreaks special effects on MacPaint, GEM/Ventura IMG, PCX,
- GIF, TIFF, JPG, WPG, MSP, IFF/LBM, BMP, RLE, Halo CUT, Targa,
- ART, text and EXE picture files. Graphic Workshop for Windows
- will display and print on any card and printer respectively that
- can be driven by Windows. It features batch processing, an
- intuitive user interface and easy to follow menus. The 1.1
- release adds a thumbnail preview mode, context sensitive help,
- easier installation and all sorts of new features. Includes
- several unicorns.
-
-
- IMAGE GALLERY (RELEASE 1.1)
- ──────────────────────────────────
- Image Gallery is a visual database to help you keep track of a
- large number of image files quickly and effectively. It will
- create database files... galleries... of any combination of
- bitmapped image files, displaying them as small ``thumbnail''
- images. It works with all the file formats supported by Graphic
- Workshop, with the exceptions of EPS, EXE and TXT. You can search
- a gallery visually or by key words. Each entry in a gallery
- supports key word and comment fields, as well as the dimensions,
- location and other specifics of each image. You can also print
- all or part of a gallery, producing hard copy catalogs of your
- images when you need them. Image Gallery will run with any VGA
- card. It uses a Microsoft compatible mouse and will drive any
- PostScript or LaserJet Plus compatible laser printer, and most
- dot matrix printers. Release 1.1 includes a full colour view
- function, exporting and multiple selection.
-
-
- DESKTOP PAINT 256 (RELEASE TWO)
- ──────────────────────────────────────
- This is a complete rewrite of our popular super VGA paint
- package. Desktop Paint 256 is a powerful painting application. It
- will let you create and edit pictures stored in the MacPaint,
- GEM/Ventura IMG, PCX, GIF, TIFF, WPG, MSP, IFF/LBM, BMP, Halo
- CUT, and Targa formats. It features a rich selection of drawing
- and image manipulation tools, XMS and EMS support to work on
- large images and a user friendly interface. Looking very much
- like monochrome Desktop Paint in colour, it's a powerful
- application which will be equally useful for picture collectors,
- artists and desktop publishing users. It supports Paradise (and
- compatibles), Headland Video 7, Tseng Labs 4000 series cards,
- Trident cards which use 8900 series chips, Oak Technologies
- cards, ATI VGA Wonder cards and all cards with VESA capabilities.
- Note that you must have one of these super-VGA cards to use
- Desktop Paint 256... it does not run in the standard 320 by 200
- pixel "standard" VGA mode. Desktop Paint 256 requires a
- Microsoft-compatible mouse.
-
-
- DESKTOP PAINT 16
- ───────────────────────
- Desktop Paint 16 is a VGA paint package for use with images
- having up to sixteen colours. As with the monochrome
- implementation of Desktop Paint, it will read and write image
- files in the MacPaint, GEM/IMG, PCX files, GIF, TIFF, WPG, MSP,
- IFF/LBM, BMP and PIC formats. It has EMS and XMS support to
- handle images of virtually any size, an intuitive user interface
- and a wide selection of image creation and manipulation tools.
- Desktop Paint 16 can utilize fonts from many other sources,
- including Ventura Publisher, Macintosh FONT and NFNT resources
- and Windows FNT files. It requires a VGA card and a Microsoft-
- compatible mouse.
-
-
- DESKTOP PAINT (RELEASE THREE)
- ────────────────────────────────────
- Desktop Paint is a powerful monochrome paint package fine tuned
- for use with desktop publishing applications. It will read and
- write image files in all the formats Graphic Workshop supports
- with the exceptions of EPS and RLE. It has EMS and XMS support to
- handle images of virtually any size, an intuitive user interface
- and a wide selection of image creation and manipulation tools.
- Desktop Paint can utilize fonts from many other sources,
- including Ventura Publisher, Macintosh FONT and NFNT resources
- and Windows FNT files. Desktop Paint requires a Microsoft-
- compatible mouse.
-
-
- GRAFCAT (RELEASE THREE)
- ──────────────────────────────
- GrafCat prints a visual catalog of your image files, with
- fifteen or sixteen pictures to a page, depending on the image
- orientation you choose. It supports all the file types that
- Graphic Workshop handles, and will drive any PostScript or
- LaserJet Plus compatible laser printer, including LaserJet II and
- LaserJet III series printers. This is a complete re-write of
- GrafCat... it now supports a file finder screen like the one in
- Graphic Workshop and numerous print options.
-
- If you can't obtain them from the usual sources of shareware,
- they're available from us for $40.00 each preregisterd. They're
- also all available for downloading from our bulletin board at
- (416) 729-4609. (The area code for Alchemy Mindworks non-800
- numbers will change from 416 to 905 after October 4, 1993.)
-
-
-
- REVISION HISTORY
- ▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀
-
- For them what cares...
-
- Version 6.1u - Added drivers for the Diamond Speedstar 24X cards
- and improved the VESA support. The VESA drivers now handle high
- colour, and work with even the most unusual VESA
- implementations... we hope. Added zooming to the view mode.
- Improved the error trapping in most of the functions. Added
- support for the PFS ART format. Improved the Targa colour
- handling for Targa 16 files. Added orthogonal and Windows palette
- options to the colour reduction function. Added a thresholding
- option to the monochrome dithering function. Moves the help
- resources out of the main GWS.RES file to speed up the boot.
- Improved the EXE format video card detection... it should behave
- itself with PS/2s now. Added the VGACARD utility to help select a
- super VGA driver.
-
- Version 6.1t - Added Deskjet 500C printer support, and
- considerably improved the handling of non-laser printers in
- general. Graphic Workshop can now handle external drivers with
- multiple modes. Fixed another inconsistency in the WPG format...
- this one caused some WPG files to be read with several lines
- missing from the bottom of the image. Fixed the PCX format to
- write sixteen-colour files that get along with more recent
- versions of PC Paintbrush. Added screen drivers for the Orchid
- Fahrenheit 1280 and Ahead B cards.
-
- Version 6.1s - Fixed a problem with converting eight-bit files
- and modified the F9 colour reduction function to use sorted
- palettes. This sets up the reduced palette such that the darkest
- colours appear first in the palette, and hence the border will be
- dark when the file is displayed. Improved the PIC resource to
- write VGA-format PIC files. Added an option to write true-colour
- images to the Targa format with either 16 or 24 bits of colour.
- Added detailed on-line topical help.
-
- Version 6.1r - Added mouse support. Fixed a problem with the WPG
- format that caused it to abort on WPG files created by the
- WordPerfect screen capture utility. Added fades and Oak
- Technologies to the EXE format. Fixed a bug in the script
- language that caused the scale function to choose the wrong
- destination file format. Fixed a bug in the extended memory
- support, and one in the BMP resource that caused problems in
- writing some 24-bit files.
-
- Version 6.1q - Added drivers for Oak Technologies VGA cards.
- Largely rewrote the GIF format resource to make it a bit more
- bulletproof. Added a GIF 89a write option. Added contrast
- adjustment to the view mode. Simplified the view mode options
- menu a lot, deleted some of the obsolete options and replaced the
- error diffused dither with eight-colour Bayer dithering, which is
- much faster for a quick preview image.
-
- Version 6.1p - Added Windows RLE support, allowing
- Graphic Workshop to create compressed Windows wallpaper and to
- change the initial Window logo. Added a scale to size option in
- the F8 scaling function. Added a time delay option for EXE
- pictures... make your own slide shows. Added new tags to the TIFF
- format to create TIFF files which will import correctly into
- CorelDRAW 3.0. Modified GWSINSTL to make the GWS.RES path in
- the F1 page default to the current directory.
-
- Version 6.1o - Implemented registration numbers to disable the
- closing beg notice for registered users, fixed a bug in the EXE
- resource and added super-VGA support to it. Fixed several bugs in
- the LBM resource.
-
- Version 6.1n - Improved the TIFF support for certain fairly
- obtuse types of colour TIFF files. Fixed an irregularity in the
- Stucki dithers.
-
- Version 6.1m - Fixed an inconsistency in the way WPG files were
- being written. Added 24-bit IMG capability. Added a VESA screen
- driver. Fixed a bug which made sixteen-colour EXE files convert
- oddly now and again. Fixed a bug in the printing function of the
- script language. History lurches erratically forward...
-
- Version 6.1l - Fixed several bugs in the PIC and WPG format
- resources and one in GWSINSTL, which caused the EPS preview flag
- to be set incorrectly.
-
- Version 6.1k - Improved the TIFF file format resource to handle
- still more TIFF file variations. TIFF files and Tory politicians
- were sent here to vex us... it's a shame you can't look forward
- to voting TIFF files into oblivion. Fixed a minor bug in the 24-
- bit to monochrome dithering code.
-
- Version 6.1j - Fixed a bug in the WPG format which caused some
- really huge WPG files not to read correctly.
-
- Version 6.1i - Considerably sped up the colour remapping code for
- the F9 effects functions. This will shorten the time it takes to
- do colour remapping, dithering, softening, sharpening and spatial
- posterization. Added a Tseng 4000X driver to support Tseng cards
- with the Sierra DAC. This will allow users of these cards to view
- 24-bit files directly. Fixed a bug in the TIFF format which
- prevented it from properly decoding some TIFF files, most notably
- those from Corel Draw. Improved the EXE format to display
- sixteen-colour grey scale files correctly on VGA cards.
-
- Version 6.1h - Fixed a potential memory allocation bug in the
- file finder screen. Added new Paradise D series drivers,
- including one for the one megabyte Paradise card with a RAMDAC.
- If you have this card, the new drivers will let you view 24-bit
- files directly. Added a work-around for the EXE file format's
- problem detecting some types of display cards and improved the
- Hercules card detection. Added a tag all command to the main file
- finder. Added a mode selection menu to the RGB display mode.
-
- Version 6.1g - Fixed a bug in the quantized dither view function.
- Added Promote to 24 bits to the F9 effects menu. Added an ATI-XL
- true colour driver. Fixed a bug in the remap to grey view
- function which only turned up after adding the ATI-XL driver.
- Fixed a bug in the Targa format which caused true colour images
- with palettes to be read incorrectly. Why would a true colour
- image require a palette, you ask... Added landscape printing for
- LaserJet printers and autosize modes for PostScript and LaserJet
- printing. Fixed a bug in the PCX format which caused some eight-
- colour PCX files to view improperly. Improved the precompensation
- for printing multiple-bit images to PostScript printers... this
- should make them print out with more lifelike halftones. Improved
- the precompensation for expanded grey scale TIFF files as well...
- same curve. Added new drivers for ATI and Trident cards. Busy
- week, this one.
-
- Version 6.1f - Fixed a bug in the rotate function which would
- cause monochrome files rotated by 90 or 270 degrees to get
- mangled or crash Graphic Workshop, depending on how big they
- were. Very nasty.
-
- Version 6.1e - Added a menu so that screen drivers can prompt you
- for a display mode in viewing. Updated the Hercules driver to
- version 2.0 so it supports cropping. Fixed a bug the the rename
- function which caused it to lock up occasionally. Fixed a bug in
- the WordPerfect Graphics format which caused it to abort on some
- files. Fixed two bugs in the TIFF format... one which kept
- Macintosh TIFF files from reading properly and another which
- caused four bit grey scale TIFF files to be written incorrectly.
-
- Version 6.1d - Fixed another bug in the Targa format which caused
- some 16-bit files to be read with the wrong colour intensity.
- Fixed a bug in the IFF/LBM format which caused some odd sized IFF
- files to be read incorrectly. Fixed a bug in the cropping
- function which caused it to behave erratically now and again.
- Added a wait box for the virtual memory allocation. Fixed a bug
- in several of the file format resources which caused F9 special
- effects to mangle sixteen-colour images and the scale and print
- functions to misbehave for some files.
-
- Version 6.1c - Fixed a bug in the Targa format which caused the
- red and blue pixel values to be interchanged in some types of 24-
- bit files. Disabled several features in the the view mode options
- menu which should have been disabled all along. Added large step
- panning in the view mode.
-
- Version 6.1b - Fixed a bug in the Hercules card driver. Added
- foreign language support.
-
- Version 6.1a - Added cropping, scanning and interactive colour
- adjustment. The currently supported scanners include the HP
- ScanJet Plus and the HP ScanJet 2C. Almost all the screen drivers
- got updated. Added Halo CUT file support and we fixed a bug in
- several of the image file formats which would cause certain types
- of very large image files to compress poorly. We fixed the
- virtual memory manager, which previously declined to delete its
- scratch files if there was no TEMP variable in the environment.
- We upgraded the VGA screen drivers to display sixteen-colour
- images with no colour shift.
-
- Version 6.0d - Fixed several PostScript printing bugs and
- improved the way the Graphic Workshop file format resources
- manage memory.
-
- Version 6.0c - Fixed a bug in the GIF format resource which
- caused GIF files to be written with bad screen descriptors. This
- bothered some other applications which read them. Also, replaced
- the Tseng Labs drivers... these seem to get along better with
- some of the newer cards.
-
- Version 6.0b - Added details to the GIF format. Fixed a bug in
- GWSINSTL that caused an "Error loading GRAF" message if the
- display type was set to VGA.
-
- Version 6.0a - Fixed a bug which causes 16 x 16 pixel spatial
- posterization to hang or crash back to DOS and one which caused
- the view function to omit the last line in 256-colour images.
-
- Version 6.0 - A complete rewrite with countless new and improved
- features (a likely story, this.)
-
-
- LEGAL DOGMA
- ▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀
- Neither the author nor Alchemy Mindworks Inc. assumes
- responsibility for any damage or loss caused by the use of these
- programs, however it comes down. If you can think of a way a
- picture program can cause you damage or loss you've a sneakier
- mind than mine.
-
- All the registered trademarks used herein are registered to
- whoever it is that owns them. This notification is given in lieu
- of any specific list of trademarks and their owners, which would
- not be as inclusive and would probably take a lot longer to type.
-
- If you register Graphic Workshop, we will assume that you are doing
- so having tested the shareware version and ascertained that it's
- suitable for your hardware and requirements. We cannot provide
- refunds for shareware registration if you subsequently change
- your mind.
-
- Graphic Workshop, Desktop Paint, Image Gallery, GrafCat and
- Storyteller are trademarks of Alchemy Mindworks Inc.
-
- That's it...
-
-