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Comparing CV/bin/cv (file contents):
Revision 1.37 by root, Fri Mar 18 03:45:29 2005 UTC vs.
Revision 1.58 by root, Wed Sep 7 20:17:25 2005 UTC

4use Encode (); 4use Encode ();
5 5
6use Gtk2 -init; 6use Gtk2 -init;
7use Gtk2::Gdk::Keysyms; 7use Gtk2::Gdk::Keysyms;
8 8
9use Gtk2::CV;
10
9use Gtk2::CV::ImageWindow; 11use Gtk2::CV::ImageWindow;
10use Gtk2::CV::Schnauzer; 12use Gtk2::CV::Schnauzer;
11 13
12use Gtk2::CV; 14BEGIN {
15 require Gtk2::CV::Plugin;
16 require "$ENV{HOME}/.cvrc" if -r "$ENV{HOME}/.cvrc";
17}
18
19use Gtk2::CV::Plugin::NameCluster;
20use Gtk2::CV::Plugin::RCluster;
13 21
14Gtk2::Rc->parse (Gtk2::CV::find_rcfile "gtkrc"); 22Gtk2::Rc->parse (Gtk2::CV::find_rcfile "gtkrc");
15 23
16use File::Spec; 24use File::Spec;
17 25
32 (File::Spec->splitpath ($_[1]))[2], 40 (File::Spec->splitpath ($_[1]))[2],
33 -s $_[1]; 41 -s $_[1];
34 $info->set_label ($label); 42 $info->set_label ($label);
35 $viewer->load_image ($_[1]); 43 $viewer->load_image ($_[1]);
36 }); 44 });
37 $s->signal_connect (chdir => sub {
38 my ($self, $dir) = @_;
39 45
40 my $path = Cwd::abs_path $dir; 46 Gtk2::CV::Plugin->call (new_schnauzer => $s);
41 47
42 $self->realize;
43 $self->window->property_change (
44 Gtk2::Gdk::Atom->intern ("_X_CWD", 0),
45 Gtk2::Gdk::Atom->intern ("UTF8_STRING", 0),
46 Gtk2::Gdk::CHARS, 'replace',
47 Encode::encode_utf8 $path,
48 );
49 });
50
51 $s; 48 $s
52} 49}
53 50
54sub std_keys { 51sub std_keys {
55 my $key = $_[1]->keyval; 52 my $key = $_[1]->keyval;
56 my $state = $_[1]->state; 53 my $state = $_[1]->state;
84 $h->load_string (do { local $/; <DATA> }); 81 $h->load_string (do { local $/; <DATA> });
85 } 82 }
86 83
87 $help->show_all; 84 $help->show_all;
88 } else { 85 } else {
89 #$mainwin->show_all; 86 return 0;
90 $schnauzer->handle_key ($key, $state);
91 } 87 }
92 88
93 1; 89 1
94} 90}
95 91
96{ 92{
97 $viewer = new Gtk2::CV::ImageWindow; 93 $viewer = new Gtk2::CV::ImageWindow;
98 94
99 $viewer->set_title ("CV: Image"); 95 $viewer->set_title ("CV: Image");
100 96
101 $viewer->signal_connect (key_press_event => \&std_keys); 97 $viewer->signal_connect (key_press_event => sub {
98 &std_keys
99 or $schnauzer->signal_emit (key_press_event => $_[1])
100 });
102 $viewer->signal_connect (delete_event => sub { main_quit Gtk2 }); 101 $viewer->signal_connect (delete_event => sub { main_quit Gtk2 });
103 102
104 $viewer->signal_connect (button3_press_event => sub { 103 $viewer->signal_connect (button3_press_event => sub {
105 $mainwin->visible 104 $mainwin->visible
106 ? $mainwin->hide 105 ? $mainwin->hide
107 : $mainwin->show_all; 106 : $mainwin->show_all;
108 1; 107 1
109 }); 108 });
109
110 Gtk2::CV::Plugin->call (new_imagewindow => $viewer);
110 111
111 $schnauzer = new_schnauzer; 112 $schnauzer = new_schnauzer;
112 113
113 $mainwin = new Gtk2::Window; 114 $mainwin = new Gtk2::Window;
114 $mainwin->set_title ("CV"); 115 $mainwin->set_title ("CV");
115 $mainwin->add (my $vbox = new Gtk2::VBox); 116 $mainwin->add (my $vbox = new Gtk2::VBox);
116 $mainwin->signal_connect (delete_event => sub { $mainwin->hide; 1; }); 117 $mainwin->signal_connect (delete_event => sub { $mainwin->hide; 1 });
117 118
118 $vbox->add ($schnauzer); 119 $vbox->add ($schnauzer);
119 $vbox->pack_end (my $frame = new Gtk2::Frame, 0, 0, 0); 120 $vbox->pack_end (my $frame = new Gtk2::Frame, 0, 0, 0);
120 $frame->add (my $hbox = new Gtk2::HBox 0, 0); 121 $frame->add (my $hbox = new Gtk2::HBox 0, 0);
121 $hbox->pack_start ((new Gtk2::Label "Info"), 0, 0, 0); 122 $hbox->pack_start ((new Gtk2::Label "Info: "), 0, 0, 0);
122 $hbox->pack_start (($info = new Gtk2::Label), 1, 1, 0); 123 $hbox->pack_end (my $labelwindow = new Gtk2::EventBox, 1, 1, 0);
124 $labelwindow->add ($info = new Gtk2::Label);
125 $labelwindow->signal_connect_after (size_request => sub { $_[1]->width (0); 0 });
126 $info->set (selectable => 1, xalign => 0, justify => "left");
123 127
124 $schnauzer->set_geometry_hints; 128 $schnauzer->set_geometry_hints;
125} 129}
126 130
127if (@ARGV) { 131if (@ARGV) {
132 @ARGV == 1 && -d $ARGV[0]
133 ? $schnauzer->set_dir (Glib::filename_to_unicode shift)
128 $schnauzer->set_paths ([map Glib::filename_to_unicode $_, @ARGV]); 134 : $schnauzer->set_paths ([map Glib::filename_to_unicode $_, @ARGV]);
129 $schnauzer->show_all; 135 $schnauzer->show_all;
130 $schnauzer->handle_key ($Gtk2::Gdk::Keysyms{space}, []); 136 $schnauzer->handle_key ($Gtk2::Gdk::Keysyms{space}, []);
131} else { 137} else {
132 $schnauzer->set_dir (File::Spec->curdir); 138 $schnauzer->set_dir (File::Spec->curdir);
133 $mainwin->show_all; 139 $mainwin->show_all;
134 $viewer->show_all;
135} 140}
136 141
137$viewer->show_all; 142$viewer->show_all;
138 143
139main Gtk2; 144main Gtk2;
140 145
141__DATA__ 146__DATA__
142 147
148=encoding utf-8
149
143=head1 NAME 150=head1 NAME
144 151
145cv - a fast gtk+ image viewer modeled after xv 152cv - a fast gtk+ image viewer loosely modeled after XV
146 153
147=head1 SYNOPSIS 154=head1 SYNOPSIS
148 155
149 cv [file...] 156 cv [file...]
150 157
158=head1 FEATURES
159
160CV is supposed to work similar to the venerable XV image viewer, just
161faster. Why faster?
162
163=over 4
164
165=item * optimized directory scanning algorithm
166
167The directory scanning in CV uses some tricks that - on most modern
168filesystems - makes it possible to detect filetypes faster than stat()'ing
169every file. This makes CV suitable for directories with lots of files
170(10000+).
171
172This algorithm is quite unprecise - it doesn't make a difference between
173files, device nodes, symlinks and the like, and filetype detection is done
174using the file extension only.
175
176On the positive side, it is usually many orders of magnitude faster than
177traditional scanning techniques (good for directories with 10000 or
178100000+ files).
179
180=item * queuing for all time-consuming background tasks
181
182All tasks, such as unlinking files or generating thumbnails, that can be
183done in the background will be done so - no waiting required, even when
184changing directories.
185
186=item * use of asynchronous I/O
187
188CV tries to use asynchronous I/O whereever it makes sense, for example
189while scanning directories, waiting for stat data, unlinking files or
190generating thumbnails. This usually decreases scanning times for large
191directories a bit (especially on RAID devices and over NFS) and makes CV
192much more interactive.
193
194=item * fast image loading
195
196The time span between the user issuing a command and displaying the new
197image should be as small as possible. CV uses optimized (especially
198for JPEG) loading functions and sacrifices some quality (e.g no gamma
199correction, although this might change) to achieve this speed.
200
201=item * fast thumbnail creation
202
203Thumbnail creation uses both CPU and Disk-I/O. CV interleaves both, so
204on modern CPUs, thumbnailing is usually limited by I/O speed. Thumbnail
205creation for JPEGs has been specially optimized and can even take
206advantage of multiple CPUs.
207
208=item * minimum optical clutter
209
210CV has no menus or other user interface elements that take up a lot of
211screen space (or are useful for beginning users). The schnauzer windows
212can also be somewhat crowded.
213
214The point of an image viewer is viewing images, not a nice GUI. This is
215similar to XV's behaviour.
216
217=item * efficient (and hard to learn) user interface
218
219CV uses key combinations. A lot. If you are an experienced XV user, you
220will find most of these keys familiar. If not, CV might be hard to use at
221first, but will be an efficient tool later.
222
223=item * multi-window GUI
224
225CV doesn't force you to use a specific layout, instead it relies on your
226window manager, thus enabling you to chose whatever layout that suits you
227most.
228
229=item * i18n'ed filename handling throughout
230
231As long as glib can recognize your filename encoding (either UTF-8 or
232locale-specific, depending on the setting of G_BROKEN_FILENAMES) and you
233have the relevant fonts, CV will display your filenames correctly.
234
235=item * extensible through plug-ins
236
237I have weird plug-ins that access remote databases to find a
238directory. This is not likely to be of any use to other people. Likewise,
239others might have weird requirements I cannot dream of.
240
241=item * filename clustering
242
243Among the standard plug-ins is a filename clustering plug-in, that (in
244case of tens of thousands images in one directory) might be able to
245cluster similar names together.
246
247=back
248
151=head1 DESCRIPTION 249=head1 DESCRIPTION
152 250
153None yet.
154
155=head2 THE IMAGE WINDOW 251=head2 THE IMAGE WINDOW
156 252
157You can use the following keys in the image window: 253You can use the following keys in the image window:
158 254
159 q quit the program 255 q quit the program
160 < half the image size 256 < half the image size
161 > double the image size 257 > double the image size
162 , shrink the image by 10% 258 , shrink the image by 10%
163 . enlarge the image by 10% 259 . enlarge the image by 10%
164 n reset to normal size 260 n reset to normal size
165 m maximize to screensize 261 m maximize to screensize
166 M maxime to screensize, respecting image aspect 262 M maximize to screensize, respecting image aspect
167 ctrl-m toggle maxpect-always mode 263 ctrl-m toggle maxpect-always mode
168 u uncrop 264 u uncrop
169 r set scaling mode to 'nearest' (fastest) 265 r set scaling mode to 'nearest' (fastest)
170 s set scaling mode to 'bilinear' (default) 266 s set scaling mode to 'bilinear' (default)
171 S set scaling mode to 'hyper' (slowest) 267 shift-s set scaling mode to 'hyper' (slowest)
172 t rotate clockwise 90° 268 t rotate clockwise 90°
173 T rotate counterclockwise° 269 T rotate counterclockwise°
174 ctrl-v open a new visual schnauzer window for the current dir 270 ctrl-v open a new visual schnauzer window for the current dir
175 ctrl-s rescan visual schnauzer files for updates/deletes etc.
176 ctrl-e run an editor ($CV_EDITOR or "gimp") on the current image. 271 ctrl-e run an editor ($CV_EDITOR or "gimp") on the current image
272 ctrl-p fire up the print dialog
273 escape cancel a crop action
177 274
178And when playing movies, these additional keys are active: 275And when playing movies, these additional keys are active:
179 276
180 left rewind by 10 seconds 277 left rewind by 10 seconds
181 right forward by 10 seconds 278 right forward by 10 seconds
182 down rewind by 60 seconds 279 down rewind by 60 seconds
183 up forward by 60 seconds 280 up forward by 60 seconds
184 pg_up rewind by 600 seconds 281 pg_up rewind by 600 seconds
185 pg_down forward by 600 seconds 282 pg_down forward by 600 seconds
186 o toggle on-screen display 283 o toggle on-screen display
187 p pause/unpause 284 p pause/unpause
188 escape stop playing 285 escape stop playing
189 9 turn volume down 286 9 turn volume down
190 0 turn volume up 287 0 turn volume up
191 288
192The following keys are redirected to the default visual schnauzer window: 289Any other keys will be sent to the default schnauzer window, which can be
290toggled on and off by right-clicking into the image window.
193 291
194 space next image 292Left-clicking into the image window will let you crop the image (usually
195 backspace last image 293to zoom into large images that CV scales down).
196 294
197=head2 THE VISUAL SCHNAUZER 295=head2 THE VISUAL SCHNAUZER
198 296
199You can use the following keys in the schnauzer window: 297You can use the following keys in the schnauzer window:
200 298
299 ctrl-space,
201 space move to and display next image 300 space move to and display next image
301 ctrl-backspace,
202 backspace move to and display previous image 302 backspace move to and display previous image
303 ctrl-return,
203 return display selected picture 304 return display selected picture, or enter directory
204 305
205 cursor keys move selection 306 cursor keys move selection
206 page-up move one page up 307 page-up move one page up
207 page-down move one page down 308 page-down move one page down
208 home move to first file 309 home move to first file
209 end move to last file 310 end move to last file
210 311
312 ctrl-a select all files
313 ctrl-shift-a select all files currently displayed in the schnauzer window
211 ctrl-d delete selected files WITHOUT ASKING AGAIN 314 ctrl-d delete selected files WITHOUT ASKING AGAIN
212 ctrl-g generate icons for the selected files 315 ctrl-g force generation of thumbnais for the selected files
316 ctrl-s rescan current direcory or files updates/deletes etc.
213 ctrl-u update selected (or all) icons if neccessary 317 ctrl-u update selected (or all) icons if neccessary
214 ctrl-a select all files 318 ctrl-l don't use, will become a plug-in eventually
319
320 ^ go to parent directory (caret).
321
322 0-9,
323 a-z find the first filename beginning with this letter
324
325Right-clicking into the schnauzer window displays a pop-up menu with
326additional actions.
327
328=head1 FILES
329
330When starting, CV runs the F<.cvrc> file in your F<$HOME> directory as if
331it were a perl script. in that, you will mostly load plug-ins.
332
333Example:
334
335 system "fping -q -t 10 ether"
336 or require "/fs/cv/cvplugin.pl";
337
338This will load a plug-in, but only if the machine I<ether> is reachable
339(supposedly the plug-in is networked in some way :).
215 340
216=head1 ENVIRONMENT 341=head1 ENVIRONMENT
217 342
218=over 4 343=over 4
219 344
345=item CV_EDITOR
346
347The program that gets executed when the user presses C<CTRL-e> in the
348Schnauzer or image window. The default is C<gimp>.
349
220=item CV_PRINT_DESTINATION 350=item CV_PRINT_DESTINATION
221 351
222The default (perl-style) destination to use in the print dialog. 352The default (perl-style) destination to use in the print dialog.
223 353
354=item CV_TRASHCAN
355
356When set, must point to a directory where all files that are deleted are
357moved to. If unset, files that are deleted are really being deleted.
358
224=back 359=back
225 360
226=head1 SECURITY CONSIDERATIONS 361=head1 SECURITY CONSIDERATIONS
227 362
228CV uses Pixbuf to load images. Pixbuf is not considered safe for this 363CV uses Pixbuf to load non-JPEG images. Pixbuf is not considered safe for
229purpose, though (from the gtk-2.2 release notes): 364this purpose, though (from the gtk-2.2 release notes):
230 365
231"While efforts have been made to make gdk-pixbuf robust against invalid 366"While efforts have been made to make gdk-pixbuf robust against invalid
232images, using gdk-pixbuf to load untrusted data is not recommended, due to 367images, using gdk-pixbuf to load untrusted data is not recommended, due to
233the likelyhood that there are additional problems where an invalid image 368the likelyhood that there are additional problems where an invalid image
234could cause gdk-pixbuf to crash or worse." 369could cause gdk-pixbuf to crash or worse."
235 370
236=head1 BUGS/TODO 371=head1 BUGS/TODO
237 372
373 Lots of functionality is missing.
374
238 Pixbuf doesn't honor G_BROKEN_FILENAMES, so accessing files with names 375 Pixbuf doesn't always honor G_BROKEN_FILENAMES, so accessing files with
239 incompatible with utf-8 fails. 376 names incompatible with utf-8 might fail.
240 377
241 rotate on disk 378 rotate on disk
242 print
243 lots of ui issues 379 lots of ui issues
244 save(?) 380 save(?)
245 preferences 381 preferences
246 ctrl-u in schnauzer
247 shift-cursor in schnauzer
248 382
249=head1 AUTHOR 383=head1 AUTHOR
250 384
251Marc Lehmann <cv@plan9.de>. 385Marc Lehmann <cv@plan9.de>.
252 386

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