GrafX2

GrafX2

GrafX 2 running on Window Maker
Developer(s) Grafx2 project team, Sunset Design
Initial release 1996 (1996)
Stable release
2.4 / October 1, 2012 (2012-10-01)
Written in C (SDL)
Operating system Linux, DOS, Microsoft Windows, Haiku (operating system), AmigaOS, MorphOS, Mac OS X, FreeBSD, Atari MiNT
Type Raster graphics editor
License GNU General Public License
Website pulkomandy.tk/projects/GrafX2

GrafX2 is a bitmap graphics editor inspired by the Amiga programs Deluxe Paint and Brilliance. It is free software and distributed under GNU General Public License.

History

GrafX2 was a DOS program developed by Sunset Design from 1996 to 2001 .[1] It was distributed as freeware, and was one of the most used graphics editor in the demoscene. The development stopped due the lack of time of the developers. So they released the sourcecode under the GNU GPL license.[2]

A Windows port was done by the Eclipse demogroup and presented at the State of the art party in 2004,[3] but the sourcecode for this version does not seem to be available anywhere.

In 2007, a project was started to port the sourcecode from the original MS-DOS version to the Simple DirectMedia Layer library. The goal was to provide a pixel art editing tool for GNU/Linux, but SDL also allowed easy ports to many other platforms, including Windows. The project development continued on this new version to add the features missing from the original opensource release and the first Windows port.

Features and specificities

What made GrafX2 interesting when it was released in 1996 was the ability to display pictures in most of the resolutions available on Amiga. This allowed the use of the program as a picture viewer for PC users. This was done by low level programming of the video card, using X-Modes combined with VESA settings. The SDL port generally runs on platforms which use high resolution screens, so it can use software scaling to emulate low resolutions. The scaling options include several non-square pixels, this allows editing of pictures for displaying on old 16- or 8-bit microcomputers, which have such video modes.

All the versions of the program are designed for drawing in indexed color mode, up to 256 colors. A palette editor allows very precise operations on the image and its palette. These functions are precious for console or mobile game graphics where some specific color indices in the palette are required for special effects : Palette swap, Color cycling, transparent color for sprites.

The user interface is mouse-driven with a toolbar for common tools, and some modal dialog windows. For increased productivity with frequently used functions, an extensive system of keyboard shortcuts is available.

The user can split the editing area in two : normal size on the left, zoomed-in view on the right. Drawing in the zoomed area allows finer mouse control.

The basic drawing concepts are clearly inspired by Deluxe Paint, they involve :

The SDL port currently runs on a lot of computer systems, tested on common systems such as Linux, FreeBSD, Windows, Mac OS X, and on less common ones such as AmigaOS 3.x on 68k, AmigaOS 4.0 on PPC, BeOS and Haiku, MorphOS on PPC, AROS on x86, SkyOS, Atari MiNT on Atari Falcon030 and Atari TT. It is even ported on the Handheld game console GP2X, and the Windows version can be used on MS-DOS thru HX DOS Extender.

Relation to the demoscene

The first release of GrafX2 was done at the Wired 96 demoparty. The tool was primarily made for demomakers. This explains the presence of features specific to old computers, because demosceners often use this kind of hardware. Today, the program is mostly used for Pixel art, not necessarily in relation to demos or to old and limited hardware.

Supported file formats

See also

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 9/12/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.