gifview - displays GIF images and animations on the X window system
gifview [
--display display] [options] [filenames and
frames]...
gifview displays GIF image files on workstations and terminals running
the X Window System.
gifview understands multi-image GIFs, which can be
displayed either as slideshows or as animations.
gifview windows recognize several keystrokes and button commands. Many of
them are only useful for multi-image GIFs.
- Space or n
- Go to the next frame.
-
b or p
- Go to the previous frame.
-
r or <
- Go to the first frame.
- >
- Go to the last frame.
- ESC
- Stop the animation.
-
s or a
- Toggle between animation and slideshow mode.
- u
- Toggle between normal and unoptimized mode.
- Backspace
- Delete this window.
- q
- Quit gifview.
Left-clicking on a window goes to the next frame; right-clicking on a window
deletes that window.
gifview's command line consists of
GIF input files and
options. Most options start with a dash (-) or plus (+); frame
selections, a kind of option, start with a number sign (#). Anything else is a
GIF input file.
gifview displays one window for each GIF input file you specify. If no
GIF input file is given, or you give the special filename `-', it reads from
the standard input.
-
--animate, -a
- Animate multi-image GIFs by default. Normally, multi-image
GIFs first appear in slideshow mode. You can always use the `a'
keystroke to toggle between modes. This option has a converse,
`--no-animate' or `+a'.
-
--unoptimize, -U
- Display multi-image GIFs as ``unoptimized'', which shows a
faithful representation of what a user will see at each frame of an
animation. See gifsicle(1) for a more detailed description of
unoptimization. This option has a converse, `--no-unoptimize' or
`+U'. GIFs are always displayed unoptimized in animation mode.
-
-d
display
-
--display
display
- Sets the X display to display. This option must come
before any GIF files.
-
--name
name
- Sets the application name under which resources are found,
rather than the default of "gifview". Since gifview
itself does not use the resource database, this is mostly useful for
communication with your window manager.
-
--geometry
geometry
- Set the size and position of gifview's windows. This
is a standard X option. At most one --geometry option
can be given per window (that is, per input GIF file).
-
--title
title
- Sets the gifview window's title. The default is
"gifview", followed by information about the currently displayed
file and frame.
-
-w
window
-
--window
window
- Display the next GIF input in an existing X window, instead
of making a new top-level window. This way, you can use gifview to
display animated GIFs in a window you created with another program. The
window argument should be an integer (gifview will use that
window ID) or `root' (gifview will use the root window).
-
--new-window
window
- Display the next GIF input in a new child of an existing X
window. This child window will disappear when gifview exits. The
window argument should be an integer (gifview will use that
window ID) or `root' (gifview will use the root window).
-
--install-colormap, -i
- Use a private colormap for each window (if you are using a
PseudoColor display). This avoids polluting the existing colormap, and may
produce better results if your colormap is full, but causes annoying
colormap flashing.
-
--background
color
-
--bg
color
- Set the background color, which is used for transparent
pixels.
-
--min-delay
delay
- Set the minimum delay between frames to delay, which
is measured in hundredths of a second. Default is 0.
-
--fallback-delay
delay
- Set the frame delay of GIFs that do not specify a delay
value or have a delay of 0. The final value is still subject to the value
of --min-delay. Like --min-delay, delay is measured in hundredths
of a second. Default is 0.
-
--no-interactive, +e
- Don't pay attention to mouse buttons or keystrokes.
-
--memory-limitlim
- Cache at most lim megabytes of images in memory when
animating. Default is 40.
-
--help
- Print usage information and exit.
-
--version
- Print the version number and some quickie warranty
information and exit.
A frame selection tells
gifview which frame to initially display from the
current input file. They are useful only for animations, as non-animated GIFs
only have one frame. Frame selections can only be displayed in slideshow mode.
-
#num
- Select frame num. (The first frame is `#0'.
Negative numbers count backwards from the last frame, which is
`#-1'.)
-
#name
- Select the frame named name.
If you give two or more frame selections, you will get one window per frame
selection.
gifsicle(1)
Please email suggestions, additions, patches and bugs to
[email protected].
Eddie Kohler,
[email protected]
http://www.read.seas.harvard.edu/~kohler/
http://www.lcdf.org/gifsicle/
The
gifsicle home page.