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xfig(1) |
FreeBSD General Commands Manual |
xfig(1) |
xfig - Facility for Interactive Generation of figures under X11
Version 3.2.8a
Xfig is a menu-driven tool that allows the user to draw and manipulate
objects interactively under the X Window System. It runs under X version
11 release 4 or higher and requires a two- or three-button mouse.
file specifies the name of a file to be edited. The objects in the file
will be read at the start of xfig.
The bulk of the documentation for xfig is in an HTML-based
reference guide. See the Help menu in xfig or point your browser at
/usr/local/share/doc/xfig/html/index.html. There are both English and
Japanese versions.
When using a two-button mouse use the <Meta> key and
the right button at the same time to effect the action of the middle
button.
Xfig is available from
https://sourceforge.net/projects/mcj/.
The Fig2dev package is used when printing or exporting the
output from xfig. The fig2dev program is automatically called
by xfig as a back-end processor to produce various types of
output:
LaTeX, Metafont, PDF, PostScript or Encapsulated PostScript, CGM
and EMF (mostyl used under Windows), tk (tcl/tk tool command language/tool
kit package), SVG, GIF, JPEG, PCX, PNG, PPM, TIFF, XBM, XPM, Gerber, AutoCAD
Slide, IBM-GL (HP/GL), Pic and PiCTeX. For use with TeX/LaTeX: box, epic,
eepic, eepicemu, pict2e, pstricks, tikz.
See man fig2dev for all options.
The Fig2dev package is available from
https://sourceforge.net/projects/mcj/.
-help
- Print all command-line options for xfig and quit.
-a[llownegcoords]
- Allow panning into the negative region of the canvas. This is the
default
-au[torefresh]
- Make xfig look at the timestamp on the .fig file and automatically load it
and display it every time it changes.
-bal[loon_delay] msec
- Cause popup information balloons to be delayed by msec
milliseconds. The default is 500 milliseconds.
-bol[d] font
- Cause the font used for displaying the file name and confirmation messages
to be font (default = 8x13bold).
-butt[on] font
- Cause the font used for most buttons to be font (default =
6x13).
-but_[per_row] number
- Specify the number of buttons wide the mode panel should be. This is
useful in conjunction with the -pheight parameter to reduce the
canvas height for small screens.
-cbg color
- Use color as the background color for the canvas. If you want to
set the background of everything in xfig (e.g. menus, etc.) use the
general -bg option.
-center
- Set the print option to print the figure centered on the page. This is the
default.
-centim[ers]
- Make centimeters the unit of choice. See also -metric.
-cfg color
- Use color as the default color for objects. If you want to set the
foreground of everything in xfig (e.g. menus, etc.) use the general
-fg option.
-correct_font_size
- Normally, fig2dev uses 1/80 inch for font size increments (for
historical reasons), instead of the more proper ``points'' (1/72 inch)
that xfig uses. This option makes xfig call fig2dev with the
-F option to make it use points (1/72 inch).
-deb[ug]
- Turn on debugging mode. Prints various debugging messages like font names
etc.
-dep[th]
- Choose depth of visual desired. Your server must support the desired
visual and depth chosen. Use xdpyinfo to see what visuals and
depths are supported. See also the -visual option.
-donta[llownegcoords]
- Don't allow panning into the negative region of the canvas. The default is
to allow panning in the negative region.
-dontshowb[alloons]
- Prevents xfig from popping up the information balloons. See also
-showballoons.
-dontshowl[engths]
- Don't show lengths of lines as they are being drawn. This is the
default.
-dontshowz[erolines]
- Don't show axis zero lines on the canvas. The default is to show
them.
-dontsw[itchcmap]
- Prevents xfig from switching to a private colormap if there aren't enough
colors available in the default colormap. See also
-max_image_colors.
-enc[oding] encoding
- Encode character set using encoding when exporting LaTeX text. The
default is 1. This is used for the ISO-8859 encoding of character sets.
Allowed values are 0 (no encoding), 1 (ISO-8859-1) or 2 (ISO-8859-2).
-exportL[anguage] language
- Specifies the default language to be used for when exporting a fig file.
Choices are:
pdftex Combined PDF/LaTeX (both PDF and LaTeX parts)
Name Language
Vector formats:
ps PostScript
eps Encapsulated PostScript
pdf PDF (Portable Document Format)
box LaTeX box (figure boundary)
latex LaTeX picture
pict2e LaTeX picture + pict2e macros
tikz LaTeX picture + tikz macros
epic LaTeX picture + epic macros
eepic LaTeX picture + eepic macros
eepicemu LaTeX picture + eepicemu macros
pstex Combined PS/LaTeX (both PS and LaTeX parts)
pdftex Combined PDF/LaTeX (both PDF and LaTeX parts)
pspdftex Combined PS/PDF/LaTeX (three parts)
pictex PiCTeX macros
cgm Computer Graphcis Meta file
emf Enhanced Meta file
dxf Drawing Interchange format
gbx Gerber (RS-247-X)
ibmgl HPGL/2 or IBMGL
textyl Textyl special commands
tpic TPIC
pic PIC
mf MF (MetaFont)
mp MP (MetaPost)
tk Tk (Tcl/Tk toolkit)
ptk Perl/Tk
shape LaTeX shape paragraph definition
svg SVG (Scalable Vector Graphics)
Bitmap formats:
gif GIF
jpeg JPEG (JFIF)
pcx PCX
png PNG
ppm PPM (portable pixmap package)
sld (AutoCad slide)
tiff TIFF
xbm X11 Bitmap
xpm X11 Pixmap
-export_m[argin] width
- Set the size of the border margin around the figure for exporting to
bitmap, PostScript, Encapsulated PostScript, or HTML MAP formats. This is
in units of points (1/72th inch). The default is 0.
-fli[pvisualhints]
- Flip left/right mouse indicator messages for mice whose buttons have been
switched. The default is to NOT flip the messages.
-flu[shleft]
- Set the print option to print the figure flush left. The default is to
center the figure on the page.
-free[hand_resolution] resolution
- Set the resolution of the freehand drawing mode to resolution
pixels. This is the number of pixels the mouse must move before xfig adds
another point to the object being drawn.
-geom[etry] [WxH][+X+Y]
- You may use the -geometry option or resource to size and/or position
the xfig window, or you may use -pwidth and/or -pheight
to specify the canvas size in inches or centimeters. If you use the
-geom option to make the xfig window smaller than the default, you
may have to use the -but_per_row option to tell xfig to put 3 or 4
buttons per row on the left mode panel.
-gh[ostscript] ghostscript executable
- Specify the name or path to the ghostscript executable. The default is gs.
This version of xfig links into the ghostscript library. The ghostscript
executable is not needed, it is only called as a fallback-solution.
-grid_c[olor] color
- Draw the grid on the canvas in this color (default: red).
-grid_u[nit] unit
- Only used when in inches mode to choose between showing fractions or
decimal inches in the rulers and grid. Any of the following may be used to
force decimal inches: "ten", "tenth", "10,
"1/10". If any other value is used for this option, the rulers
will show 1/16 inch divisions.
-hidd[entext]
- Start xfig with the hidden text mode for text objects. The
Hidden attribute is used for figures that will be used with
LaTeX and is applicable only to the display of the document in
xfig. It means that the text itself is not shown onscreen, but only
the string ``<text>''. This is to keep long sequences of
LaTeX formatting commands from making the screen messy and hard to
read. The default for the Hidden flag is off.
-dontshowd[epthmanager]
- Hide the depth manager panel. The default is to show the panel.
-icon_[view]
- Show the library objects as icons. This is the default. The other mode is
-list_view.
-iconG[eometry] +X+Y
- Specifies the position for the icon.
-im[age_editor] editor
- Specify bitmap editor to use when ``Edit Image'' button is pressed in
Picture Object panel.
-inc[hes] (or-imperial)
- Make inches the unit of choice. This is the default.
-ins[tallowncmap]
- Install own colormap. Normally, xfig uses the current colormap.
-internalBW width
- Use lines of width width between all buttons and panels (default =
1).
-international
- Switch on international support (mainly Japanese and Korean), users of ISO
Latin 1 (ISO-8859-1) probably should not use this, therefore the
international support is switched off by default for locales using
ISO-8859-1* codesets. For all other locales this option is already used by
default.
-jpeg[_quality] quality
- Set the quality factor for exporting to the jpeg format. The default is
75.
-k[eyFile] compose-key-file
- Use compose-key-file instead of CompKeyDB for compose (meta)
key database. If there are no ``/''s in the name, the file must
reside in the xfig library directory, $XFIGLIBDIR, usually
/usr/local/lib/X11/xfig. If there are any ``/''s in the name
it is taken as is (not relative to $XFIGLIBDIR). If there is a
leading ``~/'' in the string then the ``~'' is expanded to
the user's home directory.
-lan[dscape]
- Make xfig come up in landscape mode (10.5" x 8"). This is
the default; however as the orientation is stored with Fig files, when you
load a Fig file the orientation will change as required. This is only true
for files of version 3.0 or higher.
See also -portrait.
-lat[exfonts]
- Start xfig with LaTeX font selection. Normally, the
PostScript fonts are available as the default. This flag selects
the LaTeX fonts to start.
-le[ft]
- Change the position of the side panel window to the left of the canvas
window. This is the default.
-library_d[ir] directory
- Specify directory where Fig object libraries are located. There may be
sub-directories there and sub-sub-directories, etc.
-library_i[con_size] size
- Specify the size of the icons shown for library objects. The default is 60
pixels, with the minimum being 40 and the maximum being 120.
-lis[t_view]
- Show the library objects as a list of names. The default mode is
-icon_view.
-mag[nification] mag
- Set export and print magnification in %.
-max[_image_colors] numcols
- Limit the number of colors used for imported images to numcols (default
64).
-me[tric]
- Make centimeters the unit of choice. The option -centimeters may
also be used.
- After xfig is started you may change the units from metric to
imperial or vice versa from a popup menu available by pressing mouse
button 3 in the units box where the two rulers meet.
-mo[nochrome]
- Use black and white only.
-mu[ltiple]
- Sets multiple page mode for print or export. See also -single.
-noo[verlap]
- When exporting in multiple page mode, causes no overlap from page to page.
This is the default. See also -overlap.
-nor[mal] font
- Cause the font used for the message window to be font. This font is
also used on the canvas when the selected font is not available in an X11
font (default = 6x13).
-nosc[alablefonts]
- Disables use of the X11R5 or OpenWindows scalable fonts. You might want to
use this for debugging.
-nosp[lash]
- Don't show the startup splash screen. The default is to show it (
-splash ).
-not[rack]
- Turn off cursor (mouse) tracking arrows.
-nowrite_bak
- When saving a drawing into an existing .fig file xfig will first rename
that file by appending ".bak" to the name. This option disables
this feature.
-ov[erlap]
- When exporting in multiple page mode, causes overlap from page to page of
about 10%. See also -nooverlap.
-pag[eborder] color
- Draw the page border on the canvas in this color (default light blue). The
page border is turned on by the -showpageborder option (resource
Fig.showpageborder), and shows the edges of the current export
paper size.
-pap[er_size] size
- Set the initial paper size for Export and Print. Choices are
tabloid Tabloid 17in x 11in
Option Paper Size
letter Letter 8.5in x 11in
legal Legal 8.5in x 14in
tabloid Tabloid 17in x 11in
a ANSI A 8.5in x 11in
b ANSI B 11in x 17in
c ANSI C 17in x 22in
d ANSI D 22in x 34in
e ANSI E 34in x 44in
a9 ISO A9 37mm x 52mm
a8 ISO A8 52mm x 74mm
a7 ISO A7 74mm x 105mm
a6 ISO A6 105mm x 148mm
a5 ISO A5 148mm x 210mm
a4 ISO A4 210mm x 297mm
a3 ISO A3 297mm x 420mm
a2 ISO A2 420mm x 594mm
a1 ISO A1 594mm x 840mm
a0 ISO A0 840mm x 1189mm
b10 JIS B10 32mm x 45mm
b9 JIS B9 45mm x 64mm
b8 JIS B8 64mm x 91mm
b7 JIS B7 91mm x 128mm
b6 JIS B6 128mm x 182mm
b5 JIS B5 182mm x 257mm
b4 JIS B4 257mm x 364mm
b3 JIS B3 364mm x 515mm
b2 JIS B2 515mm x 728mm
b1 JIS B1 728mm x 1030mm
b0 JIS B0 1030mm x 1456mm
Note that this doesn't affect the size of the drawing canvas.
Use the -pheight and -pwidth options for that.
-ph[eight] height
- Make the xfig canvas height high (where height is
either cm or in, depending on the -metric setting).
-po[rtrait]
- Make xfig come up in portrait mode (8.5" x 9"). See note
about landscape mode.
-pw[idth] width
- Make the xfig canvas width wide (where width is
either cm or in, depending on the -metric setting).
-righ[t]
- Change the position of the side panel window to the right of the canvas
window (default: left).
-rigi[d]
- Start xfig with the rigid text mode for text objects. The
Rigid attribute forces text to remain the same size even if inside
a compound object that is scaled up or down. The default is
off.
-ru[lerthick]
- Set the height(width) of the top(side) rulers in pixels. The default (and
minimum) is 24.
-scala[blefonts]
- Allows use of the X11R5 or OpenWindows scalable fonts (this is the
default). If the scalable fonts aren't available xfig will
automatically switch to non-scaling fonts.
-scale_factor scale
- Scale every figure read in by this value. This is useful in conjunction
with the -update option to do batch scaling of figures.
-showa[llbuttons]
- Show all the xfig indicator buttons instead of only those relevant
to the current drawing mode. Normally, the buttons line width,
area-fill, grid mode, text size, etc. are only
visible when they are relevant to the current drawing mode. The
-showallbuttons option makes all of the indicator buttons visible
at all times. This takes up more screen real estate, but allows the user
to see all settable parameters.
-showb[alloons]
- Forces xfig to pop up the information balloons when the mouse
passws over a button. This is the default. See also -dontshowballoons
.
-showd[epthmanager]
- Show the depth manager panel. This panel lets one show or hide objects at
various depths. This is the default.
-showl[engths]
- Makes xfig show the lengths of lines being drawn, in red text near
the line itself. Also, when points are moved or added. In addition,
imagine a triangle formed with the line segment as the hypotenuse, and a
vertical and horizontal line forming the other two sides. These lines and
their lengths are also drawn in red as the point is moved or added. This
mode is ignored when drawing in freehand mode.
This flag may be toggled by pressing <Meta>i (default).
-shown[ums]
- With this option, xfig will draw all objects with a red number next to
each vertex. This is generally only useful for debugging.
-showp[ageborder]
- Makes xfig show the border of the current paper size in the color
specified by the -pageborder option (default: light blue).
-showz[erolines]
- Show axis zero lines on the canvas. This is the default
-si[ngle]
- Sets single page mode for print or export. This is the default. See also
-multiple.
-sm[ooth_factor] factor
- Enable smoothing when exporting to the bitmap formats (e.g. GIF, PNG,
etc.). The allowed values are 0 (no smoothing), 2 or 4 (most smoothing).
This parameter is passed to ghostscript in the -dTextAlphaBits
-dGraphicsAlphaBits options to smooth the figure.
-spec[ialtext]
- Start xfig with the TeX text mode for text objects. This
means that characters that have a special meaning to TeX/LaTeX, e.g., '$'
or '\', are not quoted but left untouched in the text string. This is most
useful for writing LaTeX equations. If this flag is not set, then the
backslash character '\' is changed to the \backslash command, a brace '{'
is turned into a brace command \{, etc.
-spel[lcheckcommand] command
- Use command for the external spell checking program when using the
spell check/search/replace popup. The string command should include
the string ``%s'' which is replaced by a temporary filename. Default is
``spell %s''.
-spinner_d[elay] msec
- The delay (in milliseconds) before the spinner will automatically count up
or down when the button is pressed. Spinners are the (numeric) text
widgets with an up- and down-arrow, which when clicked, cause the value to
be incremented/decremented. The default is 500 milliseconds.
-spinner_r[rate] msec
- The rate (in milliseconds) at which the spinner will count when the up- or
down-arrow is pressed.
-startfi[llstyle] stylenumber
- Set the starting fill style for area fill (-1 to 21).
-startfo[ntsize] pointsize
- Set the default font size for text objects (default = 12pt).
-startg[ridmode] modenumber
- Set the starting grid mode (0 to 3). Mode 0 is no grid. In imperial
(inches) mode, grid mode 1 is 1/4 inch, mode 2 is 1/2 inch and mode 3 is 1
inch. In metric mode, grid mode 1 is 2mm, mode 2 is 5mm and mode 3 is
1cm.
-startla[texFont] font
- Set the starting font name for LaTeX fonts.
-startli[newidth] width
- Set the starting line width.
-startpo[snmode] modenumber
- Set the starting point positioning mode (0 to 4) In imperial (inches)
mode, positioning mode 0 is ``any'', mode 1 is 1/16 inch, mode 2 is 1/4
inch, mode 3 is 1/2 inch and mode 4 is 1 inch. In metric mode, mode 0 is
``any'', mode 1 is 1mm, mode 2 is 5mm, mode 3 is 10mm and mode 4 is
20mm.
-startp[sFont] font
- Set the starting font name for PostScript fonts.
-startt[extstep] stepsize
- Set the starting text step.
-ta[blet]
- Specifies that xfig should use the input tablet instead of the mouse for
drawing. You must have the XInputExtension in your X server and an input
tablet for this to work. Also, you must modify the Imakefile to include
the USETAB and TABLIB variables.
-track
- Turn on cursor (mouse) tracking arrows (default).
-tran[sparent_color] color_number
- Make the transparent color for GIF export color_number. This number
is the color number according to the xfig color panel, starting at
0 (black) and ending at 31 (gold), or may be a user-defined color number,
which is 32 or higher.
-update file [ file ... ]
- Run xfig in an "update" mode, where it will read each Fig file
specified on the command line and write it out to the original file, in
the current file format for the version of xfig being run. The original
Fig file will be preserved with the suffix .bak attached to the
name.
In this mode, xfig doesn't connect the X server, so no window is opened, and
it exits when finished.
-users[cale] scale
- Set the multiplier for displayed line lengths etc. This factor is
multiplied by the actual length, radius or diameter of the object
currently being drawn on the canvas. It is useful for making scale
drawings, where e.g. 1 inch = 1 foot (userscale = 12.0) or 1cm = 1m
(userscale = 100.0).
-useru[nit] units
- The units string is printed with the length information when
drawing objects. For example if the userscale = 1.0 and the
userunit = ft then a line which is 3 inches long on the
canvas would be displayed as ``length = 3 ft'' when it is being
drawn.
- After xfig is started you may change the userscale and the
userunit from a popup menu available by pressing mouse button 3 in
the units box where the two rulers meet.
-visual visualname
- Use visualname as the visual for xfig. The names are TrueColor
(case is not important), StaticColor, DirectColor, StaticGray, GrayScale
and PseudoColor. xfig uses the default visual unless this is
specified. Your server must support the desired visual. Use
xdpyinfo to see what visuals and depths are supported. See also the
-depth option.
-write_bak
- When saving a drawing into an existing .fig file xfig will first rename
that file by appending
-zoom zoomscale
- Set the starting zoom scale.
The overall widget name(Class) is xfig(Fig). These resources correspond to the
command line arguments:
Name Type Default Command-line equivalent
Name Type Default Command-line equivalent
allownegcoords boolean true -allownegcoords (true),
-dontallownegcoords (false)
autorefresh boolean false -autorefresh
axislines string pink -axislines
balloon_delay integer 500 (ms) -balloon_delay
boldFont string 8x13bold -bold
but_per_row integer 2 -but_per_row
buttonFont string 6x13 -button
canvasbackground string white -cbg
canvasforeground string black -cfg
correctfontsize boolean false -correctfontsize
debug boolean false -debug
depth integer * -depth
dontswitchcmap boolean false -dontswitchcmap
euc_encoding boolean false (n/a)
locale_encoding boolean false (n/a)
encoding integer 1 -encoding
save8bit boolean false (n/a)
exportLanguage string eps -exportLanguage
export_margin integer 0 -export_margin
flipvisualhints boolean false -flipvisualhints
flushleft boolean false -flushleft (true),
-center (false)
freehand_resolution integer 25 -freehand_resolution
grid_color string black -grid_color
grid_unit string 1/16 (inch) -grid_unit
0.1 (metric)
hiddentext boolean false -hiddentext
icon_view boolean true -icon_view (true),
-list_view (false)
image_editor string xv -image_editor
inches boolean true -inches (true),
-imperial (true),
-centimeters (false),
-metric (false)
installowncmap boolean false -installowncmap
internalborderwidth integer 1 -internalBW
international boolean false -international
jpeg_quality integer 75 -jpeg_quality
justify boolean false -left (false),
-right (true)
keyFile string CompKeyDB -keyFile
landscape boolean true -Landscape (true),
-landscape (true),
-Portrait (false),
-portrait (false)
latexfonts boolean false -latexfonts
library_dir string ~/xfiglib -library_dir
magnification float 100 -magnification
max_image_colors integer 64 -max_image_colors
monochrome boolean false -monochrome
multiple boolean false -multiple
normalFont string 6x13 -normal
overlap boolean true -overlap (true),
-nooverlap (false)
pageborder string lightblue -pageborder
paper_size string Letter (inch) -paper_size
A4 (metric)
pheight float 8.5 (landscape) -pheight
9.5 (portrait)
pwidth float 11 (landscape) -pwidth
8.5 (portrait)
rigidtext boolean false -rigid (true)
rulerthick integer 24 -rulerthick
scalablefonts boolean true -scalablefonts (true),
-noscalablefonts (false)
scale_factor float 1.0 -scale_factor
showallbuttons boolean false -showallbuttons
showaxislines boolean true -showaxislines (true),
-dontshowaxislines (false)
showballoons boolean true -showballoons (true),
-dontshowballoons (false)
showdepthmanager boolean true -showdepthmanager (true),
-dontshowdepthmanager (false)
showlengths boolean false -showlengths (true),
-dontshowlengths (false)
shownums boolean false -shownums (true),
-dontshownums (false)
showpageborder boolean true -showpageborder (true),
-dontshowpageborder (false)
single boolean true -single
smooth_factor integer 0 -smooth_factor
specialtext boolean false -specialtext
splash boolean true -splash (true),
-nosplash (false)
spellcheckcommand string spell %s -spellcheckcommand
spinner_delay integer 500 (ms) -spinner_delay
spinner_rate integer 100 (ms) -spinner_rate
startfillstyle integer 0 -startfillstyle
startfontsize float 12 -startfontsize
startgridmode integer 0 -startgridmode
startlatexFont string Default -startlatexFont
startlinewidth integer 1 -startlinewidth
startposnmode integer 1 -startposnmode
startpsFont string Times-Roman -startpsFont
starttextstep float 1.2 -starttextstep
tablet boolean false -track,
trackCursor boolean true -track (true),
-notrack (false)
transparent_color integer -2 (none) -transparent_color
userscale float 1.0 -userscale
userunit string in (inches) -userunit
cm (metric)
visual string * -visual
write_bak boolean true -write_bak
zoom float 1.0 -zoom
* Default visual and depth depend on the X server. Use xdpyinfo
to see what visuals and depths are supported.
Please send bug reports, fixes, new features etc. to:
thomas.loimer@tuwien.ac.at
Because of the difference of some fonts in some X servers and the
PostScript fonts on printers, text alignment can be problematic.
Not all operations employ smart redrawing of objects which are
altered as a by product of the operation. You may need to use Redraw
in these cases.
If the image is panned or the xfig window iconified and
de-iconified during the middle of an operation (e.g. while drawing a line),
the picture will be distorted. This can be corrected using Redraw
after the operation is complete.
When zoomed very large, the length of dashes in dashed lines will
top out at 255 pixels long. This is due to a restriction in X that the dash
list is defined by char (255 pixels maximum for a dash). The figure will
print correctly, however.
When you do a copy/rotate with multiple copies, only the creation
of the last object can be undone with the Undo button.
Modifications to text using the popup search/update/replace/spell
check panel cannot be undone.
fig2dev(1) (Fig2dev package)
gs(1) (Ghostscript PostScript previewer)
(From the original author, Supoj Sutanthavibul): Many thanks goes to Professor
Donald E. Fussell who inspired the creation of this tool.
(From Brian Smith): Thanks to all the users who have contributed
to xfig, especially Paul King who, besides adding many features, revamped
the look and feel which became version 2.1.
Original Copyright (c) 1985 by Supoj Sutanthavibul
Parts Copyright (c) 1989-2015 by Brian V. Smith
Parts Copyright (c) 1991 by Paul King
Parts Copyright (c) 2016-2018 by Thomas Loimer
Other Copyrights may be found in various files
Any party obtaining a copy of these files is granted, free of
charge, a full and unrestricted irrevocable, world-wide, paid up,
royalty-free, nonexclusive right and license to deal in this software and
documentation files (the "Software"), including without limitation
the rights to use, copy, modify, merge, publish and/or distribute copies of
the Software, and to permit persons who receive copies from any such party
to do so, with the only requirement being that this copyright notice remain
intact.
THE AUTHORS DISCLAIMS ALL WARRANTIES WITH REGARD TO THIS SOFTWARE,
INCLUDING ALL IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS, IN NO EVENT
SHALL THE AUTHORS BE LIABLE FOR ANY SPECIAL, INDIRECT OR CONSEQUENTIAL
DAMAGES OR ANY DAMAGES WHATSOEVER RESULTING FROM LOSS OF USE, DATA OR
PROFITS, WHETHER IN AN ACTION OF CONTRACT, NEGLIGENCE OR OTHER TORTIOUS
ACTION, ARISING OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE USE OR PERFORMANCE OF THIS
SOFTWARE.
PostScript is a trademark of Adobe Systems
Incorporated.
Parts Copyright (C) 1989 by Jef Poskanzer.
Copyright notice for pbmplus code:
Permission to use, copy, modify, and distribute this
software and its documentation for any purpose and without
fee is hereby granted, provided that the above copyright
notice appear in all copies and that both that copyright
notice and this permission notice appear in supporting
documentation. This software is provided ``as is'' without
express or implied warranty.
- /usr/local/share/xfig/CompKeyDB
- Data base of compose (meta) key sequences for 8-bit characters. A
different file may be specified with the command line option
-keyFile or X toolkit resource keyFile.
- /usr/local/share/doc/xfig/html
- This directory contains the html documentation.
- /usr/local/share/doc/xfig/FORMAT3.2
- Description of Fig file format.
- /usr/local/share/xfig/Libraries
- This directory contains libraries of Fig objects such as electrical
symbols, logic symbols, etc.
- /usr/local/share/X11/app-defaults/Fig
- Application defaults file.
- /usr/local/share/applications/xfig.desktop
- Desktop entry file.
- /usr/local/share/pixmaps/xfig.png
- Desktop icon.
Many people have contributed to xfig. Here is a list of the people who
have contributed the most (in chronological order):
Version 1:
Original author:
Supoj Sutanthavibul, University of Texas at Austin
The LaTeX line drawing modes were contributed by:
Frank Schmuck, Cornell University
Original X11 port by:
Ken Yap, Rochester
Variable window sizes, cleanup of X11 port, right hand side panel:
Dana Chee, Bellcore
Cleanup of color port to X11 by:
John T. Kohl, MIT
Version 2.0:
Area fill, multiple line thicknesses, multiple fonts and font
sizes, bottom panel, line style/thickness, (and anything else that wasn't
written by the others) by:
Brian Smith
(standard disclaimer applies)
(bvsmith@lbl.gov)
Popup change-object menu by:
Jon Tombs
Frank Schmuck
Zooming and panning functions, shift key select mechanism by:
Dieter Pellkofer
Henning Spruth
Depth feature by:
Mike Lutz
Cut/Paste by:
Tom Tkacik
Version 2.1:
Indicator panel, file menu popup, print menu popup, panning with
rulers, mouse function window, regular polygon, rubberbanding of
circles/ellipses, filled splines on canvas, dashed/dotted splines on canvas,
update button, arbitrary angle rotation of objects, alignment in compound,
object scaling, constrained copy/move, corner markers for compound, context
sensitive corner markers, smarter redraw, undo for compound and point move
for boxes, cancel object creation, point positioning to three resolutions,
TransFig scalable text, hidden text, special text, save of figure on
crash by:
Paul King (king@cs.uq.oz.au)
with help from:
Brian Smith and Micah Beck (beck@cs.utk.edu)
Encapsulated PostScript importing by:
Brian Boyter
Pan/zoom with ctrl key/mouse by:
Henning Spruth
International characters by:
Herve Soulard
Directory Browser based on XDir by:
Win Treese, Digital Equipment Corporation
Rotated ellipses by:
James Tough, Dept. of Computer Science, Heriot-Watt University, Scotland
Rotated text from the xvertext package by:
Alan Richardson, Space Science Centre, School of MAPS, University of
Sussex
Popup scale menu and dynamic switching between inches and cm by:
Paul King (king@cs.uq.oz.au)
Extensive man page formatting revisions by:
David W. Sanderson
Display Postscript code for IBM RS/6000 by:
Dave Hale (dhale@green.mines.colorado.edu)
Version 3.0:
New arrowhead types, separate pen/fill colors, new file protocol,
more colors with extended color popup panel, new arc style, new fill
patterns (bricks, etc), new line join and cap styles, export offset and file
load offset, XPM import, XBM import and export (and anything else that
wasn't written by the others) by:
Brian Smith
(Note: the color popup panel was based on xcoloredit by Richard
Hesketh)
GIF header reading code by:
David Koblas from the giftoppm part of the pbmplus package
XPM export code (using XPM3 libraries) by:
Karel van Houten (K.H.C.vanHouten@research.ptt.nl)
Higher figure resolution (1200dpi) by:
Ross Martin (martin@trcsun3.eas.asu.edu)
Color quantization using neural network by:
Anthony Dekker (dekker@ACM.org)
[NEUQUANT Neural-Net quantization algorithm by Anthony Dekker, 1994. See
``Kohonen neural networks for optimal colour quantization'' in ``Network:
Computation in Neural Systems'' Vol. 5 (1994) pp 351-367. for a discussion
of the algorithm.]
Floyd-Steinberg algorithm for dithering color images on monochrome
displays lifted from the Pbmplus package by Jef Poskanser.
rotate/flip objects around/about selected anchor point and
multiple copies of objects by:
Uwe Bonnes (bon@lte.e-technik.uni-erlangen.de)
Input tablet extension by:
Greg LaCoste (greg@seismo.do.usbr.gov)
Version 3.1:
The only difference between protocol version 3.0 and version 3.1 is that the
position of the ``magnet'' has been shifted by 14 fig units. In the 2.1 and
older versions of xfig the grid was in multiples of 5 fig units, but they
were on intervals 4, 9, 14, 19, etc. When version 3.0 was created,
coordinates were simply multiplied by the ratio of the resolutions (1200/80
= 15) so values like 4 became 60 instead of 74 ((4+1)*15 - 1).
The JPEG import/export code uses the Independent JPEG Group
software (see jpeg/README for details)
Image browser, editor and screen capture features by:
Jim Daley (jdaley@cix.compulink.co.uk)
Version 3.2:
The changes to the version 3.2 file protocol are the addition of the paper
size, print/export magnification, single/multiple page indicator and a
transparent color name used for GIF export to the header of the file.
The other difference in the version 3.2 protocol is the mathematical model
used for splines. The new version uses X-splines which allows the user to
mix interpolation and approximation points in a same curve. More precisely,
it means that an X-spline curve is neither an interpolated spline nor an
approximated one, it is BOTH (the behaviour of each point is controlled by
one single parameter called ``shape factor''). For additional information
about X-splines, see:
"X-Splines: A Spline Model Designed for the End User"
by C. Blanc and C. Schlick, Proceedings of SIGGRAPH'95
http://dept-info.labri.u-bordeaux.fr/~schlick/DOC/sig1.html
Caveat: Because previous spline models (quadratic B-splines and
Bezier with hidden points) are no longer supported, curves that are present
in version 3.1 and older files are automatically converted to X-splines.
This translation is only an approximation process. It means that the
converted curves are not exactly the same as the original ones. Though they
are usually very close, some hand-fitting may be needed in some pathological
cases.
Inclusion of X-splines by:
Carole Blanc (blanc@labri.u-bordeaux.fr)
Christophe Schlick (schlick@labri.u-bordeaux.fr)
Note: the initial implementation was done by C. Feuille, S. Grosbois, L.
Maziere and L. Minihot as a student practice (Universite Bordeaux,
France).
Open/close compound feature written by
Bill Taylor (bill@mainstream.com)
Library feature written by
Stephane Mancini (mancini@elecsrv.enst.fr) (object preview by Brian V.
Smith)
The library objects in the Electrical and Logic libraries were
done by
Peter Hiscocks (phiscock@ee.ryerson.ca)
The library objects in the Computer, Networks, and
Hospital-Equipment libraries were extracted from the clipart example files
by
Bill Chimiak (chim@bgsm.edu)
Version 3.2.3 and newer:
Please see the CHANGES file for credits for newer releases.
Many bug fixes/cleanups etc. by a host of faithful users.
See the CHANGES file for all the credits.
The Fig2dev package was written by Micah Beck and is
maintained by Thomas Loimer.
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