- move x/y into composite and out of composite base, have separate x/y int
params for composite2
- upsize later for a small speed improvement
- doc comment
- note in changelog
see https://github.com/jcupitt/libvips/pull/934
eg. VImage::width() is now
int VImage::width() const;
ie. it does not alter the image objects. In factr we can mark almost all
members const.
see https://github.com/jcupitt/libvips/issues/983
Add a "background" option to pdfload to help support PDFs with a
transparent background. For example:
vips copy transparent.pdf[background=0] x.png
see https://github.com/jcupitt/libvips/issues/995
We had a global we incremented to allocate property ids, but of course that
won't work with DLLs. Instead, add vips_argument_get_id() and call that to
allocate new prop ids.
See:
https://github.com/jcupitt/libvips/issues/985
You must now include vips7 support explicitly with
#include <vips/vips7compat.h>
in your code just after including `vips.h`.
The old vips7 names, such as `Rect`, were starting to cause problems
with other packages like opencv.
Some magick coders (eg. ICO) don't sniff the filetype from the data, so
when you try to load from a string, imagemagick is unable to pick the
right decode path.
Add a @format option so callers can hint the filetype.
see https://github.com/jcupitt/pyvips/issues/39
libjpeg rounds up on shrink-on-load. In some cases this can leave a dark
line along the right and bottom edge, since it only contains (for
example) 1/4 of a pixel of data.
This change adds a crop after jpeg load so that only complete pixels are
output.
See https://github.com/lovell/sharp/issues/1185
If O_TNMPFILE is available, use it. This is a linux extension that
creates an unlinked file, so it'll be closed by the system when the last
associated fd is closed.
see https://github.com/jcupitt/libvips/pull/930
Before, they could make B_W for one-band output. This caused problems
with (for example) two black image bandjoined: the second band then
looked like an alpha to hasalpha() and enabled premultiply/unpremultiply
for operations like affine.
Now, it's always MULTIBAND. This is the generic multiband image type, so
you don't get any unexpected alpha handling.
The result of hasalpha is used to turn on things like
premultiplication, so we should be rather conservative
about when we signal this. We don't want to premultiply
things that should not be premultiplied.
Check Type as well as bands.
See: https://github.com/jcupitt/libvips/issues/918