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Do you remember those Magic Eye images that contain a 3D object? I love them!
Are there any open source programs for generating Magic Eye pictures, which ideally work on Linux.
I found a Gimp plugin, but haven't managed to get it working yet.
There's a package in Ubuntu for a program called Stereograph. It's website is here:
http://stereograph.sourceforge.net/index.html
Here's a tutorial on how to make them using GIMP, Blender and Stereograph:
http://linuxgazette.net/104/kapil.html
It's pretty basic, but you should try openstereogram, it's OS independent:
http://code.google.com/p/openstereogram/
There's also this JavaScript app:
http://guciek.github.com/imagzag.html (use the "Magic Eye" option)
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I normally use JPEGsoop to peek into jpeg images. Is there a tool kit library or program that I can use to peek into structure of Jpeg 2000 images ?
I saw
John Bokma Java
freelance Perl programmer
Obtaining image metadata
I suppose I will build that program anyway .
Any other suggestions ?
I think imagemagick esp. its tool "identify" might help you.
http://www.imagemagick.org/script/index.php
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I'm looking for text editor that run natively on linux which support multi-line tabbar and don't truncate long file names. I'm usually using Notepad++ in Windows.
Here is a screenshot of what I would like (using notepad++):
Please give me recommendation. Thank you.
The top 3 seem to be the following:
sublime, I guy I work with loves this one and it is cross os compatible.
geany, great for if you do programming and are a GTK2 fan.
kate, KDE editor with LOTS of options
vim, what most will tell you to use....
Additionally you can install Notepad++ through Wine, if you just cant live without it. :)
You can do this with atom. It's highly configurable through CSS and even is cross-platform.
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I'm looking for a graphic debugger that can connect to a running gdbserver (TCP) and does provide a usable interface.
I need to watch multiple complex data structures while stepping through the program.
I tried DDD, but the look and handling was just to weird.
Gnome comes with nemiver (but I haven't used it remotely to date)
I find I drop to gdb because I like to have lowlevel access. DDD has very nice examination features, don't underestimate the power of DDD
[OT: remember the days when GIMP was blindsided because the interface was... nonstandard?]
You might want to try Eclipse with CDT.
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I'm currently working on some straight up assembly code on Ubunutu. I was wondering what my options are as far as debuggers go for just assembly code. Somethings with a GUI would be preferable.
try DDD
http://www.gnu.org/software/ddd/
IDA Pro.
I love this program, I keep finding new features in it.
I only know about gdb. If you really need a GUI try Insight which is supposed to be a GUI for gdb. I haven't tired Insight personally yet.
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I can also settle for a web-based interface, but a good command-line tool is preferable. Now, I have tried to use xsd.exe that comes with mono-devel, but that skipped a whole bunch of stuff that was mentioned in the xml file.
I understand that I will need to hand-tweak the output, but I do want something decent to start with.
Try the tool that comes with the spring framework:
http://www.dotkam.com/2008/05/28/generate-xsd-from-xml/