xv (software)

xv

xv running on Linux
Developer(s) John Bradley
Stable release
3.10a / December 29, 1994 (1994-12-29)
Development status Unmaintained
Operating system Unix-like, VMS
Type Image viewer
License Shareware
Website www.trilon.com/xv/

xv is a shareware program written by John Bradley to display and modify digital images under the X Window System.

While popular in the early 1990s ("XV is widely considered to be the preeminent image viewer for the X Window System"[1]), no official releases have been made since December 1994. Bradley was unable to negotiate the LZW patent licence necessary for encoding the then-popular GIF format. The patent has now expired, so this legal constraint is no longer relevant.

Until at least 2000, Bradley collected third-party updates to xv, for example, support for the PNG image format. These were published as source code patches only. Additional patches are still (as of 2007) created and maintained by volunteers.

xv can be run from either the command line or through a graphical interface. It distinguishes itself from many other bitmap viewing and editing programs with a very efficient interface in which the user edits just the parameters of a fixed pipeline of processing steps, rather than modifying the bitmap directly in each operation. As a result, the user can easily undo operations (such as cropping, color modifications, filtering) out of order, rather than only being able to undo the respective last operation. While this concept limits what xv can do compared to some alternatives, the functionality it provides can be applied very conveniently and efficiently.

With the exception of present Slackware, openSUSE, and Mageia releases, xv is no longer bundled with most Linux distributions.

See also

Notes

  1. PNG: The Definitive Guide. O'Reilly. 1999. Retrieved August 11, 2011.


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