![]() ![]() Manually rotating the image modifies the image! You can rotate the image by 90 degrees using “, but it actually writes back the rotated image to file! There is no option to just rotate for viewing! This combined with Feh not supporting EXIF rotation tags is a deathblow. I cannot rotate my head while browsing a directory of photos. Since most images are photos generated by cameras or smartphones, not having this feature is a deathblow. I dont see the option in /.config/feh/keys or in man feh. So is there a way of moving a window or of toggling the frameless feature. However now I want to move the window on the screen and to do that I guess I will need a frame. It does not auto-rotate images to match their EXIF orientation. With the feh image viewer I can open a frameless window on an image.Though Feh is super fast, there are a few problems which make it impossible for me to use it: To associate this script with your file explorer, first add it as a main menu entry and then find it in the Open With dialog. On its home page, feh bills itself as a 'fast and light imlib2 based image viewer.' More 'enterprising' individuals can easily employ. It is a X11 viewer aimed mostly at command line users. Despite its odd name, it is a powerful command line utility. If you want Feh to act like an image browser, use the script provided here. Although not typically part of a PCLinuxOS installation, feh is easily installed via Synaptic. You cannot move to the previous and next image in that directory. When you open an image in your file explorer with Feh, it only displays that image. If you find that it is not appearing in the Open With menu, then open /usr/share/applications/feh.desktop. You can associate it to the default image viewer for all types of images.-scale-down: Scale down image to fit window, only when it is bigger than window.Note that there is no option to open in a maximized window. -geometry 1920x1080: Start in a window of the specified size.The command line options that I usually use: The config options can be seen in man feh. An example configuration file can be seen here. You can set your own keyboard shortcuts by creating the file ~/.config/feh/keys. The keyboard shortcuts of Feh that I typically use: You might want to try it if you need to open and browse through images quickly on even the slowest computers. Feh is probably the fastest and the most minimal image viewer on Linux. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |