NAME¶
xzoom - magnify part of the screen, with fast updates
SYNOPSIS¶
xzoom [ -display
displayname ] [ -mag
mag [
mag ] ]
[ -x ] [ -y ] [ -xy ] [ -geometry
geometry ] [ -source
geometry
]
OPTIONS¶
- -display displayname | -d
displayname
- The name of the display to use (not very useful).
- -mag mag [ mag ]
- What magnification to use. If two number arguments are
supplied the first is used for X magnifications and the second is used for
Y magnification. Magnification should be greater than 0.
- -x
- Mirror horizontally.
- -y
- Mirror vertically.
- -xy | -z
- Exchange X and Y axes before any magnification is
performed.
- -geometry geometry | =geometry
- Size and position xzoom's window.
- -source geometry
- Size and position the initial source area which is
magnified. The dimensions of this area are multiplied by the magnification
to get the size of xzoom's window. If these dimensions are given
separately (by use of -geometry ) then an error is reported.
DESCRIPTION¶
Xzoom displays in its window a magnified area of the X11 display. The
user can interactively change the zoomed area, the window size, magnification
(optionally different magnification for X and Y axes) or rotate or mirror the
image.
COMMANDS¶
Once xzoom has started the user can enter simple commands using the keyboard.
- q
- quit.
- +
- increase magnification value by 1.
- -
- decrease magnification value by 1.
- w
- next + or - command only affect X magnification.
- h
- next + or - command only affect Y magnification.
- x
- mirror the display image horizontally.
- y
- mirror the display image vertically.
- z
- rotate the displayed image 90 degrees
counter-clockwise.
- arrow keys
- scroll the zoomed area 1 pixel in the direction of the
arrow. if the control key is pressed the zoomed area will scroll 10
pixels.
- d
- sets the delay between frame updates. Built-in delays are
200, 100, 50, 10 and 0 ms.
- g
- toggle grid on and off.
- Mouse buttons
- To set the location of the magnified are click the left
mouse button inside xzoom's window and then move it (keep the button
pressed) to the place which you want to see magnified.
Xzoom allow you to resize it's window at any time.
When xzoom is iconified it simply waits to get deiconified.
DISPLAYS¶
Xzoom uses the window's title bar to inform the user about it's status. Normally
the title says something like
xzoom x2 which means the magnification is
2 both in X and Y axes. If the image is stretched differently on the X and Y
axes the title will say
xzoom X 2; Y 4. Negative numbers mean
reflection. If the image is rotated by 90 or 270 degrees the title will show
<=> between the X and Y values.
When
d is depressed the title will display the new delay value for
approximately 2 seconds and then revert to the default display of
magnification values.
Xzoom is fast enough to display enlarged or mirrored animations in small
windows. On my 486 DX2-66 and Cirrus Logic CL-GD5428 display card (attached to
Vesa local bus) update of a 256x256 window magnified by 2 (ie, source rect is
128x128) takes approximately 30 ms. This time varies, off course when a
different size window or different magnification is used. If we chose 50 ms
between updates we can get about 12.5 frames per second and still let an
animation program do it's work. It is possible to compile xzoom without X
shared memory support. In that case window update may be about 3 times slower
(if we are using a local display, using LAN is a different story).
SEE ALSO¶
xmag.1x.
I got the motivation for writing xzoom after I saw a similar WindowsNT program,
zoomin working. It started just as a test for X11 performance. I don't have
the fancy menus and scrollbar like zoomin but I do have all their features
(and more) accessible from the keyboard.
BUGS¶
† The maximum internal built in delay (see command
d above) was set
to 200 ms. Xzoom completes the delay before polling the X event queue for the
next command. Larger delays would feel like poor response to user commands.
† For best performance the shared memory extension for X11 is used. Xzoom
will fail if it is compiled to use XSHM and its display is not on the local
host.
† Xzoom is given with no warranty. It was tested only under Linux with
Xfree86 release 3.1.2 (X11R6).
† Some strange behavior may occur if the requested magnified area falls
beyond the borders of the screen. Example is when you have magnification of 1
and a window whose width is greater than the height of the screen and you want
90 degrees rotation. In that case part of the window will not get updated.
† The frame used to mark the zoomed area may corrupt the contents of other
windows if they are modified when the frame is visible. If you don't like it
disable the -DFRAME option when compiling xzoom.
AUTHOR¶
Itai Nahshon