/gifsicle-native

Create, manipulate, and optimize GIF images and animations

Primary LanguageCGNU General Public License v2.0GPL-2.0

gifsicle-logo

Gifsicle

TravisCI status

Gifsicle manipulates GIF image files. Depending on command line options, it can merge several GIFs into a GIF animation; explode an animation into its component frames; change individual frames in an animation; turn interlacing on and off; add transparency; add delays, disposals, and looping to animations; add and remove comments; flip and rotate; optimize animations for space; change images' colormaps; and other things.

Gifview, a companion program, displays GIF images and animations on an X display. It can display multi-frame GIFs either as slideshows, displaying one frame at a time, or as real-time animations.

Gifdiff, another companion program, checks two GIF files for identical visual appearance. This is probably most useful for testing GIF-manipulating software.

Each of these programs has a manpage, PROGRAMNAME.1.

The Gifsicle package comes with NO WARRANTY, express or implied, including, but not limited to, the implied warranties of merchantability and fitness for a particular purpose.

See NEWS.md in this directory for changes in recent versions. The Gifsicle home page is:

http://www.lcdf.org/gifsicle/

Building Gifsicle on UNIX

Type ./configure, then make.

If ./configure does not exist (you downloaded from Github), run autoreconf -i first.

./configure accepts the usual options; see INSTALL for details. To build without gifview (for example, if you don't have X11), use ./configure --disable-gifview. To build without gifdiff, use ./configure --disable-gifdiff.

make install will build and install Gifsicle and its manual page (under /usr/local by default).

Building Gifsicle on Windows

To build Gifsicle on Windows using Visual C, change into the src directory and run

nmake -f Makefile.w32

Gifview will not be built. The makefile is from Emil Mikulic darkmoon@connexus.net.au with updates by Steven Marthouse comments@vrml3d.com.

To build Gifsicle on Windows using Borland C++, change into the src directory and run

nmake -f Makefile.bcc

Stephen Schnipsel schnipsel@m4f.net provided Makefile.bcc. You will need to edit one of these Makefiles to use a different compiler. You can edit it with any text editor (like Notepad). See the file for more information.

Contact

If you have trouble building or running Gifsicle, try GitHub issues: https://github.com/kohler/gifsicle

Eddie Kohler, ekohler@gmail.com
http://www.read.seas.harvard.edu/~kohler/
Please note that I do not provide support for Windows.

Copyright/License

All source code is Copyright (C) 1997-2023 Eddie Kohler.

IF YOU PLAN TO USE GIFSICLE ONLY TO CREATE OR MODIFY GIF IMAGES, DON'T WORRY ABOUT THE REST OF THIS SECTION. Anyone can use Gifsicle however they wish; the license applies only to those who plan to copy, distribute, or alter its code. If you use Gifsicle for an organizational or commercial Web site, I would appreciate a link to the Gifsicle home page on any 'About This Server' page, but it's not required.

This code is distributed under the GNU General Public License, Version 2 (and only Version 2). The GNU General Public License is available via the Web at http://www.gnu.org/licenses/gpl.html or in the 'COPYING' file in this directory.

The following alternative license may be used at your discretion.

Permission is granted to copy, distribute, or alter Gifsicle, whole or in part, as long as source code copyright notices are kept intact, with the following restriction: Developers or distributors who plan to use Gifsicle code, whole or in part, in a product whose source code will not be made available to the end user -- more precisely, in a context which would violate the GPL -- MUST contact the author and obtain permission before doing so.

Authors

This program is dedicated to the memory of Anne Dudfield, who named it. Anne was an incredible friend and ridiculous person. ANNIED!!!!!!

Eddie Kohler ekohler@gmail.com
http://www.read.seas.harvard.edu/~kohler/
He wrote it.

David Hedbor david@hedbor.org
Many bug reports and constructive whining about the optimizer.

Emil Mikulic darkmoon@connexus.net.au
Win32 port help.

Hans Dinsen-Hansen dino@danbbs.dk
http://www.danbbs.dk/~dino/
Adaptive tree method for GIF writing.

Kornel Lesiński
--lossy option.