


Now, I wouldn't expect display's GUI to have tabs, but I think it should be possible to somehow have display's window replace the content it displays upon a command. This is similar to how scite has a "single instance mode" (see How to load new documents in a single instance of SciTE): when it is set up, you can say scite filename on the command line scite then exits in terminal - while it opens the file as new tab (so you can quickly open files on command line by using bash history and up arrow). However, what I'd like to do, is when the above command is ran in terminal, then display would both start the window, and at the same time exit then I could quickly press up arrow in terminal, and edit the settings (like -density), and repeat the now modified command line - which would likewise now exit, and the window would show the newly requested image. then display locks in the command line, until you exit the window (or press CTRL+ C in terminal). On your Linux machine you also need to compile ImageMagick with the -enable-opencl option. ActiveState Perl ActiveState offers both a free community version and a commercially supported binary distribution of Perl for Win32 and Perl for Win64. We are working on a change that will dynamically load this library so we can enable OpenCL by default. When I use imagemagick's display from command line, say: $ display -density 150 test1.pdf Explore the high-performance, low-power world with the tiny, affordable, open-source Beagles 4 ASC C++ centos CUDA FTP Galileo H3C httpd HTTPS intel Internet IPv6 LAMP LeetCode Linux MPI nginx odhcpd OpenWrt PHP SSH SSL STL Ubuntu vpn WordPress k2 k2p. The reason it is not enabled by default is because this will add a dependency to OpenCL.dll and this library is not always available on a Windows system.
