CDisplay

CDisplay

The application icon
Developer(s) David Ayton
Last release 1.8.1 / April 2004
Operating system Microsoft Windows
Type Image viewer
License Freeware / Abandonware
Website CDisplay Semi-Official

CDisplay is a freeware Comic book archive viewer and sequential image viewer utility for Microsoft Windows used to view images one at a time in the style of a comic book. It popularized the comic book archive file format. CDisplay was written to easily view JPEG, PNG and static GIF format images sequentially. The program was designed to be less general purpose than existing image viewer programs, and more convenient for simply viewing images sequentially.

Features

Files

CDisplay supports Comic Book Archive files, archives of individual page images with the extension .cbr, .cbz, .cbt, or .cba; they are simply renamed RAR, ZIP, TAR, or ACE archive files.The standard icon for all comic file types extension is a comic balloon. The format was made popular by CDisplay but is now used by many other programs designed for reading comics.

CDisplay supports the display of JPEG, PNG, GIF, BMP, TXT, and also SFV files which confirm that the file is not corrupt, either directly or contained within archive files.

Limitations

CDisplay does not automatically add leading zeroes to sequentially numbered images inside Comic Book Archives. Consequently it reads files in the alphabetical order of 1, 10, 11, ..., 2, 20, 21, ..., rather than true numerical order. For files to be read in numerical order, leading zeroes must be added, 01, 02, ..., 10, ..., or 001, etc. if there are more than 99 pages.

CDisplay cannot display JPEG images more than 2999 pixels high or wide at their original sizes; it resizes such JPGs to fit within the 2999 pixel limit. The same limitation does not apply to PNGs, which are displayed using a third-party TPNGImage component by Gustavo Daud.

CDisplay will not open files with names containing non-ASCII characters, although the preview window in the advanced file selection dialog is able to display a thumbnail.

Development

The program was compiled using Borland C++ Builder 5.0 and runs on 32- and 64-bit versions of Windows platforms from Windows 98 onwards. CDisplay does not, and cannot, modify files. Some configuration data is written to the Windows registry.

The source code was not made available, and the program ceased to be maintained when the author died.[1]

See also

References

  1. Henry, Alan (November 14, 2011). "Five Best Desktop Comic Book Readers". Lifehacker. Retrieved 2014-01-20.

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Sunday, January 17, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.