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Here is just a few examples of what ImageMagick can do:
You can access ImageMagick functions directly from the command line using the ImageMagick tools (convert), interactively (display), from a Perl script (PerlMagick), with the C++ API (libMagick++), with the C API (libMagick), or from Java (JavaMagick).
ImageMagick is known to compile and run on virtually any Unix. system and Linux. It also runs under Windows NT, Windows 95, Macintosh, VMS, and OS2. See the install guide for compiling instructions. Pre-compiled binaries are available for some of the more popular operating systems. The entire source and binary distribution is also available for a limited time on CD.
Developers will probably be interested in the latest source from the ImageMagick anonymous CVS server.
You can subscribe to the mailing list. Here you can ask questions and get advice from other ImageMagick users and see announcements of bug fixes, enhancements, and new releases.
Because ImageMagick is freeware, I am unwilling to certify that it is Y2K Compliant. However I am confident that it is. ImageMagick uses localtime to produce time-stamps for encoding PDF and Postscript output. It also uses system routines such as select to produce suitable sub-second delays when animating an image sequence.
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