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CreaMD
Registered: Dec 2001 Posts: 2964 |
Converting GFX question
Asking for friend. Quote follows:
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Morning! Does anyone of you please know a Window C64 converter that would not do any processing and just save data in C64 format?
What's my problem: I prepared a 4-color (so that I can convert to multicolor sprites) picture in Gimp and then ran it through a converter, which decided to just add a 5th color. 🤦♂️
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Thank you for quick help everybody. |
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CreaMD
Registered: Dec 2001 Posts: 2964 |
Quote: Quoting CreaMDI'm glad Wotnau doesn't waste his life here and does something creative on C64 instead. great, means we don't need to waste our lives anymore trying to help you \o/
really, I don't understand your passive aggressive attitude, it comes across as entitled and ungrateful. bah.
I wasn't asking for myself. And this was not aimed at you but at everyone not empathic enough to imagine, that there might be self-taught c64 coders that never actually were programmers for living and commandline is a "distant" concept to them. I think, in my honest opionion, that I was polite in that aspect, because if you look at this debate from distance, there is no real help in the rest of this thread. I admit, that I contributed to that too.
p.s.: And you are right. I forgot to thank everybody who helped. So. Thank you guys! |
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Krill
Registered: Apr 2002 Posts: 2530 |
Quoting CreaMDimagine, that there might be self-taught c64 coders that never actually were programmers for living and commandline is a "distant" concept to them. I thought the usual process was to be a self-taught C-64 coder first (in teenage years) to eventually become a professional programmer later, building on that C-64 knowledge. Not the other way around. =) |
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Hein
Registered: Apr 2004 Posts: 877 |
Quote: Quoting CreaMDimagine, that there might be self-taught c64 coders that never actually were programmers for living and commandline is a "distant" concept to them. I thought the usual process was to be a self-taught C-64 coder first (in teenage years) to eventually become a professional programmer later, building on that C-64 knowledge. Not the other way around. =)
Still so, you were not a programmer before you became a self-taught c64 coder in your teenage years, I suppose. Unless your mom gave birth to a professional programmer, of course.
But may I suggest Spritepad for this thread? |
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Krill
Registered: Apr 2002 Posts: 2530 |
Quoting HeinStill so, you were not a programmer before you became a self-taught c64 coder in your teenage years, I suppose. Unless your mom gave birth to a professional programmer, of course. "Self-taught" is the magic word here, i suppose. =) |
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Hein
Registered: Apr 2004 Posts: 877 |
Quote: Quoting HeinStill so, you were not a programmer before you became a self-taught c64 coder in your teenage years, I suppose. Unless your mom gave birth to a professional programmer, of course. "Self-taught" is the magic word here, i suppose. =)
Heh, imo it was 'were'. Which shows the difference in interpretation of words and sentences, leading to derailed forum threads. |
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Oswald
Registered: Apr 2002 Posts: 4844 |
Quote: The tool was found. Questions were answered.
I'm glad Wotnau doesn't waste his life here and does something creative on C64 instead.
Time to close.
Nobody should waste his life by telling people what they should do and what not. We shouldnt have fun here indeed, this is serious website, users should be banned from chit chatting, so moderators can idle in peace. |
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Groepaz
Registered: Dec 2001 Posts: 10579 |
"empathic enough to imagine, that there might be self-taught c64 coders that never actually were programmers for living and commandline is a "distant" concept to them"
You literally not be a self taught c64 coder, without starting on the command line. And i am pretty sure every c64 programmier has used it. Which makes fear of command line kind of funny indeed. |
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Youth
Registered: Aug 2003 Posts: 32 |
Wow this spiralled out of control fast :) For what it's worth, I kind of regret making a GUI version of retropixels. It was a kind of proof-of-concept, but I broke my own rule of never giving a tool away without being prepared to maintain it. As a coder I want command line tools that I can automate and integrate into my development process, and now I am having to dodge questions about feature requests and bugs. Boohoo! It will probably go away some day because of lack of priority and then there's only command line left...
jeugd 1 burglar 2 for sticking with just the command line tool |
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CreaMD
Registered: Dec 2001 Posts: 2964 |
Quoting KrillI thought the usual process was to be a self-taught C-64 coder first (in teenage years) to eventually become a professional programmer later, building on that C-64 knowledge. Not the other way around. =)
Imagine someone choose different career path. And he is good at it. C64 is his exit to the world of childhood/younghood dreams.
Quoting YouthWow this spiralled out of control fast :) For what it's worth, I kind of regret making a GUI version of retropixels. It was a kind of proof-of-concept, but I broke my own rule of never giving a tool away without being prepared to maintain it. As a coder I want command line tools that I can automate and integrate into my development process, and now I am having to dodge questions about feature requests and bugs. Boohoo! It will probably go away some day because of lack of priority and then there's only command line left...
jeugd 1 burglar 2 for sticking with just the command line tool
If it helped him to achieve his goal, then it was worth it I think. Thanks. |
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TWW
Registered: Jul 2009 Posts: 514 |
Quoting CreaMDImagine someone choose different career path. And he is good at it. C64 is his exit to the world of childhood/younghood dreams.
+1
Never worked as a programmer, but strangely enough it has been very usefull to know a little about bits and bytes in every situation i have been in professionaly (which has ranged from high tech space/subsea exploration to technical ship management and a lot of other weird stuff). It goes with the story though that most of those I considered "coders" in my home area back in the day (~10 people) have gone into programming and IT. Some have climbed the corporate ladders and don't program anymore but some still are.
It's a good hobby, but the motivation to "produce" anything is long gone as there can be no 'reward' like it was when you were 12 and managed to put something in the sideborder to all your little nerd-buddies awe. What's most rewarding to me these days is to take ancient ineficcient code and optimize it :) |
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