ES-DE/README.txt

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C++ Template Image Processing Toolkit
( http://cimg.eu )
_cimg_version
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# Summary
#---------
The CImg Library is a small and open-source C++ toolkit for image processing.
It consists in a single header file 'CImg.h' providing a minimal set of C++
classes and methods that can be used in your own sources, to load/save,
process and display images. Very portable (Unix/X11,Windows, MacOS X, FreeBSD, .. ),
efficient, easy to use, it's a pleasant library for developing image processing
algorithms in C++.
# Authors and contributors :
#----------------------------
- David Tschumperlé (project leader) ( http://tschumperle.users.greyc.fr/ )
- Maksim Aizenshtein
- Alberto Albiol
- Antonio Albiol
- Simon Barthelme
- Neil Brown
- Haz-Edine Assemlal
- Vincent Barra
- Wolf Blecher
- Romain Blei
- Yohan Bentolila
- Jerome Boulanger
- Pierre Buyssens
- Sebastien Coudert
- Frederic Devernay
- Olivier D'Hondt
- Francois-Xavier Dupe
- Gerd von Egidy
- Eric Fausett
- Jean-Marie Favreau
- Sebastien Fourey
- Alexandre Fournier
- Hon-Kwok Fung
- Vincent Garcia
- David Grimbichler
- Jinwei Gu
- Jean-Daniel Guyot
- Cedric Hammiche
- Matt Hanson
- Sebastien Hanel
- Michael Holroyd
- Christoph Hormann
- Werner Jainek
- Daniel Kondermann
- Pierre Kornprobst
- Jan W. Krieger
- Orges Leka
- Francois Lauze
- Xie Long
- Thomas Martin
- Cesar Martinez
- Jean Martinot
- Arnold Meijster (Center for High Performance Computing and Visualization, University of Groningen/The Netherlands)
- Nikita Melnichenko
- Julien Morat
- Baptiste Mougel
- Jovana Milutinovich
- Guillaume Nee
- Adam Newgas
- Francisco Oliveira
- Andrea Onofri
- Renaud Peteri
- Martin Petricek
- Paolo Prete
- Adrien Reboisson
- Klaus Schneider
- Jakob Schluttig
- Jamie Smith
- Veronique Souchaud
- Konstantin Spirin
- David G. Starkweather
- Rainer Steffens
- Grzegorz Szwoch
- Thierry Thomas
- Yu-En-Yun
- Vo Duc Khanh
- Phillip Wood
- Bug Zhao
- Haibo Zheng
# Institution
#-------------
GREYC Image / CNRS UMR 6072 / FRANCE
The CImg Library project started in 2000, at the INRIA-Sophia
Antipolis/France ( http://www-sop.inria.fr/ ), in the ROBOTVIS / ODYSSEE Team.
Since October 2004, it is maintained and developed in the Image team of
the GREYC Lab (CNRS, UMR 6072), in Caen/France.
Team web page : http://www.greyc.fr/image
# Licenses
#----------
The source code of the CImg Library is distributed under
two distinct licenses :
- The main library file 'CImg.h' is *dual-licensed* :
It can be either distributed under the CeCILL-C or CeCILL license.
(see files 'Licence_CeCILL-C_V1-en.txt' and 'Licence_CeCILL_V2-en.txt').
Both are Free-Software licenses :
* CeCILL-C is adapted to the distribution of
library components, and is close in its terms to the well known GNU LGPL license
(the 'CImg.h' file can thus be used in closed-source products under certain
conditions, please read carefully the license file).
* CeCILL is close to (and even compatible with) the GNU GPL license.
- Most of the other files are distributed under the CeCiLL license
(file 'Licence_CeCILL_V2-en.txt'). See each file header to see what license applies.
These two CeCiLL licenses ( http://www.cecill.info/index.en.html ) have been
created under the supervision of the three biggest research institutions on
computer sciences in France :
- CNRS ( http://www.cnrs.fr/ )
- CEA ( http://www.cea.fr/ )
- INRIA ( http://www.inria.fr/ )
You have to RESPECT these licenses. More particularly, please carefully read
the license terms before using the CImg library in commercial products.
# Package structure :
#--------------------
The main package directory CImg/ is organized as follows :
- README.txt : This file.
- Licence_CeCILL-C_V1-en.txt : A copy of the CeCiLL-C license file.
- Licence_CeCILL_V2-en.txt : A copy of the CeCiLL license.
- CImg.h : The single header file that constitutes the library itself.
- examples/ : A directory containing a lot of example programs performing
various things, using the CImg library.
- html/ : A directory containing a copy of the CImg web page in html
format. The reference documentation is generated
automatically with the tool 'doxygen' (http://www.doxygen.org).
- resources/ : A directory containing some resources files for compiling
CImg examples or packages with various C++ compilers and OS.
- plugins/ : A directory containing CImg plug-ins files that can be used to
add specific extra functionalities to the CImg library.
# Getting started
#-----------------
If you are new to CImg, you should first try to compile the different examples
provided in the 'examples/' directory, to see what CImg is capable of
(as CImg is a template-based library, no prior compilation of the library is mandatory).
Look at the 'resources/' directory to ease this compilation on different platforms.
Then, you can look at the documentation 'html/reference/' to learn more about CImg
functions and classes. Finally, you can participate to the 'Forum' section
of the CImg web page and ask for help if needed.
# End of file
#------------