5 GIF and Animated GIF Writing
Writes the given
bitmap to
filename as a GIF image,
where
bitmap is either an instance of
bitmap% or a
thunk (to be called just once) that generates such an object. If the
bitmap uses more than 256 colors, it is automatically quantized using
a simple algorithm; see
quantize. If the bitmap has a mask
bitmap via
get-loaded-mask, it is used to determine
transparent pixels in the generated GIF image.
(write-animated-gif | | bitmaps | | | | delay-csec | | | | filename | | | [ | #:loop loop? | | | | #:one-at-a-time? one-at-a-time? | | | | #:last-frame-delay last-frame-delay]) | |
|
→ void? |
|
delay-csec : (integer-in 0 4294967295) |
filename : path-string |
loop? : any/c = (and delay-csec #t) |
one-at-a-time? : any/c = #f |
|
Writes the bitmaps in
bitmaps to
filename as an
animated GIF. The
bitmaps list can contain a mixture of
bitmap% objects and thunks (each called just once) that
produce
bitmap% objects. The
delay-csec argument is
the amount of time in 1/100s of a second to wait between transitions.
If
loop? is a true value, then the GIF is marked as a looping
animation.
If one-at-a-time? is #f, then the content of all
images is collected and quantized at once, to produce a single
colortable; a drawback to this approach is that it uses more memory,
and it allows less color variation among animation frames. Even when
one-at-a-time? is #f, the result of each thunk in
bitmaps is converted to a byte-string one at a time
(which helps avoid bitmap-count limits under Windows).
If one-at-a-time? is true, then the bitmaps are quantized and
written to the file one at a time; that is, for each thunk in
bitmaps, its result is written and discarded before another
thunk is called. A drawback to this approach is that a separate
colortable is written for each frame in the animation, which can make
the resulting file large.
If last-frame-delay is not false, a delay of
last-frame-delay (in 1/100s of a second) is added to the last
frame. This extra delay is useful when loop? is true.