IrfanView has an extremely niche feature that literally no other image editor I’ve found, not even Photoshop, can do, called Remove/Insert strip
. I literally use this regularly for work and have donated to the dev because of it, but would like to try to find something open-source that does this if possible.
Let’s say you have an image which is comprised of 3 rows: ABC (there aren’t literal rows with lines, but we could just say the top 33% of the image is A, the middle 33% is B, and the remainder is C).
IrfanView can crop out just B (or any similar interior portion) and have A and C touch each other, in a single menu click after you’ve selected the portion-to-delete. It can also do this as columns, if ABC were treated as vertical columns instead.
It can also inject X amount of pixels in either height or width at any specified location in the middle of the image of whatever color you specify. This is also powerful, as I sometimes have to replicate part of an image elsewhere in the image (they’re sheet music), so being able to generate that placeholder and the immediately putting actual contents in the injected space is really helpful.
These are insanely creative features that I literally can’t find any other program capable of doing, open- or closed-source. Any guidance towards an alternative would be great!
That makes sense. The extent of my desktop-publishing work has typically involved bifold programs, so I use LibreOffice Writer’s “brochure”-printing mode (which automatically sets every 4 pages as double-sided quarters of 1 sheet) because I can’t stand how bad element selection in MS Publisher is. I’ve never used InDesign and want to avoid Adobe as much as possible since my org is already neck-deep in Microsoft’s subscriptions as it is.
Don’t get me wrong; Scribus can clearly make a lot of beautiful stuff. I just can’t even start to figure it out; I gotta find video tutorials or something.
I get you. It’s a question of finding the one app that works for your workflow. sometimes it takes years to find it