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On Sun, 2010-08-08 at 00:36 -0700, Alan Coopersmith wrote:<BR>
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<TT><FONT COLOR="#1a1a1a">Not true:</FONT></TT><BR>
<TT><FONT COLOR="#1a1a1a">BitEdit.c: #include <X11/bitmaps/xlogo16></FONT></TT><BR>
<BR>
<TT><FONT COLOR="#1a1a1a">xbm bitmaps & xpm pixmaps are C header files in disguise (and</FONT></TT><BR>
<TT><FONT COLOR="#1a1a1a">unfortunately without file suffixes to make them easy to spot) -</FONT></TT><BR>
<TT><FONT COLOR="#1a1a1a">this is occasionally useful for building X apps, even though its a</FONT></TT><BR>
<TT><FONT COLOR="#1a1a1a">horrible encoding format for images in general (while most image</FONT></TT><BR>
<TT><FONT COLOR="#1a1a1a">formats try to compress image data, xbm & xpm actually embiggen it).</FONT></TT><BR>
<BR>
<TT><FONT COLOR="#1a1a1a">There's also a runtime dependency on a number of the bitmaps from</FONT></TT><BR>
<TT><FONT COLOR="#1a1a1a">xbitmaps in the app-defaults file for the bitmap program.</FONT></TT><BR>
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I had noticed those but not where they were included. I ran bitmap and noticed<BR>
the X logo but it did not occur to me that's where it was coming from.<BR>
Sorry for the false alarm.
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