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- Sixel - Wikipedia
Sixel, short for "six pixels", is a bitmap graphics format supported by terminals and printers from DEC It consists of a pattern six pixels high and one wide (in black and white), resulting in 64 possible patterns
- Are We Sixel Yet?
This site lists the support for the SIXEL graphics format across various terminal emulators The SIXEL format allows the terminal to display bitmap graphics See https: en wikipedia org wiki Sixel for more information SIXEL support for a terminal can be determined by running the lsix command
- GitHub - saitoha libsixel: A SIXEL encoder decoder implementation . . .
SIXEL is one of image formats for printer and terminal imaging introduced by Digital Equipment Corp (DEC) Its data scheme is represented as a terminal-friendly escape sequence So if you want to view a SIXEL image file, all you have to do is "cat" it to your terminal
- Sixel — Grokipedia
Sixel is a bitmap graphics format and terminal control protocol developed by Digital Equipment Corporation (DEC) in the 1980s for rendering images on text-based terminals and printers
- Brow6el - Terminal Web Browser with Sixel Support
Brow6el is a full-featured web browser that runs entirely in your terminal using Sixel graphics Built on Chromium (CEF), it brings modern web browsing to the command line with a powerful vim-style keyboard interface, mouse support, JavaScript console, bookmarks, user scripts, and more
- Super simple lispised DEC sixel macro for common lisp inferface manager
Real talk I was in a powerful funk, so to lighten the mood I implemented sixel printing for McCLIM application panes This is relevant to dl-roc, because it treats colors as printing different pallet
- Why Sixel? : r commandline - Reddit
Why is Sixel the standard we ended up with? Sixel seems to have been designed primarily to work around the early limitations of dot-matrix printers, and as such it does a terrible job of communicating bitmap over text
- Sixel protocol | Rio Terminal
Sixel, short for "six pixels", is a bitmap graphics format supported by terminals and printers from DEC It consists of a pattern six pixels high and one wide, resulting in 64 possible patterns
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