Screenshots are ordered by the date it was taken. Please let me know if any of these shots will be down (unavailable), because I'm not sure about the hosting I chose ;). Also be sure to check out the video of the early gnfodiz version – you can find the link at the very bottom of the page.

2010-08-29

I'm returning to this project on a rather free-from-rules basics, once making longer breaks, other times coding day after day. Today I've found some time to spare, implemented a part of the Options window and did some maintenance fixes. Current state of gnfodiz:

6

I'm planning to implement some eyecandies as well, but I'm not going to write anything about it yet ;). I'm not showing the Options Window because it’s not really that interesting in the current state.

2010-06-28

Added some color parametrization. You can select custom colors for text, background, selection. Here’s how it looks like with different font and different colors:

5

Additionally, support for URL links is on its way. Gnfodiz will detect links and allow you to click on them with left mouse button, and will display a context of useful actions when clicking right mouse button.

6

2010-04-14

Improved UI a little. Removed this ugly slider, added nice buttons instead of it. The third toolbar button will copy selected text into the clipboard. There is also an improved View menu, where you can find same stuff as in toolbar, plus options to show/hide toolbar and menubar, so there’s no need to do a new screenshot for it. Also, this version will remember the state of zooming and visibility of some controls across invocations (by using ~/.gnfodiz/prefs.conf).

4

2010-04-12

Added block copy feature. It’s not actually copying to the clipboard yet, but all of the interfaces are ready. Also, I understand that the colors used to highlight selection area are ugly, but the plan is that the user will be able to change them to whatever he likes.

3

2010-04-09

Main window in all of its glory. There’s a mockup menu bar (will be improved of course), and a slider, which scales the image accordingly to its value. This version also has smooth scrolling functionality, but it’s impossible to show it on screenshots.

1

Here’s the slider in action.

2

For a sneak peek of these functions in action, see the video of this version hosted on Vimeo.