Software:IBM PCPG
Original author(s) | Eugene Ying |
---|---|
Initial release | 1980s |
Written in | BASIC |
Operating system | MS-DOS, MS Windows |
Size | approximately 200KB |
IBM Personal Computer Picture Graphics System (PCPG) is a software developed in BASIC by Eugene Ying in the 1980s, for the IBM PC operating system.
This software is used to draw figures, add images from several libraries and include text. It has functions to digitize and print pictures.
Technical
PCPG is designed to work on IBM PCs and compatible, running MS-DOS (and MS Windows). It actually runs in a NTVDM upon all versions of Windows. It can be stored and loaded from a 360K 5"1/4 floppy disk. Operates with keyboard. No mouse driver is required.
Type PCPG in Command Prompt to run PCPG.EXE. Other files (PCPG.DOC, .FT1, .FT2, .FT3, .FT4, .FT5, .HLP, .PAK, .PIC, .SYM) are system files (info file, fonts, help, unpacking system, startup picture, symbol library)
Features
Geometry
Allows to draw Polygons, Involutes, Hypocycloid, Epicycloid, Rose, Sinusoid from %1 data.
Symbols
The program features libraries of pictures, drawn using the BASIC statement DRAW.
Text
5 fonts are available to insert text. Both monospaced and proportional fonts were available, all of them drawn using the BASIC statement DRAW.
See also
- Computer graphics (computer science)
- Digital imaging
- Computer representation of surfaces
- Glossary of computer graphics
References
Original source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/IBM PCPG.
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