![]() I greatly appreciate everyone's input on this. The PNG or possibly SVG file, the website, or the url where it's uploaded. I guess the bottom line is that we need more info, before we can try to pinpoint the specific problem. Maybe it's being uploaded into a set-size frame, which causes the image to be scaled, perhaps creating the described "dark rectangular image with vague lettering visible". Now that I re-read the message though, I wonder about where the image is being uploaded. Is that bug only when the commandline is used for exporting the PNG? And probably other kinds of gallery apps to it too.) (But I've never seen a black bg on a PNG in my CPG installation.) (Coppermine Galleries do that - I know because I use it on my site. Although if it's being uploaded into some kind of gallery - yes, the gallery app could absolutely be creating thumbnails in a different format for example, like JPG. I don't doubt you at all, but I've just never seen that. (I've never heard of a website converting an image format when it's uploaded. It seems like you're thinking there may be a JPG somehow involved, but I don't understand how you came to that idea. I was responding to James' description of using Export PNG and it showing with black background. We may be talking about 2 different things, Moini. But historically, it's not an Inkscape problem. Maybe someone will notice some kind of problem with the image. But this is probably nothing to do with Inkscape. I assumed it was because it was going into a different server. I came to that conclusion because I could upload the same image on a different day, or different week, and it would display properly. So I thought images on certain servers behaved differently. You know a site like IS must have many servers. My final conclusion was that it must be something about the server. ![]() I never was able to figure out if it was something with the images. Not all images with transparent background showed black, but some did. Often a transparent background would be displayed as black. ![]() But if it's a problem with a website, and you don't have any control over the website, there probably not much you can do.įor example, I used to use ImageShack as a host for images that I needed to upload. If you have the option of using a different viewer that might work - you can only try it. In your search, did you come across the several to many messages explaining that some viewers and some websites just have this problem, and there's not much you can do about it. When you upload to a website, which browser are you using to view it? Could you share the PNG with us, so we can test? Can you share the address of the website? Or a link to the image where it's uploaded?
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