# UK textual resources for ImageFS control panel
# ImageFS is (c) Alternative Publishing Ltd
# For release version 2.00



# Help messages
HelpIC:This is the ImageFS Control application, from which you can alter the settings for the ImageFS module.|MClick SELECT to open the Options window.|MDrag any file here to identify it as an image filetype.
HelpInfo:This window displays information about the current version of ImageFS. The licence number is shown in the bottom-right of the window.|M(%0)
Help001:Click here to activate/inactivate the individual foreign filetypes that ImageFS can handle.
Help002:Click here to edit the global settings used when ImageFS converts foreign files into sprites.
Help003:Click here to edit the Tinyview pop-up preview options.
Help004:Click here to edit the general options.
Help005:Click here to restore the default settings for all options.
Help006:Click here to set the options selected and save them to disc. They will then be set whenever ImageFS is started.
Help007:Click here to cancel the changes you have just made to the options settings.
Help008:Click here to set the options you have selected.

Help104:Click here to see a list of foreign filetypes that ImageFS can handle.
Help105:This is the icon used by the filer for %0 files.
Help106:This is the range of graphics available using %0 files.
Help107:These are the DOS extensions used for %0 files.
Help108:This is a brief description of %0 files, and the filetype alias used by RISC OS.
Help109:Click here to make %0 files inactive under ImageFS. They will then have to be converted into RISC OS graphic images using another graphic file converter if you wish to load them.
Help110:Click here to make %0 files active under ImageFS. They will then present a converted RISC OS graphic image 'within' the %0 file if it is double-clicked. This can be used as a normal RISC OS graphic file.
Help111:Click here to make %0 files automatic under ImageFS. They will then be converted automatically into RISC OS graphics by ImageFS if double-clicked or dragged within the desktop.
Help113:Click here to see a range of presets for quickly changing some common types' status.
Help114:Displayed here are specific parameters used by ImageFS when saving %0 files.
Help115:Displayed here are specific parameters used by ImageFS when saving %0 files.
Help116:Displayed here are specific parameters used by ImageFS when saving %0 files.
Help117:Displayed here are specific parameters used by ImageFS when saving %0 files.
Help118:Displayed here are specific parameters used by ImageFS when saving %0 files.
Help119:Displayed here are specific parameters used by ImageFS when saving %0 files.
Help120:Displayed here are specific parameters used by ImageFS when saving %0 files.
Help121:Displayed here are specific parameters used by ImageFS when saving %0 files.
Help122:This file icon represents the type of RISC OS file that ImageFS will convert %0 files into, when set to 'Active' or 'Auto'.

Help212:Click here to load all converted sprites as 'old' format, reducing deep-colour sprites to 256 colours, and optionally converting foreign 256-colour palettes into standard Acorn palettes.
Help213:Click here to load all converted sprites as 'new' format, 1-32 bpp.
Help214:These radio buttons select the diffusion method used when reducing deep-colour sprites to 256 colours. No diffusion is best used with flat illustrations; photographic images may appear 'blotchy' with this setting.
Help215:These radio buttons select the diffusion method used when reducing deep-colour sprites to 256 colours. Simple dithering is adequate for most images and is not very time-consuming for the computer.
Help216:These radio buttons select the diffusion method used when reducing deep-colour sprites to 256 colours. Floyd-Steinberg provides the best quality photographic dithered images, but can be time-consuming for slower computers.
Help217:Click here to convert foreign file 256-colour palettes into Acorn standard palettes using the above diffusion method.
Help218:Click here to convert foreign file 256-colour paletted images into 256-colour sprites, retaining all the original palette colours.
Help219:Click here to load all converted sprites as square pixel (1:1, VGA-style) images.
Help220:Click here to load all converted sprites as rectangular pixel (1:2, Mode 12-style) images.
Help221:Click here to use standard 10-character filenames for graphic images.
Help222:Click here to use author/creator data (if present) within foreign files as graphic image filenames. These can be up to 32 characters long.
Help223:Click here to use the 'parent' foreign file's name for graphic image filenames. The 'parent' name is also used for the spritename within spritefiles.
Help224:Click here to force all 'new' deep sprites to 90 dpi. 1-8 bpp sprites will be forced to 'old' format regardless of the 'Sprite format' setting above. This setting should remain selected as RISC OS cannot handle arbitrary dpi values.
Help225:Click here to use the dpi values within foreign files when converting 'New' sprites. At present RISC OS cannot handle these (true) arbitrary dpi values, so this option should not be used.

Help304:When selected, this option activates the Tinyview pop-up preview.
Help305:When selected, this option converts deep colour pop-up sprites into 256-colour sprites using the diffusion method below.
Help306:When selected, this option prevents errors during pop-up preview image scaling. Other file details are still displayed.
Help307:These radio buttons select the diffusion method used when reducing deep-colour previews to 256 colours. No diffusion is best used with flat illustrations; photographic images may appear 'blotchy' with this setting.
Help308:These radio buttons select the diffusion method used when reducing deep-colour previews to 256 colours. Simple dithering is adequate for most images and is not very time-consuming for the computer.
Help309:These radio buttons select the diffusion method used when reducing deep-colour previews to 256 colours. Floyd-Steinberg provides the best quality photographic dithered images, but can be time-consuming for slower computers.
Help310:These radio buttons select the amount of file information displayed in the pop-up preview window. 'None' will display only the pop-up preview image, with no file information.
Help311:These radio buttons select the amount of file information displayed in the pop-up preview window. 'Normal' will display the file size, image size and bitdepth, along with the pop-up preview image.
Help312:These radio buttons select the amount of file information displayed in the pop-up preview window. 'Enhanced' will display a full range of information about the file, along with the pop-up preview image.
Help313:Enter the size of the pop-up preview image (in pixels) here.
Help315:Click here to see a list of preset pop-up preview image sizes, including the last 5 settings you used.

Help403:Select this option to cause the ImageFS Control Panel to quit after initial startup. All option settings will still take effect, and the ImageFS module will remain active. Restart the Control Panel by double-clicking on it again.
Help404:When selected, zoom-boxes will not be used by ImageFS windows.
Help405:When selected, dragging a preview will use a solid drag, otherwise a standard dashed-line drag will be used.
Help406:Enter the delay in centiseconds before a Progress window is displayed. The Progress window also offers the option to abort the load. Use 99999 to effectively disable the Progress window.
Help410:Enter the delay in seconds, after which 'inactive' graphic files will be automatically closed. This prevents 'Access denied' errors on peer-to-peer networks.
Help409:When selected, 'inactive' graphic images will be automatically closed after a definable delay, preventing access problems on peer-to-peer networks.
Help402:When selected, 'inactive' swapfiles in the scrap directory will be automatically deleted after a definable delay. This should normally be selected, to keep the ImageFS scrap directory tidy.
Help407:Enter the delay in seconds, after which 'inactive' graphic swapfiles will be automatically deleted. A small delay can improve efficiency with some applications which examine graphic file contents before loading them.

# Menu - menus too simple to bother with MessageTrans_MakeMenus
MnInfo:Info
MnOptions:Options...
MnQuit:Quit
MnQuitPanel:This control panel only
MnQuitWhole:Whole filing system

# Errors
NoMem:Not enough free memory to load preview
