• @cmnybo@discuss.tchncs.de
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        36 months ago

        I have had a number of webp issues on Linux. Support is nowhere near as bad as it was several years ago, but I still have a few programs that don’t work with webp.

        I would imagine it’s a much bigger mess on windows since so many programs will have their own image processing libraries.

      • @AgentGrimstone@lemmy.world
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        126 months ago

        In my case, Illustrator and XD, which I use a lot. One of the best features of XD is the ability to drag and drop images into placeholders but I can’t do that with webp. In Illustrator, importing a webp file crashes the app.

          • Mike
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            16 months ago

            If it’s supported, then it doesn’t work. Photoshop also fails to open web the last time I tried it earlier this year.

        • @768@sh.itjust.works
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          86 months ago

          For a program costing US$22.99/mo crashing and not accepting webp, which is so abundant, is extrem. Especially crashing for such an expensive program is not acceptable.

      • lad
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        46 months ago

        Also, some sites don’t recognise webp images when I’m trying to upload those. Like, it’s literally made for web, wtf

      • @cmnybo@discuss.tchncs.de
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        16 months ago

        Last week, I tried to send a picture using QSSTV and it wouldn’t open the webp image I saved from a website, so I had to convert it first.
        Up until last year, Libreoffice didn’t support webp and many Linux distros haven’t updated to the version that supports it yet.

        Even GIMP and ImageMagick didn’t support it for quite a while. Before they supported it, it was almost impossible to do anything with webp.