In this series of three tutorials, you'll create a Windows Forms application that loads a picture and displays it.The Visual Studio Integrated Design Environment (IDE) provides the tools you need to create the app.To learn more, see Welcome to the Visual Studio IDE.

Your picture viewing app contains a picture box, a checkbox, and four buttons, which you'll add in the next tutorial.The layout element controls their location on the form.This section shows you how to change the title of your form, resize the form, and add a layout element.


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It's easy to get the trusty old Windows Photo Viewer back -- simply open up Settings and go to System > Default apps. Under "Photo viewer" you should see your current default photo viewer (probably the new Photos app). Click this to see a list of options for a new default photo viewer. Assuming you upgraded to Windows 10 from a previous version of Windows, you should see Windows Photo Viewer as an option.

2. Double-click on your new REG file to merge it with your Windows Registry. You will need to click through the User Account Control and a few other windows to allow the file to make changes to the Registry.

I have a render going. I minimized my c4d window to work on something else. When i maximize the window again the picture viewer is not there. I can only get it back if i cancel the render and start it again, or wait until the render is finished. I would like to preview the render and my multipasses.

picture viewer doesnt do that for me.

you must be doing something different to make it vanish.

but you can dock the picture viewer anywhere on your layout.

just grab the dotted square on the left side of the viewer then drag it anywhere you want it.

Nothing special, I just want to double click a picture and be able to scroll through photos without the hassle of going back to explorer and finding the next picture. I've read about some kind of KODAK program that comes with 98, and I found some program called Imaging, but it does next to nothing, and getting it to associate with photo formats will be a long, manual process. I also did a search of the 9x and special project sections of this forum, with no luck.

It's been a while since I've used it (and I don't have a Windows box handy to test on) but I remember using an image viewer called JPEGView. From memory, I seem to recall it supporting the feature you need most: refreshing the display when the source file changes. In any event it is one of the few open-source image viewers for Windows that I found to holds its own.

Okular is a document viewer that opens pdf, djvu, jpeg, png files, perhaps even more. It's a KDE app, since KDE is cross-platform, you may give it a try.Expect a big download though. On the other hand if you plan to use it on Linux, it should be pretty easy to get it up and running.

I know this is an old question but I did not want to install another image viewer. However, a web browser works just fine depending on what you need. You can open the image directly in it and then either

Why do jpgs look different color wise in Photoshop then they do in Windows Picture Viewer? I color corrected a bunch of NEFs in camera raw and converted them to jpgs. Once done, I went to view them in windows picture viewer and they looked horrible. The colors were really washed out and dull. I opened the same jpg in Photoshop, and it looked great.. Any ideas? I tried it on 2 computers with the same results. Thanks!

It's because in Photoshop your pictures are displayed in a different color profile than in Windows picture viewer. In Photoshop, before you save to JPG, convert them to a different profile (I convert them to sRGB...). That should fix that, although, it will lack sharpness because Windows picture viewer isn't so good for viewing photos at its best quality.

Why do jpgs look different color wise in Photoshop then they do in

Windows Picture Viewer? I color corrected a bunch of NEFs in camera

raw and converted them to jpgs. Once done, I went to view them in

windows picture viewer and they looked horrible. The colors were

really washed out and dull. I opened the same jpg in Photoshop, and

it looked great.. Any ideas? I tried it on 2 computers with the

same results. Thanks!

For starters, the default mac (1.8, brighter) and pc (2.2) gamma settings are different. On older macs, the color engine rendered in a wider gamut, but current versions of photoshop override the smaller, older windows gamut. Newer PC's and look to render the same color gamut as Mac.

Hello, 


After switching to a new laptop, (Dell XPS 15), using my same old monitor (Dell as well), I spotted some really bad colour differences between Photoshop and Windows 10 Photo Viewer


Some of the things that I've already tried & observed:

1. I did look a lot into colour management. I bought the Windows 10 Colour Managed version and exactly the same result.

2. I tried using Paint & Paint 3d for opening up the image & potential editing, same colour issue was present.

3. I did NOT change any of the settings that the photoshop comes with. I also tried to reinstall & delete the settings file of photoshop.

4. My exported versions are all in sRGB. I also tried swithing to other profiles and exporting as sRGB, without any effect.

5. The only way I managed to get it working is by changing the Proof Setup to Monitor RGB, but I don't have any idea why, after a short period of time(a few hours) this fix was not working anymore.


Tried the solutions from this post with no result. Proof setup was the only way and it now doesn't work again. 

 -jpeg-colors-different-from-windows10-photo-app/td...


I would be deeply appreciative if someone would help out!

Pictures: 


There appear to be 0 picture viewing app from Microsoft in LTSB since Photo Viewer is not included (Modern UI app) and WIndows Essential has been deprecated. Would greatly appreciate if MS can include a default picture app in LTSB

Windows Photo Viewer (formerly Windows Picture and Fax Viewer)[1] is an image viewer included with the Windows NT family of operating systems. It was first included with Windows XP and Windows Server 2003 under its former name. It was temporarily replaced with Windows Photo Gallery in Windows Vista,[2] but was reinstated in Windows 7.[3] This program succeeds Imaging for Windows. In Windows 10, it is deprecated in favor of a Universal Windows Platform app called Photos, although it can be brought back with a registry tweak.[4]

Windows Photo Viewer can show individual pictures, display all pictures in a folder as a slide show, reorient them in 90 increments, print them either directly or via an online print service, send them in e-mail or burn them to a disc.[3][5][6] Windows Photo Viewer supports images in BMP, JPEG, JPEG XR (formerly HD Photo), PNG, ICO, GIF and TIFF file formats.[7]

Some devices and Android phones are able to take photos and screenshots and have a custom ICC Profile being applied to said pictures, however Windows Photo Viewer will render an error when trying to display the picture with an "Windows Photo Viewer can't display this picture because there might not be enough memory available on your computer." exception when an unknown ICC Profile is detected. A patch is available on GitHub that fixes this behavior.[17]

Also regarding ICC profiles, when a custom Display ICC profile is applied after installing a Monitor driver, Windows Photo Viewer wrongly shifts the picture hue to a warm tint. The feature is intentional but greatly exaggerated. This is fixed by removing or replacing the Display ICC Profile.[18]

Normally, i will add them to a note as full screen, or perhaps grab a corner and resize it down a little... but then I thought why not just shrink/re-size them right down and should I later wish to view it, I could just double click on an image to view in the EN image viewer...sounds reasonable.

Now the issue I'm having, is that on 1st entering the image viewer screen, EN resizes the image so the whole thing is viewable on screen. BUT--- when I zoom in on the image I'm left with no way to scroll up or down...!? And my keyboards 'vertical' and 'horizontal' arrow keys only cause the image viewer to move to the next image... plus I could find no way on my mouse to allow me to scroll these large images.

Hi. Where I'm showing multiple large images in a note I generally use a table to constrain the display to visible window width. Evernote automatically reduces the visible image size to fit each cell. Then, if I click on one image I get a 'gallery' view where I can scroll through each of my large images. That doesn't give me an individually scrollable image though - just a way to choose one picture from a set. To do more I'd have to open the file to annotate it or use an external viewer.

I may not be getting it but assuming you are double clicking the image to open the viewer have you tried clicking/holding on the image using the left mouse button and dragging the image up/down and all around? Typical windows drag action. Quick video added, I had to resize the image is why it is blurry.

This is a simple proof of concept showing a picture viewer for the current folder, a bit like on Windows.

It uses the nice little gallery script from GitHub - demtario/hes-gallery: Light, dependency free, responsive gallery script and shows how to access files via localfile:// e24fc04721

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