icat ======================================== *Display images in the terminal* The ``icat`` kitten can be used to display arbitrary images in the |kitty| terminal. Using it is as simple as:: kitty +kitten icat image.jpeg It supports all image types supported by `ImageMagick <https://www.imagemagick.org>`__. It even works over SSH. For details, see the :doc:`kitty graphics protocol </graphics-protocol>`. You might want to create an alias in your shell's configuration files:: alias icat="kitty +kitten icat" Then you can simply use ``icat image.png`` to view images. .. note:: `ImageMagick <https://www.imagemagick.org>`__ must be installed for icat kitten to work. .. note:: kitty's image display protocol may not work when used within a terminal multiplexer such as :program:`screen` or :program:`tmux`, depending on whether the multiplexer has added support for it or not. .. program:: kitty +kitten icat The ``icat`` kitten has various command line arguments to allow it to be used from inside other programs to display images. In particular, :option:`--place`, :option:`--detect-support`, :option:`--silent` and :option:`--print-window-size`. If you are trying to integrate icat into a complex program like a file manager or editor, there are a few things to keep in mind. icat works by communicating over the TTY device, it both writes to and reads from the TTY. So it is imperative that while it is running the host program does not do any TTY I/O. Any key presses or other input from the user on the TTY device will be discarded. At a minimum, you should use the :option:`--silent` and :option:`--transfer-mode` command line arguments. To be really robust you should consider writing proper support for the :doc:`kitty graphics protocol </graphics-protocol>` in the program instead. Nowadays there are many libraries that have support for it. .. include:: /generated/cli-kitten-icat.rst
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