README 5.2 KB

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  1. Public Domain Icons
  2. These icons were originally made for Mosaic for X and have been
  3. included in the NCSA httpd and Apache server distributions in the
  4. past. They are in the public domain and may be freely included in any
  5. application. The originals were done by Kevin Hughes (kevinh@kevcom.com).
  6. Andy Polyakov tuned the icon colors and added a few new images.
  7. If you'd like to contribute additions to this set, contact the httpd
  8. documentation project <http://httpd.apache.org/docs-project/>.
  9. Almost all of these icons are 20x22 pixels in size. There are
  10. alternative icons in the "small" directory that are 16x16 in size,
  11. provided by Mike Brown (mike@hyperreal.org).
  12. Suggested Uses
  13. The following are a few suggestions, to serve as a starting point for ideas.
  14. Please feel free to tweak and rename the icons as you like.
  15. a.gif
  16. This might be used to represent PostScript or text layout
  17. languages.
  18. alert.black.gif, alert.red.gif
  19. These can be used to highlight any important items, such as a
  20. README file in a directory.
  21. back.gif, forward.gif
  22. These can be used as links to go to previous and next areas.
  23. ball.gray.gif, ball.red.gif
  24. These might be used as bullets.
  25. binary.gif
  26. This can be used to represent binary files.
  27. binhex.gif
  28. This can represent BinHex-encoded data.
  29. blank.gif
  30. This can be used as a placeholder or a spacing element.
  31. bomb.gif
  32. This can be used to represent core files.
  33. box1.gif, box2.gif
  34. These icons can be used to represent generic 3D applications and
  35. related files.
  36. broken.gif
  37. This can represent corrupted data.
  38. burst.gif
  39. This can call attention to new and important items.
  40. c.gif
  41. This might represent C source code.
  42. comp.blue.gif, comp.gray.gif
  43. These little computer icons can stand for telnet or FTP
  44. sessions.
  45. compressed.gif
  46. This may represent compressed data.
  47. continued.gif
  48. This can be a link to a continued listing of a directory.
  49. down.gif, up.gif, left.gif, right.gif
  50. These can be used to scroll up, down, left and right in a
  51. listing or may be used to denote items in an outline.
  52. dir.gif
  53. Identical to folder.gif below.
  54. diskimg.gif
  55. This can represent floppy disk storage.
  56. dvi.gif
  57. This can represent DVI files.
  58. f.gif
  59. This might represent FORTRAN or Forth source code.
  60. folder.gif, folder.open.gif, folder.sec.gif
  61. The folder can represent directories. There is also a version
  62. that can represent secure directories or directories that cannot
  63. be viewed.
  64. generic.gif, generic.sec.gif, generic.red.gif
  65. These can represent generic files, secure files, and important
  66. files, respectively.
  67. hand.right.gif, hand.up.gif
  68. These can point out important items (pun intended).
  69. image1.gif, image2.gif, image3.gif
  70. These can represent image formats of various types.
  71. index.gif
  72. This might represent a WAIS index or search facility.
  73. layout.gif
  74. This might represent files and formats that contain graphics as
  75. well as text layout, such as HTML and PDF files.
  76. link.gif
  77. This might represent files that are symbolic links.
  78. movie.gif
  79. This can represent various movie formats.
  80. p.gif
  81. This may stand for Perl or Python source code.
  82. pie0.gif ... pie8.gif
  83. These icons can be used in applications where a list of
  84. documents is returned from a search. The little pie chart images
  85. can denote how relevant the documents may be to your search
  86. query.
  87. patch.gif
  88. This may stand for patches and diff files.
  89. portal.gif
  90. This might be a link to an online service or a 3D world.
  91. pdf.gif, ps.gif, quill.gif
  92. These may represent PDF and PostScript files.
  93. screw1.gif, screw2.gif
  94. These may represent CAD or engineering data and formats.
  95. script.gif
  96. This can represent any of various interpreted languages, such as
  97. Perl, python, TCL, and shell scripts, as well as server
  98. configuration files.
  99. sound1.gif, sound2.gif
  100. These can represent sound files.
  101. sphere1.gif, sphere2.gif
  102. These can represent 3D worlds or rendering applications and
  103. formats.
  104. tar.gif
  105. This can represent TAR archive files.
  106. tex.gif
  107. This can represent TeX files.
  108. text.gif
  109. This can represent generic (plain) text files.
  110. transfer.gif
  111. This can represent FTP transfers or uploads/downloads.
  112. unknown.gif
  113. This may represent a file of an unknown type.
  114. uu.gif, uuencoded.gif
  115. This can stand for uuencoded data.
  116. world1.gif, world2.gif
  117. These can represent 3D worlds or other 3D formats.