![]() Our interaction with snaps is based on the interface that is exposed to us. In the case of ImageMagick, the developers of that application have not ported their code to snaps (yet?) Unless they incorporate the requested capability within the body of the snap. Instead the developers must build into the snap packaging the request or capability for a given snap to interact with other snaps, or the computer system. Snaps run in a sandboxed environment, and are not given permissions to access much on your computer by default. Snaps are interesting to developers as a method of creating an application that can run across a wide variety of platforms, which is great (for them) but new-ish to old fossils like me - so tricks and tips about using snaps are few. Install the flatpack or deb version to do your final export, or do the same in a VM.
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