Microsoft Image Composer
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APPLIES TO: Composer v1.x and v2.x
Bot Framework Composer, built on the Bot Framework SDK, is an open-source IDE for developers to author, test, provision, and manage conversational experiences. It provides a powerful visual authoring canvas enabling dialogs, language-understanding models, QnAMaker knowledge bases, and language generation responses to be authored from within one canvas and crucially, enables these experiences to be extended with code for more complex tasks such as system integration. Resulting experiences can then be tested within Composer and provisioned into Azure along with any dependent resources.
Composer is available as a desktop application for Windows, macOS, and Linux. If the desktop app is not suited to your needs, you can build Composer from source or host Composer in the cloud.
Authoring dialog experiences with a visual designer is more efficient and enables easier modeling of more sophisticated conversational experiences where context switching, interruption and more natural and dynamic conversation flows are important. More complex activities such as integrating with dependencies such as REST Web Services are best suited towards code and we provide an easy mechanism to extend Composer bots with code bringing the best of both together.
Microsoft Image Composer 1.5. A resource page for fans of the classic 1990's era image editing tool shipped free with Microsoft FrontPage. Download Image Composer for Windows 10 (imgcomp.exe). Please comment, help keep this as 1st Page Google result. A tutorial is included with Microsoft Image Composer, and it's probably the best way to get acquainted with Image Composer. To launch the tutorial, follow the instructions below: In Image Composer, select Help. Select Learning Microsoft Image Composer. Select Tutorial. From this point forward, follow the instructions.
Microsoft Image Composer v1.5. Microsoft, way back in 1997 released MS FrontPage 1998. What a treat that was - I had only been programming for a year or two and just starting to become good with old school HTML. Packaged with that version of FrontPage was Microsoft Image Composer version 1.5 (a minor upgrade from v1). Microsoft Image Composite Editor is an advanced panoramic image stitcher. Given a set of overlapping photographs of a scene shot from a single camera location, the application creates a high. How to compress images.
What you can do with Composer
Composer is a visual editing canvas for building bots. With Composer, you can:
- Create a new bot using a template, which incorporates the Virtual Assistant capabilities directly into Composer.
- Add NLU capabilities to your Bot using LUIS and/or QnA/FAQ type capabilities using QnA Maker
- Author text and if needed speech variation responses for your Bot using language generation templates
- Author bots in multiple languages
- Test directly inside Composer using embedded Web Chat
- Publish bots to Azure App Service and Azure Functions
- Integrate external services such as QnA Maker knowledge base
Beyond a visual editing canvas, you can use Composer to do the following:
- Import and export dialog assets to share with other developers
- Package manager provides a range of reusable conversational assets and code built by Microsoft and third parties that quickly add pre-built functionality to your project.
- Extend the dialog authoring canvas with Create custom actions.
- Integrate Orchestrator, which is an advanced transformer model-based router that can delegate from a parent bot to skills based on a user's utterance.
Note
The nightly builds include pre-release features and may change how some operations are performed.The Composer documentation supports the latest stable release of Composer, and some aspects of the nightly builds may not work as described in the documentation.For more information about nightly builds, see Application settings.
Under the hood, Composer harnesses the power of many of the components from the Bot Framework SDK. When building bots in Composer, developers will have access to:
Adaptive dialogs
Dialogs provide a way for bots to manage conversations with users. Adaptive dialogs and the event model simplify sophisticated conversation modeling enabling more natural, dynamic conversation flow, interruption and context switching. They also help you focus on the model of the conversation rather than the mechanics of dialog management. Read more in the dialog concept article.
Language Understanding (LU)
LU is a core component of Composer that allows developers and conversation designers to train language understanding models directly in the context of editing a dialog. As dialogs are edited in Composer, developers can continuously add to their bots' natural language capabilities using the .lu file format, a simple Markdown-like format that makes it easy to define new intents, entities and provide sample utterances. In Composer, you can use both Regular Expression, LUIS and Orchestrator. Composer detects changes and updates the bot's cloud-based natural-language understanding (NLU) model automatically so it is always up to date. Read more in the language understanding concept article.
Language generation (LG)
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With Language Generation, you can achieve previously complex tasks easily such as:
- Including dynamic elements in messages.
- Generating grammatically correct lists, pronouns, articles.
- Providing context-sensitive variation in messages.
- Creating Adaptive Cards attachments, as seen above.
- Provide speech variations for each response, including SSML modifications which are key for speech-based experiences such as telephony
QnA Maker
QnA Maker is a cloud-based service that enables you to extract question-and-answer pairs from existing FAQ-style documents and websites into a knowledge base that can be manually curated by knowledge experts. QnA Maker, once integrated into a bot, can be used to find the most appropriate answer for any given natural language input from your custom knowledge base of information.
Bot Framework Emulator
Emulator is a desktop application that allows bot developers to test and debug bots built using Composer. This tool allows for more advanced scenarios (e.g., Authentication), which Composer's integrated WebChat feature doesn't support at this time.
Advantage of developing bots with Composer
Some of the advantages of developing bots in Composer include:
- Authoring dialogs using the visual canvas can be more conducive to a conversational design versus code and enables you to focus development efforts on more complex tasks such as system integration.
- Design conversational experiences using a seamless blend of visual and code authoring.
- Existing dialogs authored in code can be leveraged by a Composer-based bot
- Language Generation (LG) provides the ability to create more natural, personalized responses resulting in engaging conversational experiences.
- Composer streamlines your bot project's codebase and provides a more accessible visual design surface which provides a unified canvas to author dialogs, responses along with language and QnA resources.
- Integrated testing within the Composer authoring experience
- Azure provisioning for dependent resources is streamlined as part of the overall Composer experience
Apps created with Composer use the declarative dialog format, a JSON specification shared by many tools provided by the Bot Framework.
The Composer bot projects contain reusable assets in the form of JSON and Markdown files that can be bundled and packaged with a bot's source code. These can be checked into source control systems and deployed along with code updates, such as dialogs, language understanding (LU) training data, and message templates.
Existing SDK-first bots can make use of Composer for new capabilities while still making use of existing waterfall dialogs, see Migrating a bot built with the v4 SDK and waterfall dialogs to Bot Framework Composer for more information. In addition, Skills are a technique that can be used to combine different bots together.
Additional resources
Next steps
- Read best practices for building bots using Composer.
- Learn how to create an echo bot using Composer.
I became proficient quickly, learning what sprites were and how to use various effects. It was the mainstay of my graphics foundry.
Microsoft Image Compower v1.5 STILL remains a vital part of my daily, yes daily, toolbox. I keep an old CD of FrontPage 98 around just so I can install it whenever I need it. Image Compower is fast, pwerful, easy and - needless to say - discontinued and not supported. Even still, I love it - I use it and defend it from the scorn of fellow developers who spy for kinks in the the ole Nixon tech armor. It's simply a great program; it almost defends itself.
Image Composer made a short come back with FrontPage 2000, but Microsoft's latest (at the time) entry into the graphics program market (also shipped with Office 2000) was PhotoDraw, an awkward interface with a short life. There are always rumours of new graphics applications from Microsoft (even a Flash competitor like the short lived MS LiquidMotion) and PictureIt is the reigning retail king for MSFT, but none seem to combine the simplicity and complexity of Microsoft Image Composer v1.5 - and did I mention that it is free?