[devel] Use FIXED_POINT in contrib/pngminim/decoder and encoder
diff --git a/contrib/pngminim/decoder/pngusr.dfa b/contrib/pngminim/decoder/pngusr.dfa
index ec4495e..a8ccec2 100644
--- a/contrib/pngminim/decoder/pngusr.dfa
+++ b/contrib/pngminim/decoder/pngusr.dfa
@@ -15,8 +15,14 @@
 option SEQUENTIAL_READ on
 
 # You must choose fixed or floating point arithmetic:
-option FLOATING_POINT on
-# option FIXED_POINT on
+# option FLOATING_POINT on
+option FIXED_POINT on
+
+# You must chose the internal fixed point implementation or to
+# use the system floating point.  The latter is considerably
+# smaller (by about 1kbyte on an x86 system):
+# option FLOATING_ARITHMETIC on
+option FLOATING_ARITHMETIC off
 
 # Your program will probably need other options.  The example
 # program here, pngm2pnm, requires the following.  Take a look
diff --git a/contrib/pngminim/encoder/pngusr.dfa b/contrib/pngminim/encoder/pngusr.dfa
index d596f13..6033580 100644
--- a/contrib/pngminim/encoder/pngusr.dfa
+++ b/contrib/pngminim/encoder/pngusr.dfa
@@ -13,8 +13,14 @@
 option WRITE on
 
 # You must choose fixed or floating point arithmetic:
-option FLOATING_POINT on
-# option FIXED_POINT on
+# option FLOATING_POINT on
+option FIXED_POINT on
+
+# You must chose the internal fixed point implementation or to
+# use the system floating point.  The latter is considerably
+# smaller (by about 1kbyte on an x86 system):
+# option FLOATING_ARITHMETIC on
+option FLOATING_ARITHMETIC off
 
 # Your program will probably need other options.  The example
 # program here, pnm2pngm, requires the following.  Take a look
diff --git a/contrib/pngminim/preader/pngusr.dfa b/contrib/pngminim/preader/pngusr.dfa
index 31e83a5..0ebcc30 100644
--- a/contrib/pngminim/preader/pngusr.dfa
+++ b/contrib/pngminim/preader/pngusr.dfa
@@ -15,6 +15,7 @@
 # You may choose fixed or floating point APIs:
 # option FLOATING_POINT on
 option FIXED_POINT on
+
 # You must chose the internal fixed point implementation or to
 # use the system floating point.  The latter is considerably
 # smaller (by about 1kbyte on an x86 system):