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xpilot-ng-replay(6) [debian man page]

XPILOT-NG-REPLAY(6)						       Games						       XPILOT-NG-REPLAY(6)

NAME
xpilot-ng-replay - Playback an XPilot session. SYNOPSIS
xpilot-ng-replay [options] filename DESCRIPTION
If filename is a dash - then standard input is used. Valid options are: -scale "factor" Set the scale reduction factor for saving operations. Valid scale factors are in the range [0.01 - 1.0]. -linewidth "width" use a fixed linewidth "width" for drawing all lines -gamma "factor" Set the gamma correction factor when saving scaled frames. Valid gamma correction factors are in the range [0.1 - 10]. -compress Save frames compressed using the "compress" program. -fps "value", -FPS "value" Set the number of frames per second used for replay and recording. -play Start playing immediately. -loop Loop after playing. -debug -verbose -help -version In addition to the pushbuttons you can use the following keys: f - move forwards to the next frame. b - move backwards to the next frame. z - move backwards to the first frame. [ - mark the current frame as the first frame to be saved. ] - mark the current frame as the last frame to be saved. * - save the marked frames in PPM format. WARNING: saving many frames takes HUGE amounts of diskspace! & - save the marked frames in XPilot Recording format. q - quit the program. xpilot.sourceforge.net November 2011 XPILOT-NG-REPLAY(6)

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pfsoutppm(1)						      General Commands Manual						      pfsoutppm(1)

NAME
pfsoutppm, pfsouttiff, pfsoutrgbe, pfsoutexr - Write images or frames in one of the several formats SYNOPSIS
pfsoutppm (<file> [--srgb] [--frames <range>]) [<file>...] pfsouttiff (<file> [--srgb] [--frames <range>]) [<file>...] pfsoutrgbe (<file> [--frames <range>]) [<file>...] pfsoutexr (<file> [--frames <range>]) [<file>...] DESCRIPTION
This command can be used to write pfs frames piped to standard input in one of the several recognized formats. See the manual page of pfs- inppm to get a list of available formats. To write images to standard output use a single dash '-' instead of filename. Each file name can contain a %d pattern, which is substituted with frame numbers. The pattern has the same syntax as C printf command. For example, you can use %04d to make the frame number four digit with proceedings zeros. You can select the frames using the following options (the options must be always given after the file name): --frames <range> Range is given in mathlab / octave format: startframe:step:endframe Frame numbers start with startframe (default 0), are increased by step (default 1) and stop at endframe You can skip one of those values, for example 1:100 for frames 1,2,...,100 and 0:2: for frame 0,2,4,... up to the last file that exists. --srgb, -s Apply the sRGB non-linearity (approximately 2.2 gamma) before writing a file. This can be used instead of using pfsgamma -g 2.2 to store the result of some tone-mapping operators. The option will compress contrast to make sure that tone values are properly shown on a display. It should be only used with linearized (not gamma corrected) images that are normalized to the 0-1 range. --bit-depth <val>, -b <val> Enforce bit-depth (per color channel). The allowed values are from 8 to 32. If not specified, the bit depth from the pfs stream ('BITDEPTH' tag) will be used instead. If the 'BITDEPTH' tag is missing, the ImageMagick default value will be used (usually 16). The bit depth of actually stored file may be lower of that specified, if the file format does not support higher bit depths. EXAMPLES
pfsin memorial.tiff | pfsoutrgbe memorial.hdr Converts from one HDR format to another pfsin test.jpg | pfsout test.png Convert from one image format to another. pfsin --linear test.jpg | pfsout --srgb test.png The same as above, but apply inverse gamma correction after reading an image (--linear) and then apply gamma correction before writ- ing an image (--srgb). SEE ALSO
pfsout(1) pfsinppm(1) BUGS
Please report bugs and comments on implementation to the discussion group http://groups.google.com/group/pfstools pfsoutppm(1)
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