pgmhist(1) General Commands Manual pgmhist(1)NAME
pgmhist - print a histogram of the values in a portable graymap
SYNOPSIS
pgmhist [pgmfile]
DESCRIPTION
Reads a portable graymap as input. Prints a histogram of the gray values.
SEE ALSO pgmnorm(1), pgm(5), ppmhist(1)AUTHOR
Copyright (C) 1989 by Jef Poskanzer.
28 February 1989 pgmhist(1)
Check Out this Related Man Page
ppmhist(1) General Commands Manual ppmhist(1)NAME
ppmhist - print a histogram of a portable pixmap
SYNOPSIS
ppmhist [-hexcolor] [-noheader] [-map] [-nomap] [-sort={frequency,rgb}] [ppmfile]
DESCRIPTION
Reads a PPM image as input. Generates a histogram of the colors in the image, i.e. a list of all the colors and how many pixels of each
color are in the image.
OPTIONS
-sort={frequency,rgb}
The -sort option determines the order in which the colors are listed in the output. frequency means to list them in order of how
pixels in the input image have the color, with the most represented colors first. rgb means to sort them first by the intensity of
the red component of the color, the of the green, then of the blue, with the least intense first.
The default is frequency.
-hexcolor
Print the color components in hexadecimal. Default is decimal.
-noheader
Do not print the column headings.
-map Generates a PPM file of the colormap for the image, with the color histogram as comments.
-nomap Generates the histogram for human reading. This is the default.
SEE ALSO ppm(5), pgmhist(1), ppmtomap(1), pnmhistmap(1), ppmchange(1)AUTHOR
Copyright (C) 1989 by Jef Poskanzer.
17 September 2000 ppmhist(1)
Introduction
I have seen some misinformation regarding Unix file permissions. I will try to set the record straight. Take a look at this example of some output from ls:
$ ls -ld /usr/bin /usr/bin/cat
drwxrwxr-x 3 root bin 8704 Sep 23 2004 /usr/bin
-r-xr-xr-x 1 bin bin ... (6 Replies)
I have a file which looks roughly like this:
996 mmmmmmm
996 xxxxxxxxxxxxx
99600 ssssssssss
9964 fffffffffffff
and would like to sort it numerically on the first field. I tried:
sort -nr --key=1 ....
The output I get is:
99600 ssssssssss
9964 ... (3 Replies)
Suppose I have a main() function with only one malloc statement allocating say some 1 gb memory. Also say my system has 1 gb of ram.
main()
{
malloc(1gb)
return(0)
}
The program above exits without freeing the memory.
In this case will the 1 gb of heap memory be returned... (9 Replies)
I'm trying to install a PGX32 video card on my Sparc 10 Ultra running Solaris 10.
I've got the Oracle installation guide for it and I got as far as:
"4. Insert the CD-ROM labeled “GFX OpenWindows for Solaris 2” into the drive."
I don't have a CD-ROM by that name and a web search for that... (21 Replies)
Hey All,
Quick question...
I'm writing a short script to check if a continuous port is running on a server.
I'm using "ps -ef | grep -v grep | grep processName" and I was wondering if it was better/more reliable to just check the
return code from the command or if its better to pipe to... (12 Replies)
I installed NetBSD 6.1.2 amd64 and can't find the apm utility. Is it not in the base system?
Is it necessary to recompile the default amd64 kernel to use apm?
Or is there a new method for power management and suspend/resume? (2 Replies)
Hi,
I am learning shell scripting for the first time. I use AT&T Korn Shell, Version AJM 93u+ 2012-08-01, compiled from source on NetBSD.
So far I have managed to set up what I think is a useful and pleasing shell prompt, which can be seen in the image attached to this post.
The prompt is... (2 Replies)
Hey gang, I have a list of times I need to sum up. This list can vary from a few to a few thousand entries. Now I had found a closed reference to adding time titled "add up time with xx:yy format in bash how?" In it, the example works great for that formatted list of times... This is the reply code... (5 Replies)
Usually when I on the evening go to bed I take some interesting book with me. I read it for a while to get me down to sleep. Probably most people seek information from the Nett by googleing but I am so oldfashioned I prefer a real book ;)
But what a book. The one I found and ordered is BSD Unix®... (0 Replies)
On the late 1960s I got short hands on experience with a russian "small" computer. It vas a copy of DEC's VAX ... and running some version of BSD-Unix. After that I worked in a university following the development of computing. After retire I started collecting old pc's and installing... (13 Replies)