01-18-2002
my try
there is probably a much better way to do this. Please forgive me I have never done any shell programming before (i want to learn) and I just wanted to rack my brain trying to figure out an answer to your problem. here is what I got to work for me. it does however pipe to a new file. sorry i couldn't help you there.
for x in *
do
sed "s/, LA/,LA/g" $x > temp
cat temp > $x
rm temp
done
just make sure you don't already have a file named temp. if yo do then just change the name temp to a file you don't already have.
----------------------
tD
Last edited by theDirtiest; 01-18-2002 at 09:56 AM..
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LEARN ABOUT DEBIAN
sdl_pixelformat
SDL_PixelFormat(3) SDL API Reference SDL_PixelFormat(3)
NAME
SDL_PixelFormat - Stores surface format information
STRUCTURE DEFINITION
typedef struct SDL_PixelFormat {
SDL_Palette *palette;
Uint8 BitsPerPixel;
Uint8 BytesPerPixel;
Uint8 Rloss, Gloss, Bloss, Aloss;
Uint8 Rshift, Gshift, Bshift, Ashift;
Uint32 Rmask, Gmask, Bmask, Amask;
Uint32 colorkey;
Uint8 alpha;
} SDL_PixelFormat;
STRUCTURE DATA
palette Pointer to the palette, or NULL if the BitsPerPixel>8
BitsPerPixel The number of bits used to represent each pixel in a surface. Usually 8, 16, 24 or 32.
BytesPerPixel The number of bytes used to represent each pixel in a surface. Usually one to four.
[RGBA]mask Binary mask used to retrieve individual color values
[RGBA]loss Precision loss of each color component (2^[RGBA]loss)
[RGBA]shift Binary left shift of each color component in the pixel value
colorkey Pixel value of transparent pixels
alpha Overall surface alpha value
DESCRIPTION
A SDL_PixelFormat describes the format of the pixel data stored at the pixels field of a SDL_Surface. Every surface stores a SDL_PixelFor-
mat in the format field.
If you wish to do pixel level modifications on a surface, then understanding how SDL stores its color information is essential.
8-bit pixel formats are the easiest to understand. Since its an 8-bit format, we have 8 BitsPerPixel and 1 BytesPerPixel. Since BytesPer-
Pixel is 1, all pixels are represented by a Uint8 which contains an index into palette->colors. So, to determine the color of a pixel in a
8-bit surface: we read the color index from surface->pixels and we use that index to read the SDL_Color structure from surface->for-
mat->palette->colors. Like so:
SDL_Surface *surface;
SDL_PixelFormat *fmt;
SDL_Color *color;
Uint8 index;
.
.
/* Create surface */
.
.
fmt=surface->format;
/* Check the bitdepth of the surface */
if(fmt->BitsPerPixel!=8){
fprintf(stderr, "Not an 8-bit surface.
");
return(-1);
}
/* Lock the surface */
SDL_LockSurface(surface);
/* Get the topleft pixel */
index=*(Uint8 *)surface->pixels;
color=fmt->palette->colors[index];
/* Unlock the surface */
SDL_UnlockSurface(surface);
printf("Pixel Color-> Red: %d, Green: %d, Blue: %d. Index: %d
",
color->r, color->g, color->b, index);
.
.
Pixel formats above 8-bit are an entirely different experience. They are considered to be "TrueColor" formats and the color information is
stored in the pixels themselves, not in a palette. The mask, shift and loss fields tell us how the color information is encoded. The mask
fields allow us to isolate each color component, the shift fields tell us the number of bits to the right of each component in the pixel
value and the loss fields tell us the number of bits lost from each component when packing 8-bit color component in a pixel.
/* Extracting color components from a 32-bit color value */
SDL_PixelFormat *fmt;
SDL_Surface *surface;
Uint32 temp, pixel;
Uint8 red, green, blue, alpha;
.
.
.
fmt=surface->format;
SDL_LockSurface(surface);
pixel=*((Uint32*)surface->pixels);
SDL_UnlockSurface(surface);
/* Get Red component */
temp=pixel&fmt->Rmask; /* Isolate red component */
temp=temp>>fmt->Rshift;/* Shift it down to 8-bit */
temp=temp<<fmt->Rloss; /* Expand to a full 8-bit number */
red=(Uint8)temp;
/* Get Green component */
temp=pixel&fmt->Gmask; /* Isolate green component */
temp=temp>>fmt->Gshift;/* Shift it down to 8-bit */
temp=temp<<fmt->Gloss; /* Expand to a full 8-bit number */
green=(Uint8)temp;
/* Get Blue component */
temp=pixel&fmt->Bmask; /* Isolate blue component */
temp=temp>>fmt->Bshift;/* Shift it down to 8-bit */
temp=temp<<fmt->Bloss; /* Expand to a full 8-bit number */
blue=(Uint8)temp;
/* Get Alpha component */
temp=pixel&fmt->Amask; /* Isolate alpha component */
temp=temp>>fmt->Ashift;/* Shift it down to 8-bit */
temp=temp<<fmt->Aloss; /* Expand to a full 8-bit number */
alpha=(Uint8)temp;
printf("Pixel Color -> R: %d, G: %d, B: %d, A: %d
", red, green, blue, alpha);
.
.
.
SEE ALSO
SDL_Surface, SDL_MapRGB
SDL
Tue 11 Sep 2001, 23:01 SDL_PixelFormat(3)