Sponsored Content
Full Discussion: Game: Name this person
The Lounge What is on Your Mind? Game: Name this person Post 302129874 by quintet on Thursday 2nd of August 2007 04:54:09 AM
Old 08-02-2007
hey .. i am not able to insert any pictures..
can anyone post a new image?
 

4 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. Solaris

Another person that needs Internet help

Ok i have a router, which my sparc 5 is connected to. I can acess the router webpage (192.168.0.1). But I cant access the internet. When i use sys-unconfig i enter my ip address fine then i click none for when it asks me for DNS info because I dont have a domain. I was told i can manually change... (10 Replies)
Discussion started by: vikster007
10 Replies

2. Shell Programming and Scripting

New Person Added to the Forum

Hello, I'm brand new to this forum. I am working on my first Bash shell script. We were given an exercise to get ready for the real assignment. I could use some help. The exercise is to "set two variables (i. e., file1 & file2) on the command line to the paths of the text files. We are to... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: wcarp05
1 Replies

3. UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users

How to get a login name of a person who used 'su' and act with different user-name?

I need to realize the user login name after he/she used the 'su' command to log under another name (for specific privileges.) I am on SunOS v5.6, and here by now I could not find a way to figured it out. In another Thread I've get an advise from Linux user to use 'ps afxj' that display a... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: alex_5161
3 Replies

4. What is on Your Mind?

how do you call a person who assembles computers?

The title says everything. I'm wondering how we call in English the person who builds a computer. I mean instead of buying a branded computer like dell or toshiba, how do you call the guy who assembles computers from pieces of various suppliers. Thanks for your help Santiago (8 Replies)
Discussion started by: chebarbudo
8 Replies
PCOMPOS(1)						      General Commands Manual							PCOMPOS(1)

NAME
pcompos - composite RADIANCE pictures. SYNOPSIS
pcompos [ -h ][ -x xres ][ -y yres ][ -b r g b ][ -lh h ][ -la ] [ -t min1 ][ +t max1 ][ -l lab ][ =SS ] pic1 x1 y1 .. or pcompos [ -a ncols ][ -s spacing ][ -o x0 y0 ][ options ] pic1 pic2 .. DESCRIPTION
Pcompos arranges and composites RADIANCE pictures and sends the result to the standard output. Each input picture must be accompanied by an anchor point (unless the -a option is used, see below). This anchor point is the usually position of the picture's left lower corner in the final output, but can be changed for individual pictures with an =SS option, where S is one of '-', '+' or '0', indicating the minimum, maximum or center of the image, respectively. (For example, =+- would indicate the anchor is relative to the right lower corner, and =-0 would indicate the anchor is relative to the center of the left edge.) Negative anchor coordinates result in the input being cropped at the origin. By default, the size of the output picture will be just large enough to encompass all the input files. By specifying a smaller dimension using the -x and -y options, input files can be cropped at the upper boundary. Specifying a larger dimension produces a border. The -b option specifies a background color to appear wherever input files do not cover. The default value is black (0 0 0). The -h option may be used to reduce the information header size, which can grow disproportionately after multiple runs of pcompos and/or pcomb(1). If input files overlap, later pictures will overwrite earlier ones. By default, input files are copied unconditionally within the output boundaries. The -t option specifies a lower threshold intensity under which input pixels will not be copied to the output. The +t option specifies an upper threshold. These options are useful for cutting around irregular boundaries in the input. The -l option can be used to specify a label for a specific picture, which will be given a height determined by the -lh option (default 24 pixels) and placed in the upper left corner of the picture. This label is generated by the program psign(1). The -la option instructs pcompos to label each picture automatically by its name. This is particularly useful in conjunction with the -a option for producing a catalog of images (see example below). The -l option may still be used to override the default label for a picture. The -a option can be used to automatically compute anchor points that place successive pictures next to each other in ncols columns. The ordering will place the first picture in the lower left corner, the next just to the right of it, and so on for ncols pictures. Then, the next row up repeats the pattern until all the input pictures have been added to the output. If the pictures are of different size, pcompos will end up leaving some background areas in the output picture. There will also be an unfinished row at the top if the number of pictures is not evenly divided by ncols. The -s N option will cause each image to be separated by at least N pixels. The -o x0 y0 option specifies a nonzero anchor point for the bottom left image. The standard input can be specified with a hyphen ('-'). A command that produces a RADIANCE picture can be given in place of a file by preceeding it with an exclamation point ('!'). EXAMPLE
To put a copyright label at the bottom of a picture: psign Copyright 1987 | pcompos inp.hdr 0 0 +t .5 - 384 64 > out.hdr To make a catalog of images separated by white 10-pixel borders: pcompos -la -a 4 -s 10 -b 1 1 1 dog*.hdr > alldogs.hdr NOTES
Since there is a limit to the number of open files and processes, large collections of images must be created in stages. Even if the sys- tem limit on open files is large, pcompos places an artificial limit of 1024 on the number of open files and/or processes. AUTHOR
Greg Ward SEE ALSO
getinfo(1), pcomb(1), pfilt(1), psign(1), rpict(1) RADIANCE
12/18/97 PCOMPOS(1)
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 09:52 PM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy