Sponsored Content
Full Discussion: Redirecting paste cmd
Top Forums Shell Programming and Scripting Redirecting paste cmd Post 302523293 by rob171171 on Wednesday 18th of May 2011 10:12:35 AM
Old 05-18-2011
ah yes I had r10 with A9.. which I have now corrected

Many Thanks for your help
 

10 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

man <cmd> >> cmd.txt

I've noticed most of my postings here are because of syntax errors. So I want to begin compiling a large txt file that contains all the "man <cmd>" of the commands I most have problems with. I ran a "man nawk >> nawk.txt" but it included a header/footer on each "page". Anyone know how I'd be... (6 Replies)
Discussion started by: yongho
6 Replies

2. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

mv cmd

Hi All, How can I move only files to another destination using mv cmd in hp-ux. (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: mhbd
2 Replies

3. UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users

MX redirecting

I in no means consider myself a expert in unix however my question is a little more complex. I am running a mac os 10 server and all web settings and email settings have been set up using the unix terminal. I am in the process or redirecting my mxrecords to a spam filtering company but i am... (11 Replies)
Discussion started by: nbredthauer
11 Replies

4. Shell Programming and Scripting

aside from paste

how can i make a script or command to have output like this $cat file 10000 20000 $cat a 10000 $cat b 20000 this is the solution paste a b > file but another solution? $cat file 10000 20000 (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: kenshinhimura
3 Replies

5. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

Paste

paste -d "\0" ap_cntrl_total.txt.1 ap_cntrl_total.txt.2, and it shows: 01234567890911051342C091026 0000910517990000000000009105179900000000CHOPME it put space btwn 1026 and 000091 should not have space. ---------- Post updated at 03:54 PM ---------- Previous update was at 03:03 PM... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: tjmannonline
1 Replies

6. Shell Programming and Scripting

Unix cmd prompt how to get old cmd run?

Hi, I am using SunOS I want to serch my previous command from unix prompt (like on AIX we can search by ESC -k) how to get in SunOs urgent help require. (10 Replies)
Discussion started by: RahulJoshi
10 Replies

7. Shell Programming and Scripting

redirecting help

I am trying to create the file and redirect the output in the same command line which is line 4 in the below program. #!/bin/bash read -p "Enter File Name:" value1 echo "Your File Name is $value1" sed 's/abcd/'$value1'/g' abcd_calls > $value1_calls This is the error it generates ... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: learnbash
3 Replies

8. Shell Programming and Scripting

Perl open(CMD, "cmd |"); buffering problem..

Hello, There's a third-party application's command that shows the application's status like "tail -f verybusy.log". When use the command, the output comes every 1-sec. but when it goes in a script below the output comes every 8-sec...What is the problem and how can I fix it? open(CMD,... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: Shawn, Lee
2 Replies

9. Shell Programming and Scripting

How to paste string yanked into an edit in cmd mode?

I have 2 files open in Vim at the same time. I yank from one with 16yw and get this INSERT INTO ALIS_PART_MANU_PART_TAB (SEQUENCE_NO,PART_NO,MANU_NO,MANU_PART_NO,ROWVERSION) VALUES ( Now I go to the second file and type the command to add this to the beginning of every... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: djehresmann
3 Replies

10. Shell Programming and Scripting

Help with cmd while using ps

Hi i am new to shell scripting and any help is really appreciated. my requirement is in, ps -e -o pid,uname,cmd how can i split and take only the cmd part from it. I tried awk but the issue is when the cmd is returning a lengthy command which itself has some spaces it is truncating the... (7 Replies)
Discussion started by: Jojo90
7 Replies
pnmgamma(1)						      General Commands Manual						       pnmgamma(1)

NAME
pnmgamma - perform gamma correction on a PNM image SYNOPSIS
pnmgamma [-ungamma] [-cieramp] [value [pnmfile]] pnmgamma [-ungamma] [-cieramp] redgamma greengamma bluegamma [pnmfile] DESCRIPTION
Reads a psuedo-PNM image as input. Performs gamma correction, and produces a PNM image as output. Alternatively, this program can undo gamma correction. The PPM specification states that the sample values in the image are nonlinear, i.e. not directly proportional to light intensity, i.e. gamma corrected. But there exist images that are PPM in every respect except that their sample values are directly proportional to light intensity. People may loosely refer to these as PPM, but they are not. pnmgamma converts these pseudo-PPM images to true PPM by perform- ing gamma correction. To get true PPM, you must specify the -cieramp option and no gamma values. That causes pnmgamma to apply the CIE Rec. 709 gamma transfer function, as specified by the PPM format specification. On the other hand, you can use the -ungamma option to convert from true PPM to linear RGB pseudo-PPM. (Again, if the input is true PPM, specify the -cieramp option and no gamma values). The situation for PGM images is analogous. And pnmgamma treats PBM images as PGM images. You can also apply a different transfer function (which means you don't end up with a true PPM image) by selecting the gamma values as arguments or omitting the -cieramp option. The gamma value is the power to which the input value is raised in the transfer function. A value of 1 means the output is the same as the input. A value less than one makes the output samples numerically less than the input sam- ples; A value greater than one makes the samples numerically greater. Without the -cieramp option, the transfer function is a simple power function. With -cieramp, it is a power function modified with a lin- ear ramp near black, as described in CIE Rec. 709. When you feed a linear PPM image to a display program that expects a true PPM, the display appears darker than it should, so pnmgamma has the effect of lightening the image. When you feed a true PPM to a display program that expects linear sample values, and therefore does a gamma correction of its own on them, the display appears lighter than it should, so pnmgamma with a gamma value less than one (the multi- plicative inverse of whatever gamma value the display program uses) has the effect of darkening the image. WHAT IS GAMMA
? A good explanation of gamma is in Charles Poynton's GammaFAQ at <http://www.inforamp.net/~poynton/ColorFAQ.html> and ColorFAQ at <http://www.inforamp.net/~poynton/GammaFAQ.html> In brief: The simplest way to code an image is by using sample values that are directly proportional to the intensity of the color compo- nents. But that wastes the sample space because the human eye can't discern differences between low-intensity colors as well as it can between high-intensity colors. So instead, we pass the light intensity values through a transfer function that makes it so that changing a sample value by 1 causes the same level of perceived color change anywhere in the sample range. We store those resulting values in the image file. That transfer function is called the gamma transfer function and the transformation is called gamma correcting. Virtually all image formats, either specified or de facto, use gamma-corrected values for their sample values. What's really nice about gamma is that by coincidence, the inverse function that you have to do to convert the gamma-corrected values back to real light intensities is done automatically by CRTs. You just apply a voltage to the CRT's electron gun that is proportional to the gamma-corrected sample value, and the intensity of light that comes of the screen is close to the intensity value you had before you applied the gamma transfer function! And when you consider that computer video devices usually want you to store in video memory a value proportional to the signal voltage you want to go to the monitor, which the monitor turns into a proportional drive voltage on the electron gun, it is really convenient to work with gamma-corrected sample values. SEE ALSO
pnm(5) AUTHOR
Copyright (C) 1991 by Bill Davidson and Jef Poskanzer. 11 June 2001 pnmgamma(1)
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 05:33 PM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy