05-26-2011
Hello DGPickett!
Thank you very much for the reply, and the direction!
Greately appreciated.
From what you wrote, I have my work cut out for the future.
1. I'm going to research the ~/.forward file you mention.
2. EMail encoding: I'll also research this, as I have no idea.
3. The naming method... I'll figure it out, although I thought to give it the date+time to the second.
4. I think this point is the only one I "more or less" understand.
If the images are inside a directory, I know I can do a script that will list all the files in the directory, and output those names.
Then do a page that will display those images.
Well, I really thank you for the direction!
I will research these things, and report back my progress here.
Much thanks!!
8 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting
1. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers
help, what is the difference between core dump and panic dump? (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: aileen
1 Replies
2. Solaris
Friends,
I am in search for a shell script that is capable of running as a cronjob and have to send out an email when ever there is a CORE DUMP.
Please post the hints to achieve my goal.
Thanks in advance. (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: rtatineni
1 Replies
3. UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users
Hi, (HP-UX 11.11)
I need to create a tape image of an igniteUX image created on our igniteUX server.
That is to say. I have a "Online" image of the igniteUX of the targeted system but I now need to copy it to a useable TAPE (igniteUX) image so i can build an other server from it that is not... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: Andrek
3 Replies
4. UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users
hi all
I have to send a mail, that should have an image at the backgound of the text. i know to send it as an attachment, but how can i set it as backgound.
Please help.
Thanks (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: infyanurag
2 Replies
5. UNIX and Linux Applications
Background:
I am replicating a set of servers into a "bubble" for testing. Those systems cannot be aware they are in a "bubble" so I must replicate all external services. I have successfully replicated most of those services except SMTP. I would like to configure an SMTP server that collects... (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: NFN_NLN
0 Replies
6. Shell Programming and Scripting
I'm setting up a cronjob that will hopefully dump the contents of a email delivered to Maildir/new/ to /home/user/raw.txt (and then delete that email)
I could manually remove the bottom line of the raw email, then place the contents in the next line up in the /home/user/raw.txt, but it seems to... (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: unclecameron
5 Replies
7. Shell Programming and Scripting
I have code below
for i in *.gz; do gzip -dc $i /home/vizion/Desktop/gzipfile/; done
one more
for i in *.gz; do gunzip -dc $i /home/vizion/Desktop/gzipfile/; done
both are getting error: "gunzip: /home/vizion/Desktop/gzipfile/ is a directory -- ignored "
i have requirement below
in... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: Chenchireddy
3 Replies
8. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers
Dear all,
I have a directory consisted of files in .jpg, .jpeg etc..all of them are image
20140411030143_62811159403_92886.jpg 5/11/2014 15:01 197K
20140415024737_62811618747_116460.jpg 4/15/2014 14:47 17K
20140415031003_62811618747_109192.jpg 4/17/2014 15:10 17K... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: radius
4 Replies
image(n) Tk Built-In Commands image(n)
__________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
NAME
image - Create and manipulate images
SYNOPSIS
image option ?arg arg ...?
_________________________________________________________________
DESCRIPTION
The image command is used to create, delete, and query images. It can take several different forms, depending on the option argument. The
legal forms are:
image create type ?name? ?option value ...?
Creates a new image and returns its name. type specifies the type of the image, which must be one of the types currently defined
(e.g., bitmap). name specifies the name for the image; if it is omitted then Tk picks a name of the form imagex, where x is an
integer. There may be any number of option-value pairs, which provide configuration options for the new image. The legal set of
options is defined separately for each image type; see below for details on the options for built-in image types. If an image
already exists by the given name then it is replaced with the new image and any instances of that image will redisplay with the new
contents. It is important to note that the image command will silently overwrite any procedure that may currently be defined by the
given name, so choose the name wisely. It is recommended to use a separate namespace for image names (e.g., ::img::logo,
::img::large).
image delete ?name name ...?
Deletes each of the named images and returns an empty string. If there are instances of the images displayed in widgets, the images
won't actually be deleted until all of the instances are released. However, the association between the instances and the image
manager will be dropped. Existing instances will retain their sizes but redisplay as empty areas. If a deleted image is recreated
with another call to image create, the existing instances will use the new image.
image height name
Returns a decimal string giving the height of image name in pixels.
image names
Returns a list containing the names of all existing images.
image type name
Returns the type of image name (the value of the type argument to image create when the image was created).
image types
Returns a list whose elements are all of the valid image types (i.e., all of the values that may be supplied for the type argument
to image create).
image width name
Returns a decimal string giving the width of image name in pixels.
BUILT-IN IMAGE TYPES
The following image types are defined by Tk so they will be available in any Tk application. Individual applications or extensions may
define additional types.
bitmap Each pixel in the image displays a foreground color, a background color, or nothing. See the bitmap manual entry for more informa-
tion.
photo Displays a variety of full-color images, using dithering to approximate colors on displays with limited color capabilities. See the
photo manual entry for more information.
KEYWORDS
height, image, types of images, width
Tk 4.0 image(n)