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Full Discussion: One liners, quick rant...
The Lounge What is on Your Mind? One liners, quick rant... Post 302977435 by rbatte1 on Monday 18th of July 2016 06:45:03 AM
Old 07-18-2016
I've learned the hard way that compressing my code to the extreme just confuses myself when I need to change it. Do I really want 2 hours of extricating myself for a few extra lines of clear code that cost no noticeable time.

There is a case for a one-liner if you can get a tool such as awk to do several things at once rather than calling a loop with multiple greps or cuts being called within it. For me it comes down to using it for processing efficiency. Even if I can make my code fit into fewer blocks on disk, it's just not worth it. If I do, then it gets an explicit comment, often with example code it is logically replacing. If I can adjust it in future in a longer method, then conversion would be simpler if I get my requirements clearer first.

It's the same with debugging logs for batch programs - write lots of info to the log so that when there is a problem, the trace is there. Just make sure you clean up old logs after a short time to avoid running out of space. It's far better than trying to trace or reproduce an error, potentially altering your data for the worse on each attempt or having to put trace information in when an error occurs and you are bleary-eyed.



Robin
 

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pbmreduce(1)						      General Commands Manual						      pbmreduce(1)

NAME
pbmreduce - read a portable bitmap and reduce it N times SYNOPSIS
pbmreduce [-floyd|-fs|-threshold ] [-value val] N [pbmfile] DESCRIPTION
Reads a portable bitmap as input. Reduces it by a factor of N, and produces a portable bitmap as output. pbmreduce duplicates a lot of the functionality of pgmtopbm; you could do something like pnmscale | pgmtopbm, but pbmreduce is a lot faster. pbmreduce can be used to "re-halftone" an image. Let's say you have a scanner that only produces black&white, not grayscale, and it does a terrible job of halftoning (most b&w scanners fit this description). One way to fix the halftoning is to scan at the highest possible res- olution, say 300 dpi, and then reduce by a factor of three or so using pbmreduce. You can even correct the brightness of an image, by using the -value flag. OPTIONS
By default, the halftoning after the reduction is done via boustrophedonic Floyd-Steinberg error diffusion; however, the -threshold flag can be used to specify simple thresholding. This gives better results when reducing line drawings. The -value flag alters the thresholding value for all quantizations. It should be a real number between 0 and 1. Above 0.5 means darker images; below 0.5 means lighter. All flags can be abbreviated to their shortest unique prefix. SEE ALSO
pnmenlarge(1), pnmscale(1), pgmtopbm(1), pbm(5) AUTHOR
Copyright (C) 1988 by Jef Poskanzer. 02 August 1989 pbmreduce(1)
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