Sponsored Content
Top Forums Shell Programming and Scripting Basic Bash algorithm with sum/subtraction Post 302993945 by Board27 on Thursday 16th of March 2017 02:00:24 PM
Old 03-16-2017
Hi,
of course, i've corrected the output as it should be.
thank you
 

10 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. Shell Programming and Scripting

Basic bash 'for loop' usage

Hi! I have a simple question about using a for loop. I'm trying to open up all the zip files in the currect directory with ark, but I am getting the error "bash: syntax error near unexpected token `for $i ; do ark $i ; done ; I looked in the info pages for bash, but I can't seem to figure... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: Orange Stripes
2 Replies

2. Shell Programming and Scripting

bash script, pattern matching + sum

Hi guys, i have been struggling to achieve the following and therefor looking for some help. I am trying to write something that will summerize the following output from my switches for daily totals. Basicly if $1 $2 $3 doesnt change, we can keep adding up $4. Probably would use a awk print end... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: Wratholix
3 Replies

3. Shell Programming and Scripting

subtraction in bash arrays

hi i am using bash shell to perform some subraction. here is what i have: i have a while loop and am using i as a counter. diff= `expr ${ARRAY1} - ${ARRAY2}` for example array1 has -0.7145 and array2 has -0.7041. when i try the above command, i get expr: non-numeric argument. any... (6 Replies)
Discussion started by: npatwardhan
6 Replies

4. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

Basic Unix bash script help

Hello there Been using Unix bash scripting for two days now so am very new to this. I am currently doing a project now and i'm basically making a noughts and crosses game (or tic tac toe). I have created the board using an array. When I try and check to see if the array is empty using an If... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: ChrisHoogie
3 Replies

5. Shell Programming and Scripting

Basic bash, echo in loop for

Hi, I am trying to make a script to manage log. I want to write the name of the .gz I moved and the date : for i in `ls $replog/*.gz` do echo " $i " `echo $i date +%d:%m:%Y` `echo $datee `>> $replog/mrnet.log mv $i /var/log/vieux-logs done I need to echo... (10 Replies)
Discussion started by: Dabless
10 Replies

6. Shell Programming and Scripting

Help in making a basic bash script

Hi All, I am trying to monitor CPU load of few processes, with the same name. The output that I get from top is the following 28171 root 20 0 1089m 21m 3608 S 103 0.3 15:16.89 /opt/ppp//h264rtptranscoder.bin --videoPort=14504 --audioPort=14505 27589 root 20 0 1060m 23m... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: liviusbr
3 Replies

7. Shell Programming and Scripting

Bash Sum up for spezific Numbers

Hello everyone, I need your assistance with bash. I want to sum up some numbers, that's not the big problem i think, but the values i want to some depending on another number. For example, I have a file with some rows of content. Number 1, Number 2, other content. I want to sum up number... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: Bruder_Bruno
4 Replies

8. UNIX for Beginners Questions & Answers

Beginner bash - basic shell script 'while' help...

Hi everyone, first time visitor to these forums here. Keeping a long story short I've been attempting to learn how to code in bash. I have VERY little previous experience with coding languages besides simply copying and pasting batch scripts for Windows. So, with that in mind I've followed a... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: Meta
4 Replies

9. UNIX for Beginners Questions & Answers

Sum talk time in bash

Hello, guys ! I need a little help :) Lets say i have log files with "n" calls like this one : """"" <+825080825462>","+825080825462","60197774588","from-internal", "SIP/518-00013e14","SIP/eu.test.com_outgoing-00013e15","Dial",... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: dragonfly85
4 Replies

10. Shell Programming and Scripting

Syntax error in subtraction in Bash

I am sharing a code snippet. for (( i=0; i<=$(( $count -1 )); i++ )) do first=${barr2} search=${barr1} echo $first echo "loop begins" for (( j=0; j<=5000; j++ )) do if } == $search ]]; then echo $j break; fi done second=${harr2} echo $second (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: ngabrani
2 Replies
pnmgamma(1)                                                   General Commands Manual                                                  pnmgamma(1)

NAME
pnmgamma - perform gamma correction on a portable anymap SYNOPSIS
pnmgamma [-ungamma] [-cieramp|-srgbramp] [value [pnmfile]] pnmgamma [-ungamma] [-cieramp|-srgbramp] redgamma greengamma bluegamma [pnmfile] DESCRIPTION
Performs gamma correction on pseudo-PNM images. The PPM format specification specify that certain sample values in a file represent certain light intensities in an image. In particular, they specify that the sample values are directly proportional to gamma-corrected intensity values. The gamma correction they specify is CIE Rec. 709. However, people sometimes work with approximations of PPM and PGM where the relationship between the image intensities and the sample val- ues are something else. For example, the sample value might be directly proportional to the intensity with no gamma correction (often called "linear intensity"). Or a different gamma transfer function may be used. pnmgamma allows you to manipulate the transfer function, thus working with and/or creating pseudo-PPM files that are useful for various things. For example, if you feed a true PPM to pnmgamma -cieramp -ungamma, you get as output a file which is PPM in every respect except that the sample values are directly proportional to the light intensities in the image. If you feed such a file to pnmgamma -cieramp, you get out a true PPM. The situation for PGM images is analogous. And pnmgamma treats PBM images as PGM images. 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. PARAMETERS
The only parameters are the specification of the input image file and the gamma values. Every gamma transfer function pnmgamma uses con- tains an exponent, which is the gamma value, and you can choose that value. Furthermore, you can choose different values for each of the three RGB components. If you specify only one gamma value, pnmgamma uses that value for all three RGB components. If you don't specify any gamma parameters, pnmgamma chooses a default. For the transfer functions defined by standards, the default is the value defined by the standard. If you specify anything else, you will be varying from the standard. For the simple power function trans- fer function, the default gamma is 1/.45. OPTIONS
-ungamma Apply the inverse of the specified transfer function (i.e. go from gamma-corrected nonlinear intensities to linear intensities). -cieramp Use the CIE Rec. 709 gamma transfer function. Note that it is true CIE Rec. 709 only if you use the default gamma value (i.e. don't specify any gamma parameters). This transfer function is a power function modified with a linear ramp near black. If you specify neither -cieramp nor -srgbramp, the transfer function defaults to a simple power function. -srgbramp Use the Internation Electrotechnical Commission (IEC) SRGB gamma transfer function (as specified in the standard IEC 61966-2-1). Note that it is true SRGB only if you use the default gamma value (i.e. don't specify any gamma parameters). This transfer function is like the one selected by -cieramp, but with different constants in it. Note that SRGB is often spelled "sRGB". In this document, we use standard English typography, though, which doesn't allow for that kind of capitalization. If you specify neither -cieramp nor -srgbramp, the transfer function defaults to a simple power function. 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 out 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 07:46 AM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy