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Contact Us Post Here to Contact Site Administrators and Moderators Top banner too big Post 37894 by Spetnik on Tuesday 1st of July 2003 03:15:45 PM
Old 07-01-2003
Question Top banner too big

Why not make it smaller? Say like a height of 400 pixels or so?

-AaronSmilie
 

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pamdice(1)                                                    General Commands Manual                                                   pamdice(1)

NAME
pamdice - slice a Netpbm image into many horizontally and/or vertically SYNOPSIS
pamslice -outstem=filenamestem [-width=width] [-height=height] [-verbose] [filename] You can use the minimum unique abbreviation of the options. You can use two hyphens instead of one. You can separate an option name from its value with white space instead of an equals sign. DESCRIPTION
Reads a PAM, PBM, PGM, or PPM image as input. Splits it horizontally and/or vertically into equal size pieces and writes them into sepa- rate files as the same kind of image. See the -outstem option for information on naming of the output files. The -width and -height options determine the size of the output pieces. pnmcat can rejoin the images. OPTIONS
-outstem=filenamestem This option determines the names of the output files. Each output file is named filenamestem_y_x.type where filenamestem is the value of the -outstem option, x and y are the horizontal and vertical locations, respectively, in the input image of the output image, zero being the leftmost and top, and type is .pbm, .pgm, .ppm, or .pam, depending on the type of image. -width=width gives the width in pixels of the output images. The rightmost pieces are smaller than this if the input image is not a multiple of width pixels wide. -height=height gives the height in pixels of the output images. The bottom pieces are smaller than this if the input image is not a multiple of height pixels high. -verbose Print information about the processing to Standard Error. SEE ALSO
pamcut(1), pnmcat(1), pgmslice(1), pnm(5) AUTHOR
put by Bryan Henderson in the public domain in 2001 31 January 2001 pamdice(1)
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