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Full Discussion: Printing .TIFF files
Top Forums UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers Printing .TIFF files Post 6476 by elbryan on Wednesday 5th of September 2001 01:18:29 PM
Old 09-05-2001
Printing .TIFF files

Please forgive my ignorance...but I was hoping a Unix guru could help me with sending .TIFF files to an HP color laserjet 8550. I understand that .TIFF is not one of the languages used in this case, but I understood that there might be some commands that could be added to the queue to allow it to print...could someone please help me with this issue please?


Thank you,

Dave
 

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RA_TIFF(1)						      General Commands Manual							RA_TIFF(1)

NAME
ra_tiff - convert RADIANCE picture to/from a TIFF color or greyscale image SYNOPSIS
ra_tiff [ -z|-L|-l|-f|-w ][ -b ][ -e +/-stops ][ -g gamma ] { in.hdr|- } out.tif ra_tiff -r [ -x ][ -g gamma ][ -e +/-stops ] in.tif [ out.hdr|- ] DESCRIPTION
Ra_tiff converts between RADIANCE and TIFF image formats. The -g option specifies the exponent used in gamma correction; the default value is 2.2, which is the recommended value for TIFF images. The -b option can be used to specify an 8-bit greyscale TIFF output file. The type of input file is determined automatically. The -z option will result in LZW compression of the TIFF output file. The -L option specifies SGILOG compression, which is recommended to capture the full dynamic range of the Radiance picture. However, since many TIFF readers do not yet support this format, use this option under advisement. The -l option specifies SGILOG24 compressed output, which has less dynamic range than SGILOG, but may be smaller in some cases. (It is usually larger.) The -f option specifies 32-bit IEEE floating-point/primary output, which is the highest resolution format but results in very large files, since each RGB pixel takes 96 bits (12 bytes) and does not compress well. The -w option specifies 16-bit/primary output, which is understood by some photo editing software, such as Adobe Photoshop. Decompression is automatically deter- mined for TIFF input. The -e option specifies an exposure compensation in f-stops (powers of two). Only integer stops are allowed, for efficiency. The -r option invokes a reverse conversion, from a TIFF image to a RADIANCE picture. The RADIANCE picture file can be taken from the stan- dard input or sent to the standard output by using a hyphen ('-') in place of the file name, but the TIFF image must be to or from a file. The -x option can be used to specify an XYZE Radiance output file, rather than the default RGBE. EXAMPLES
To convert a Radiance picture to SGILOG-compressed TIFF format: ra_tiff -L scene1.hdr scene1.tif To later convert this image back into Radiance and display using human visibility tone-mapping: ra_tiff -r scene1.tif scene1.hdr ximage -e human scene1.hdr AUTHOR
Greg Ward Larson Sam Leffler ACKNOWLEDGEMENT
Work on this program was initiated and sponsored by the LESO group at EPFL in Switzerland. Additions for the SGILOG data encoding were sponsored by Silicon Graphics, Inc. BUGS
Many TIFF file subtypes are not supported. A gamma value other than 2.2 is not properly recorded or understood if recorded in the TIFF file. SEE ALSO
pfilt(1), ra_bmp(1), ra_bn(1), ra_ppm(1), ra_pr(1), ra_pr24(1), ra_t8(1), ra_t16(1), ximage(1) RADIANCE
8/29/97 RA_TIFF(1)
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