Linux and UNIX Man Pages

Linux & Unix Commands - Search Man Pages

ppmflash(1) [minix man page]

ppmflash(1)                                                   General Commands Manual                                                  ppmflash(1)

NAME
ppmflash - brighten a picture up to complete white-out SYNOPSIS
ppmflash flashfactor [ppmfile] DESCRIPTION
Reads a portable pixmap as input. Increases its brightness by the specified flashfactor up to a total white-out image. The flashfactor may be in the range from 0.0 (original picture's brightness) to 1.0 (full white-out, The Second After). As pnmgamma does not do the brightness correction in the way I wanted it, this small program was written. This program is similar to ppmbrighten , but not exactly the same. SEE ALSO
ppm(5), ppmdim(1), pnmgamma(1), ppmbrighten(1) AUTHOR
Copyright (C) 1993 by Frank Neumann 16 November 1993 ppmflash(1)

Check Out this Related Man Page

ppmshift(1)                                                   General Commands Manual                                                  ppmshift(1)

NAME
ppmshift - shift lines of a portable pixmap left or right by a random amount SYNOPSIS
ppmshift shift [ppmfile] DESCRIPTION
Reads a portable pixmap as input. Shifts every row of image data to the left or right by a certain amount. The 'shift' parameter determines by how many pixels a row is to be shifted at most. Another one of those effects I intended to use for MPEG tests. Unfortunately, this program will not help me here - it creates too random patterns to be used for animations. Still, it might give interesting results on still images. EXAMPLE
Check this out: Save your favourite model's picture from something like alt.binaries.pictures.supermodels (ok, or from any other picture source), convert it to ppm, and process it e.g. like this, assuming the picture is 800x600 pixels: # take the upper half, and leave it like it is pnmcut 0 0 800 300 cs.ppm >upper.ppm # take the lower half, flip it upside down, dim it and distort it a little pnmcut 0 300 800 300 cs.ppm | pnmflip -tb | ppmdim 0.7 | ppmshift 10 >lower.ppm # and concatenate the two pieces pnmcat -tb upper.ppm lower.ppm >newpic.ppm The resulting picture looks like the image being reflected on a water surface with slight ripples. SEE ALSO
ppm(5), pnmcut(1), pnmflip(1), ppmdim(1), pnmcat(1) AUTHOR
Copyright (C) 1993 by Frank Neumann 16 November 1993 ppmshift(1)
Man Page

9 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. Programming

help with write-read locks inter-process

I need help!Many Thanks! Now,I try to manage the shared memory inter-process . Inevitably,I have to deal with the synchronous. I know the pthread_rwlock in posix,and I compile ,then run successfully in Red Hat Enterprise 4. I have a doubt about whether the Posix supports the system such as... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: weizh
1 Replies

2. Programming

Trying to understand kernel

Hi all, I'm a user and a programmer of UNIX based systems (mainly FreeBSD and Linux). I have never programmed or tried to fully understand the kernel layer. I haven't a special propouse for learning it, but I'd like to. Can anyone suggest me books, documentation or examples that may help me... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: mghis
2 Replies

3. Programming

Learning OS design, Linux Vs. Minix???

Hi friends, I hope everybody is fine. I have been studing operating system concepts at college, and I find this subject very interesting. I've decided that I must go into this field no matter what, hopefully someday I would design my own operating system. I have two choices infront of me, studying... (9 Replies)
Discussion started by: gabam
9 Replies

4. Android

Basic Android platform information.

I am thinking of developing an app' for Android mobile devices... Two questions here:- 1) Does anyone _develop_ for the Android _mobile_ platform? If so do you use OSX 10.7.5 or greater as your _development_platform_? 2) I know ********* is gonna say that the Android terminal/shell is... (13 Replies)
Discussion started by: wisecracker
13 Replies

5. Fedora

Is UNIX an open source OS ?

Hi everyone, I know the following questions are noobish questions but I am asking them because I am confused about the basics of history behind UNIX and LINUX. Ok onto business, my questions are-: Was/Is UNIX ever an open source operating system ? If UNIX was... (21 Replies)
Discussion started by: sreyan32
21 Replies

6. SCO

Study UNIX Kernel

Hi all, I hope you are fine, I'd like study Os I tried a book like Silberschatz it's a good book but like other books it talks about the concepts abstractly and that's due to it try to encompass many concepts from many operating systems in GENERAL. i am not too much comfortable from these... (20 Replies)
Discussion started by: Abdo_8008
20 Replies

7. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

New to Unix

I'm new on the site and do not write very well in English, I am now using osx platform and was attracted to her. For several searches on random websites for Unix content yours was the best and most interesting, I registered and already visualized some very interesting content. But I wonder where... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: mmmrugby
3 Replies

8. What is on Your Mind?

Just getting started with UNIX programming and administration

Hi everyone, I am new to this forum and this is my very first post, one i think i will look back at many years from now and have nothing to regret about. This is simply because i recently installed Linux (Ubuntu) on my system and downloaded a book titled, The Unix Programming Environment. I... (7 Replies)
Discussion started by: despiragado
7 Replies

9. UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users

Shopt -s histappend

What is the point of this? Whenever I close my shell it appends to the history file without adding this. I have never seen it overwrite my history file. # When the shell exits, append to the history file instead of overwriting it shopt -s histappend (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: cokedude
3 Replies