pnmflip(1) General Commands Manual pnmflip(1)NAME
pnmflip - perform one or more flip operations on a portable anymap
SYNOPSIS
pnmflip [-leftright|-lr] [-topbottom|-tb] [-transpose|-xy] [-rotate90|-r90|-ccw ] [-rotate270|-r270|-cw ] [-rotate180|-r180] [pnmfile]
DESCRIPTION
Reads a portable anymap as input. Performs one or more flip operations, in the order specified, and writes out a portable anymap.
OPTIONS
The flip operations available are: left for right (-leftright or -lr); top for bottom (-topbottom or -tb); and transposition (-transpose or
-xy). In addition, some canned concatenations are available: -rotate90 or -ccw is equivalent to -transpose -topbottom; -rotate270 or -cw
is equivalent to -transpose -leftright; and -rotate180 is equivalent to -leftright -topbottom.
All flags can be abbreviated to their shortest unique prefix.
SEE ALSO pnmrotate(1), pnm(5)AUTHOR
Copyright (C) 1989 by Jef Poskanzer.
25 July 1989 pnmflip(1)
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pnmcat(1) General Commands Manual pnmcat(1)NAME
pnmcat - concatenate portable anymaps
SYNOPSIS
pnmcat [-white|-black] -leftright|-lr [-jtop|-jbottom] pnmfile pnmfile ...
pnmcat [-white|-black] -topbottom|-tb [-jleft|-jright] pnmfile pnmfile ...
DESCRIPTION
Reads portable anymaps as input. Concatenates them either left to right or top to bottom, and produces a portable anymap as output.
pamdice splits an image up into smaller ones.
pnmtile concatenates a single input image to itself repeatedly.
OPTIONS
If the anymaps are not all the same height (left-right) or width (top-bottom), the smaller ones have to be justified with the largest. By
default, they get centered, but you can specify one side or the other with one of the -j* flags. So, -topbottom-jleft would stack the
anymaps on top of each other, flush with the left edge.
The -white and -black flags specify what color to use to fill in the extra space when doing this justification. If neither is specified,
the program makes a guess.
All flags can be abbreviated to their shortest unique prefix.
SEE ALSO pamdice(1), pnmtile(1), pamcut(1), pnm(5)AUTHOR
Copyright (C) 1989 by Jef Poskanzer.
12 March 1989 pnmcat(1)
Hi Folks,
Today hasn't been the best one of my career in IT.
I've been a contractor for a major utility company for a number of years, on a number of seperate IT contracts mostly Unix. The company had 10 different flavours of unix and multiple different varsions of most of them.
At the... (3 Replies)