pnmenlarge(1) General Commands Manual pnmenlarge(1)NAME
pnmenlarge - read a portable anymap and enlarge it N times
SYNOPSIS
pnmenlarge N [pnmfile]
DESCRIPTION
Reads a portable anymap as input. Replicates its pixels N times, and produces a portable anymap as output.
pnmenlarge can only enlarge by integer factors. The slower but more general pnmscale can enlarge or reduce by arbitrary factors, and pbm-
reduce can reduce by integer factors, but only for bitmaps.
If you enlarge by a factor of 3 or more, you should probably add a pnmsmooth step; otherwise, you can see the original pixels in the
resulting image.
SEE ALSO pbmreduce(1), pnmscale(1), pnmsmooth(1), pnm(5)AUTHOR
Copyright (C) 1989 by Jef Poskanzer.
26 February 1989 pnmenlarge(1)
Check Out this Related Man Page
fstopgm(1) General Commands Manual fstopgm(1)NAME
fstopgm - convert a Usenix FaceSaver(tm) file into a portable graymap
SYNOPSIS
fstopgm [fsfile]
DESCRIPTION
Reads a Usenix FaceSaver(tm) file as input. Produces a portable graymap as output.
FaceSaver(tm) files sometimes have rectangular pixels. While fstopgm won't re-scale them into square pixels for you, it will give you the
precise pnmscale command that will do the job. Because of this, reading a FaceSaver(tm) image is a two-step process. First you do:
fstopgm > /dev/null
This will tell you whether you need to use pnmscale. Then use one of the following pipelines:
fstopgm | pgmnorm
fstopgm | pnmscale -whatever | pgmnorm
To go to PBM, you want something more like one of these:
fstopgm | pnmenlarge 3 | pgmnorm | pgmtopbm
fstopgm | pnmenlarge 3 | pnmscale <whatever> | pgmnorm | pgmtopbm
You want to enlarge when going to a bitmap because otherwise you lose information; but enlarging by more than 3 does not look good.
FaceSaver is a registered trademark of Metron Computerware Ltd. of Oakland, CA.
SEE ALSO pgmtofs(1), pgm(5), pgmnorm(1), pnmenlarge(1), pnmscale(1), pgmtopbm(1)AUTHOR
Copyright (C) 1989 by Jef Poskanzer.
06 April 89 fstopgm(1)
Hi, i have a file like this:
A1
kdfjdljfdkljfdlf
A2
lfjdlfkjddkjf
A3
***no hit***
A4
ldjfldjfdk
A5
***no hit***
A6
jldfjdlfjdlkfjd
I want to remove the lines "***no hit*** and their above line to get an output file like this: (11 Replies)
Not my story, but interesting enough to be worth posting here IMHO. (Original is here)
The following is the 500-mile email story in the form it originally appeared, in a post to sage-members on Sun, 24 Nov 2002.:
From trey@sage.org Fri Nov 29 18:00:49 2002
Date: Sun, 24 Nov 2002 21:03:02... (3 Replies)
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)
Hi gurus,
I have a weird requirement. I need to convert the number to english lecture.
I have 1.2 ....19 numbers
I need to convert to first second third fourth, fifth, sixth...
Is there any way convert it using unix command?
thanks in advance. (8 Replies)
Hi,
Humorous UNIX Commands shows a fun way of using echo and dc to sort of obfuscate a string.
% echo 'sasb3135071790101768542287578439snlbxq'|dc
GET A LIFE!
I am just wanting to know if there is a way to sort of use dc and echo to print out an obfuscated/garbled string instead... (3 Replies)
Hi All,
Having recently started a new job, a Data Center Migration in fact I have been tasked with looking at some of the older Solaris boxes when I came across this little gem.
nismas# uname -a
SunOS nismas 5.5.1 Generic_103640-27 sun4u sparc SUNW,Ultra-1
nismas# uptime
10:37am up 2900... (2 Replies)
For any SunOS 5.XX release, it appears prior to the "login:" prompt (as if a "uname" command is run).
Would anyone know where that initial display of SunOS release comes from upon a remote login and how I can stop if from displaying?
Thank you (4 Replies)
I am trying to remove each line in which $2 is FP or RFP. I believe the below will remove one instance but not both. Thank you :).
file
12
123 FP
11
10 RFP
awk
awk -F'\t' '
$2 != "FP"' file
desired output
12
11 (6 Replies)
Hi everybody,
Which Unix base OS have best performance for HOST virtualization?
I tested SmartOS but it needs another OS to connect remotely!
Thanks in advance. (11 Replies)
I have this file:
>ID1
AA
>ID2
TTTTTT
>ID-3
AAAAAAAAA
>ID4
TTTTTTGGAGATCAGTAGCAGATGACAG-GGGGG-TGCACCCC
Add I am trying to use this script to output sequences longer than 15 characters:
sed -r '/^>/N;{/^.{,15}$/d}'
The desire output would be this:
>ID4... (8 Replies)
Hi,
I am having contents in a file like below,
cat testfile
rpool/swap
rpool/swap14
rpool/swap2
rpool/swap3
I want to sort the above contents like,
rpool/swap
rpool/swap2
rpool/swap3
rpool/swap14
I have tried in this way, (7 Replies)
Morning All
So, I am starting looking into the world of UNIX for a new job (luckily not my primary function!) and I am looking to get stared. Like anything I seem to learn best by trying things out first in an environment but I have a key question:
Currently I use Oracle VirtualBox, can... (8 Replies)