Mon, 30 Jun 2008 08:00:00 GMT
Images are an important part of an attractive, eye-catching blog. Well-chosen images can highlight and capture the essence of your communication, helping your audience to better appreciate your message. Here are three WordPress extensions that help you gain more control over the photos and graphics you want to display on your blog.
Hello everyone. :) I need to write a script and I'm newbie in it.
Sorry for my English, I've been learning that amazing language for one year.
Task:
Write script called 'myls', "wrapper" program call ls in such a way that you could ask it the name of the file without extension, for example:... (1 Reply)
Hi,
I have done Copy image and Restores back on Windows.
I have two solaris servers, one contains Solaris OS and Applications on Server-1.
Want i required is want to copy image of Server-1 and restores the copied image on Server-2.
First of all, is it possibile in Solaris. If it is then... (4 Replies)
Hi, I have two sets of image files. Both sets have names A to Z but set 1 ends with .cdt.png and set 2 ends with .matrix.png. I want set 1 to match with set 2 if the names match (i.e. A.cdt.png will match with A.matrix.png) and with the convert image tool (program for images), it will merge the... (6 Replies)
Hi, (HP-UX 11.11)
I need to create a tape image of an igniteUX image created on our igniteUX server.
That is to say. I have a "Online" image of the igniteUX of the targeted system but I now need to copy it to a useable TAPE (igniteUX) image so i can build an other server from it that is not... (3 Replies)
Hey!
Do you guys know of a good site that can explain all the Unix commands... I have been using Unix för almost 6 months but still have probelms with things like -u -U -g -G -R -T bla bla bla bla
thanks!
Dave (3 Replies)
HDFTOR8(1) General Commands Manual HDFTOR8(1)NAME
hdftor8 - extract 8-Bit raster images and palettes from HDF file
SYNOPSIS
hdftor8 hdf-file [-i] [-v] [-r raster-image-file] [-p pallette-file]
DESCRIPTION
hdftor8 extracts the raster images and/or palettes from an HDF file and stores them in one file that contains the raster image data and an-
other that contains the palette data.
The names given for the raster image and palette files are interpreted by hdftor8 as follows: For each raster image file, the file name is
given the extension ".#.@.%", where "#" represents the raster image number from the HDF file, "@" represents the x-dimension of the raster
image, and "%" represents the y-dimension of the raster image. For each palette file, the file name is given the extensions ".#", where "#"
represents the palette number from the HDF format file.
If no name is given for the raster image file, the default name "img.#.@.%" is assigned, where "#", "@", and "%" are as defined in the pre-
ceding paragraph. The default name for a palette file is "pal.#".
OPTIONS -i Execute the program in interactive mode.
-v Execute in verbose mode. Display diagnostic messages during the session.
-r raster-image-file
Specify the name of the raster image file.
-p pallette-file
Specify the name of the palette file.
EXAMPLES
A file named "denm.hdf" contains three 512 x 256 raster images and three palettes. To store these images and palettes in separate raster
image and palette files, use the following hdftor8 command:
hdftor8 denm.hdf
Six files are created, named "img1.512.256", "img2.512.256", "img3.512.256", "pal.1", "pal.2", and "pal.3".
SEE ALSO r8tohdf(1), hdf(5)
November 6, 1999 HDFTOR8(1)