JPG man page on Plan9

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JPG(1)									JPG(1)

NAME
       jpg,  gif,  png, ppm, bmp, v210, yuv, ico, togif, toppm, topng, toico -
       view and convert pictures

SYNOPSIS
       jpg [ -39cdefFkJrtv ] [ file ...	 ]
       gif [ -39cdektv ] [ file ...  ]
       png [ -39cdektv ] [ file ...  ]
       ppm [ -39cdektv ] [ file ...  ]
       bmp [ file ]
       v210 [ -39cdektv ] [ file ...  ]
       yuv [ file ]

       togif [ -c comment ] [ -l loopcount ] [ -d msec ] [ -t transindex  ]  [
       file ...	 [ -d msec ] file ...  ]
       toppm [ -c comment ] [ file ]
       topng [ -c comment ] [ [ -g gamma ] [ file ]

       ico [ file ]
       toico [ file ...	 ]

DESCRIPTION
       These  programs read, display, and write image files in public formats.
       Jpg, gif, png, ppm, bmp, v210, and yuv read files in the	 corresponding
       formats	and,  by  default, display them in the current window; options
       cause them instead to convert the images to Plan	 9  image  format  and
       write  them  to	standard  output.  Togif, Toppm, and topng read Plan 9
       images files, convert them to GIF, PPM, or PNG, and write them to stan‐
       dard output.

       The  default  behavior  of jpg, gif, and ppm is to display the file, or
       standard input if no file is named.  Once a file is displayed, typing a
       character  causes  the  program to display the next image.  Typing a q,
       DEL, or control-D exits the program.  For a more	 user-friendly	inter‐
       face,  use  page(1), which invokes these programs to convert the images
       to standard format, displays them, and offers scrolling,	 panning,  and
       menu-driven navigation among the files.

       These programs share many options:

       -e     Disable  Floyd-Steinberg	error  diffusion,  which  is  used  to
	      improve the appearance of images on color-mapped displays, typi‐
	      cally with 8 bits per pixel.  Primarily useful for debugging; if
	      the display has true RGB color, the image will be	 displayed  in
	      full glory.

       -k     Convert and display the image as a black and white (really grey-
	      scale) image.

       -v     Convert the image to an RGBV color-mapped	 image,	 even  if  the
	      display has true RGB color.

       -d     Suppress	display of the image; this is set automatically by any
	      of the following options:

       -c     Convert the image to a Plan  9  representation,  as  defined  by
	      image(6), and write it to standard output.

       -9     Like -c, but produce an uncompressed image.  This saves process‐
	      ing time, particularly when the output is being piped to another
	      program  such as page(1), since it avoids compression and decom‐
	      pression.

       -t     Convert the image, if it is in color, to a true color RGB image.

       -3     Like -t, but force the image to RGB even	if  it	is  originally
	      grey-scale.

       Jpg  has	 two extra options used to process the output of the LML video
       card:

       -f     Merge two adjacent images, which represent the two fields	 of  a
	      video picture, into a single image.

       -F     The input is a motion JPEG file, with multiple images represent‐
	      ing frames of the movie.	Sets -f.

       The togif and toppm programs go the other way: they convert from Plan 9
       images  to GIF and PPM, and have no display capability.	Both accept an
       option -c to set the comment field of the resulting file.  If there  is
       only  one  input	 picture,  togif converts the image to GIF format.  If
       there are many files, though, it will assemble them  into  an  animated
       GIF file.  The options control this process:

       -lloopcount
	      By default, the animation will loop forever; loopcount specifies
	      how many times to loop.  A value of zero means loop forever  and
	      a negative value means to stop after playing the sequence once.

       -dmsec By default, the images are displayed as fast as they can be ren‐
	      dered.  This option specifies  the  time,	 in  milliseconds,  to
	      pause while displaying the next named file.

       Gif  translates	files that contain a `transparency' index by attaching
       an alpha channel to the converted image.

       Ico displays a Windows icon (.ico) file.	 If no file is specified,  ico
       reads  from  standard  input.   Icon files contain sets of icons repre‐
       sented by an image and a mask.  Clicking the right  button  pops	 up  a
       menu  that  lets	 you write any icon's image as a Plan 9 image (widthx‐
       height.image), write any	 icon's	 mask  as  a  Plan  9  image  (widthx‐
       height.mask),  or exit.	Selecting one of the write menu items yields a
       sight cursor.  Move the sight over the icon and right  click  again  to
       write.

       Toico  takes  a list of Plan 9 image files (or standard input) and cre‐
       ates a single icon file.	 The masks in the icon file will be the	 white
       space in the image.  The icon file is written to standard output.

SOURCE
       /sys/src/cmd/jpg

SEE ALSO
       page(1), image(6).
       http://www.w3.org/Graphics/JPEG/itu-t81.pdf
       http://www.w3.org/Graphics/GIF/spec-gif89a.txt
       http://www.w3.org/TR/2003/REC-PNG-20031110
       http://netpbm.sourceforge.net/doc/ppm.html
       http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Windows_bitmap
       http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yuv

BUGS
       Writing an animated GIF using togif is a clumsy undertaking.

									JPG(1)
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