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dcm2pnm(1)			  OFFIS DCMTK			    dcm2pnm(1)

NAME
       dcm2pnm - Convert DICOM images to PGM/PPM, PNG, TIFF or BMP

SYNOPSIS
       dcm2pnm [options] dcmfile-in [bitmap-out]

DESCRIPTION
       The  dcm2pnm  utility  reads  a	DICOM  image,  converts the pixel data
       according to the selected image processing options and writes  back  an
       image in the well-known PGM/PPM (portable gray map / portable pix map),
       PNG,  TIFF  or  Windows	BMP  format.  This   utility   only   supports
       uncompressed  and  RLE  compressed  DICOM images. The command line tool
       dcmj2pnm also supports a number of JPEG compression schemes.

PARAMETERS
       dcmfile-in  DICOM input filename to be converted

       bitmap-out  output filename to be written (default: stdout)

OPTIONS
   general options
	 -h    --help
		 print this help text and exit

	       --version
		 print version information and exit

	       --arguments
		 print expanded command line arguments

	 -q    --quiet
		 quiet mode, print no warnings and errors

	 -v    --verbose
		 verbose mode, print processing details

	 -d    --debug
		 debug mode, print debug information

	 -ll   --log-level  [l]evel: string constant
		 (fatal, error, warn, info, debug, trace)
		 use level l for the logger

	 -lc   --log-config  [f]ilename: string
		 use config file f for the logger

   input options
       input file format:

	 +f    --read-file
		 read file format or data set (default)

	 +fo   --read-file-only
		 read file format only

	 -f    --read-dataset
		 read data set without file meta information

       input transfer syntax:

	 -t=   --read-xfer-auto
		 use TS recognition (default)

	 -td   --read-xfer-detect
		 ignore TS specified in the file meta header

	 -te   --read-xfer-little
		 read with explicit VR little endian TS

	 -tb   --read-xfer-big
		 read with explicit VR big endian TS

	 -ti   --read-xfer-implicit
		 read with implicit VR little endian TS

   image processing options
       frame selection:

	 +F    --frame	[n]umber: integer
		 select specified frame (default: 1)

	 +Fr   --frame-range  [n]umber [c]ount: integer
		 select c frames beginning with frame n

	 +Fa   --all-frames
		 select all frames

       rotation:

	 +Rl   --rotate-left
		 rotate image left (-90 degrees)

	 +Rr   --rotate-right
		 rotate image right (+90 degrees)

	 +Rtd  --rotate-top-down
		 rotate image top-down (180 degrees)

       flipping:

	 +Lh   --flip-horizontally
		 flip image horizontally

	 +Lv   --flip-vertically
		 flip image vertically

	 +Lhv  --flip-both-axes
		 flip image horizontally and vertically

       scaling:

	 +a    --recognize-aspect
		 recognize pixel aspect ratio (default)

	 -a    --ignore-aspect
		 ignore pixel aspect ratio when scaling

	 +i    --interpolate  [n]umber of algorithm: integer
		 use interpolation when scaling (1..4, default: 1)

	 -i    --no-interpolation
		 no interpolation when scaling

	 -S    --no-scaling
		 no scaling, ignore pixel aspect ratio (default)

	 +Sxf  --scale-x-factor	 [f]actor: float
		 scale x axis by factor, auto-compute y axis

	 +Syf  --scale-y-factor	 [f]actor: float
		 scale y axis by factor, auto-compute x axis

	 +Sxv  --scale-x-size  [n]umber: integer
		 scale x axis to n pixels, auto-compute y axis

	 +Syv  --scale-y-size  [n]umber: integer
		 scale y axis to n pixels, auto-compute x axis

       modality LUT transformation:

	 -M    --no-modality
		 ignore stored modality LUT transformation

	 +M    --use-modality
		 use modality LUT transformation (default)

       VOI LUT transformation:

	 -W    --no-windowing
		 no VOI windowing (default)

	 +Wi   --use-window  [n]umber: integer
		 use the n-th VOI window from image file

	 +Wl   --use-voi-lut  [n]umber: integer
		 use the n-th VOI look up table from image file

	 +Wm   --min-max-window
		 compute VOI window using min-max algorithm

	 +Wn   --min-max-window-n
		 compute VOI window using min-max algorithm,
		 ignoring extreme values

	 +Wr   --roi-min-max-window  [l]eft [t]op [w]idth [h]eight: integer
		 compute ROI window using min-max algorithm,
		 region of interest is specified by l,t,w,h

	 +Wh   --histogram-window  [n]umber: integer
		 compute VOI window using Histogram algorithm,
		 ignoring n percent

	 +Ww   --set-window  [c]enter [w]idth: float
		 compute VOI window using center c and width w

	 +Wfl  --linear-function
		 set VOI LUT function to LINEAR

	 +Wfs  --sigmoid-function
		 set VOI LUT function to SIGMOID

       presentation LUT transformation:

	 +Pid  --identity-shape
		 set presentation LUT shape to IDENTITY

	 +Piv  --inverse-shape
		 set presentation LUT shape to INVERSE

	 +Pod  --lin-od-shape
		 set presentation LUT shape to LIN OD

       overlay:

	 -O    --no-overlays
		 do not display overlays

	 +O    --display-overlay  [n]umber: integer
		 display overlay n (0..16, 0=all, default: +O 0)

	 +Omr  --ovl-replace
		 use overlay mode "Replace"
		 (default for Graphic overlays)

	 +Omt  --ovl-threshold
		 use overlay mode "Threshold Replace"

	 +Omc  --ovl-complement
		 use overlay mode "Complement"

	 +Omv  --ovl-invert
		 use overlay mode "Invert Bitmap"

	 +Omi  --ovl-roi
		 use overlay mode "Region of Interest"
		 (default for ROI overlays)

	 +Osf  --set-foreground	 [d]ensity: float
		 set overlay foreground density (0..1, default: 1)

	 +Ost  --set-threshold	[d]ensity: float
		 set overlay threshold density (0..1, default: 0.5)

       display LUT transformation:

	 +Dm   --monitor-file  [f]ilename: string
		 calibrate output according to monitor characteristics
		 defined in f

	 +Dp   --printer-file  [f]ilename: string
		 calibrate output according to printer characteristics
		 defined in f

	 +Da   --ambient-light	[a]mbient light: float
		 ambient light value (cd/m^2, default: file f)

	 +Di   --illumination  [i]llumination: float
		 illumination value (cd/m^2, default: file f)

	 +Dn   --min-density  [m]inimum optical density: float
		 Dmin value (default: off, only with +Dp)

	 +Dx   --max-density  [m]aximum optical density: float
		 Dmax value (default: off, only with +Dp)

	 +Dg   --gsd-function
		 use GSDF for calibration (default for +Dm/+Dp)

	 +Dc   --cielab-function
		 use CIELAB function for calibration

       compatibility:

	 +Ma   --accept-acr-nema
		 accept ACR-NEMA images without photometric
		 interpretation

	 +Mp   --accept-palettes
		 accept incorrect palette attribute tags
		 (0028,111x) and (0028,121x)

	 +Mc   --check-lut-depth
		 check 3rd value of the LUT descriptor, compare
		 with expected bit depth based on LUT data

	 +Mm   --ignore-mlut-depth
		 ignore 3rd value of the modality LUT descriptor,
		 determine bits per table entry automatically

	 +Mv   --ignore-vlut-depth
		 ignore 3rd value of the VOI LUT descriptor,
		 determine bits per table entry automatically

       TIFF format:

	 +Tl   --compr-lzw
		 LZW compression (default)

	 +Tr   --compr-rle
		 RLE compression

	 +Tn   --compr-none
		 uncompressed

	 +Pd   --predictor-default
		 no LZW predictor (default)

	 +Pn   --predictor-none
		 LZW predictor 1 (no prediction)

	 +Ph   --predictor-horz
		 LZW predictor 2 (horizontal differencing)

	 +Rs   --rows-per-strip	 [r]ows: integer (default: 0)
		 rows per strip, default 8K per strip

       PNG format:

	 +il   --interlace
		 create interlaced file (default)

	 -il   --nointerlace
		 create non-interlaced file

	 +mf   --meta-file
		 create PNG file meta information (default)

	 -mf   --meta-none
		 no PNG file meta information

       other transformations:

	 +G    --grayscale
		 convert to grayscale if necessary

	 +P    --change-polarity
		 change polarity (invert pixel output)

	 +C    --clip-region  [l]eft [t]op [w]idth [h]eight: integer
		 clip image region (l, t, w, h)

   output options
       general:

	 -im   --image-info
		 print image details (requires verbose mode)

	 -o    --no-output
		 do not create any output (useful with -im)

       image format:

	 +op   --write-raw-pnm
		 write 8-bit binary PGM/PPM (default for files)

	 +opb  --write-8-bit-pnm
		 write 8-bit ASCII PGM/PPM (default for stdout)

	 +opw  --write-16-bit-pnm
		 write 16-bit ASCII PGM/PPM

	 +opn  --write-n-bit-pnm  [n]umber: integer
		 write n-bit ASCII PGM/PPM (1..32)

	 +ob   --write-bmp
		 write 8-bit (monochrome) or 24-bit (color) BMP

	 +obp  --write-8-bit-bmp
		 write 8-bit palette BMP (monochrome only)

	 +obt  --write-24-bit-bmp
		 write 24-bit truecolor BMP

	 +obr  --write-32-bit-bmp
		 write 32-bit truecolor BMP

	 +ot   --write-tiff
		 write 8-bit (monochrome) or 24-bit (color) TIFF

	 +on   --write-png
		 write 8-bit (monochrome) or 24-bit (color) PNG

NOTES
       The following preferred interpolation algorithms can be selected	 using
       the --interpolate option:

       · 1 = free scaling algorithm with interpolation from pbmplus toolkit
       · 2 = free scaling algorithm with interpolation from c't magazine
       · 3  =  magnification algorithm with bilinear interpolation from Eduard
	 Stanescu
       · 4 = magnification algorithm with bicubic  interpolation  from	Eduard
	 Stanescu
       The   --write-tiff  option  is  only  available	when  DCMTK  has  been
       configured and compiled with support  for  the  external	 libtiff  TIFF
       library.	 The  availability  of the TIFF compression options depends on
       the libtiff configuration. In particular, the  patented	LZW  algorithm
       may not be available.
       The --write-png option is only available when DCMTK has been configured
       and compiled with support for the external libpng PNG  library.	Option
       --interlace  enables progressive image view while loading the PNG file.
       Only a few applications take care of the meta  info  (TEXT)  in	a  PNG
       file.
TRANSFER SYNTAXES
       dcm2pnm	supports  the  following transfer syntaxes for input (dcmfile-
       in):
       LittleEndianImplicitTransferSyntax	      1.2.840.10008.1.2
       LittleEndianExplicitTransferSyntax	      1.2.840.10008.1.2.1
       DeflatedExplicitVRLittleEndianTransferSyntax   1.2.840.10008.1.2.1.99 (*)
       BigEndianExplicitTransferSyntax		      1.2.840.10008.1.2.2
       RLELosslessTransferSyntax		      1.2.840.10008.1.2.5
       (*) if compiled with zlib support enabled
LOGGING
       The level of logging output of  the  various  command  line  tools  and
       underlying  libraries  can  be  specified by the user. By default, only
       errors and warnings are written to the  standard	 error	stream.	 Using
       option  --verbose  also	informational messages like processing details
       are reported. Option --debug can be used to get	more  details  on  the
       internal	 activity,  e.g.  for debugging purposes. Other logging levels
       can be selected using option --log-level. In --quiet  mode  only	 fatal
       errors  are reported. In such very severe error events, the application
       will usually terminate. For  more  details  on  the  different  logging
       levels, see documentation of module 'oflog'.
       In  case	 the logging output should be written to file (optionally with
       logfile rotation), to syslog (Unix) or the event log  (Windows)	option
       --log-config  can  be  used.  This  configuration  file also allows for
       directing only certain messages to a particular output stream  and  for
       filtering  certain  messages  based  on the module or application where
       they are generated.  An	example	 configuration	file  is  provided  in
       <etcdir>/logger.cfg).
COMMAND LINE
       All  command  line  tools  use  the  following notation for parameters:
       square brackets enclose optional	 values	 (0-1),	 three	trailing  dots
       indicate	 that multiple values are allowed (1-n), a combination of both
       means 0 to n values.
       Command line options are distinguished from parameters by a leading '+'
       or  '-' sign, respectively. Usually, order and position of command line
       options are arbitrary (i.e. they	 can  appear  anywhere).  However,  if
       options	are  mutually exclusive the rightmost appearance is used. This
       behaviour conforms to the standard  evaluation  rules  of  common  Unix
       shells.
       In  addition,  one  or more command files can be specified using an '@'
       sign as a prefix to the filename (e.g. @command.txt).  Such  a  command
       argument	 is  replaced  by  the	content of the corresponding text file
       (multiple whitespaces are treated as a  single  separator  unless  they
       appear  between	two  quotation marks) prior to any further evaluation.
       Please note that a command file cannot contain  another	command	 file.
       This   simple   but  effective  approach	 allows	 to  summarize	common
       combinations of options/parameters and  avoids  longish	and  confusing
       command lines (an example is provided in file <datadir>/dumppat.txt).
ENVIRONMENT
       The  dcm2pnm  utility  will  attempt  to	 load  DICOM data dictionaries
       specified in the DCMDICTPATH environment variable. By default, i.e.  if
       the   DCMDICTPATH   environment	 variable   is	 not   set,  the  file
       <datadir>/dicom.dic will be loaded unless the dictionary is built  into
       the application (default for Windows).
       The   default   behaviour  should  be  preferred	 and  the  DCMDICTPATH
       environment variable only used when alternative data  dictionaries  are
       required.  The  DCMDICTPATH environment variable has the same format as
       the Unix shell PATH variable in that a colon (':')  separates  entries.
       On  Windows systems, a semicolon (';') is used as a separator. The data
       dictionary code will  attempt  to  load	each  file  specified  in  the
       DCMDICTPATH  environment variable. It is an error if no data dictionary
       can be loaded.
FILES
       <datadir>/camera.lut - sample characteristics file of a camera
       <datadir>/monitor.lut - sample characteristics file of a monitor
       <datadir>/printer.lut - sample characteristics file of a printer
       <datadir>/scanner.lut - sample characteristics file of a scanner
SEE ALSO
       dcmj2pnm(1), img2dcm(1)
COPYRIGHT
       Copyright (C) 1998-2010 by OFFIS e.V., Escherweg	 2,  26121  Oldenburg,
       Germany.

Version 3.6.0			  6 Jan 2011			    dcm2pnm(1)
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