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Ppm3d User Manual(0)					  Ppm3d User Manual(0)

NAME
       ppm3d  -	 convert two PPM images into an anaglyph (red/blue 3d glasses)
       PPM

SYNOPSIS
       ppm3d [-color] [-offset=horizontal_offset] leftppmfile rightppmfile

       Deprecated optional 3rd argument: horizontal_offset

DESCRIPTION
       This program is part of Netpbm(1).

       ppm3d reads two PPM images as input and produces a PPM as output,  with
       the  images  overlapping	 by  the  specified  number of pixels in blue-
       green/red format.  The idea is that if you look at the image  with  3-D
       glasses	(glasses that admit only red through one eye and only green or
       blue through the other), you see an image with depth.  This  is	called
       an anaglyph stereogram.

       ppm3d  can  produce  either  of two kinds of anaglyph stereogram: mono‐
       chrome or color.	 Use the -color option to choose.

       In the monochrome version, ppm3d ignores any color  (actually,  chromi‐
       nance)  in  the input images and produces a result which is monochrome.
       Viewed through red-green glasses it is yellow, but  without  any	 other
       color in the field, your brain tends to see it as grayscale.

       In  the	color  version, ppm3d generates a result which is close to the
       color of the original.  It's not great, though, due to  the  fact  that
       each  eye  necessarily  cannot  see  the entire spectrum.  Red and cyan
       don't work well, but most other colors -- especially when heavily satu‐
       rated -- come out quite well.

       To  view a color analgyph stereogram, you need glasses with a left lens
       that admits only red light and a right lens that admits only  blue  and
       green light.  (The right lens may be called a cyan lens because that is
       its pigment in white light; don't be misled into thinking that cyan  is
       the only color that gets through it).  Your brain is wired so that even
       though the components of light are coming in  through  different	 eyes,
       they  mix in your brain to form the same sensation as if you were look‐
       ing at the combined light with both eyes.

       The input PPMs must be the same dimensions.

       To make a different kind of stereogram, use pamstereogram.  That	 makes
       a steregram that you view without special glasses, just by letting your
       eyes unfocus so that each eye sees different parts of the image.

ARGUMENTS
       The mandatory arguments are file names of  the  left  and  right	 input
       images.

       An optional third argument specifies the same thing as the value of the
       -offset argument, but is deprecated because -offset is  easier  to  use
       and read.  Before Netpbm 10.38 (March 2007), this third argument is the
       only way to specify the offset.

OPTIONS
       -offset=horizontal_offset
	      This option indicates the amount, in pixels, by which  the  left
	      and  image is offset to the right of the right image in the out‐
	      put.

	      The effect of this option is to move the	entire	image  forward
	      (positive	 numbers) or backward (negative numbers).  With a zero
	      offset, the main subject of the picture appears in the plane  of
	      the  picture  (i.e.  if  the image is projected on a screen, the
	      location of the screen).	The main subject is the subject at the
	      location	where  the line of sight of the left camera intersects
	      the line of sight of  the	 right	camera	--  the	 main  subject
	      appears at the same location in both the left and right images.

	      Default is zero.

	      This  option was new in Netpbm 10.38 (March 2007).  Before that,
	      use the third argument instead.  Also, before Netpbm  10.38  the
	      default is +30 pixels.

       -color This  option  causes  ppm3d  to generate a color anaglyph stere‐
	      ogram.  By default, it generates monochrome.

	      This option was new in Netpbm 10.38 (March 2007).

SEE ALSO
       pamstereogram(1) ppm(1)

AUTHOR
       Copyright (C) 1993 by David K. Drum.

netpbm documentation	       20 February 2007		  Ppm3d User Manual(0)
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