fldcraw man page on Mandriva

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fldcraw(1)							    fldcraw(1)

NAME
       dcraw - command-line decoder for raw digital photos

SYNOPSIS
       fldcraw [OPTION]... [FILE]...

DESCRIPTION
       fldcraw decodes raw photos, displays metadata, and extracts thumbnails.

OPTIONS
       -v     Print verbose messages, not just warnings and errors.

       -c     Write decoded images or thumbnails to standard output.

       -e     Extract  the  camera-generated  thumbnail,  not  the  raw image.
	      You'll get either a JPEG or a PPM file, depending on the camera.

       -z     Change the access and modification times of an AVI, JPEG or  raw
	      file to when the photo was taken, assuming that the camera clock
	      was set to Universal Time.

       -i     Identify files but don't decode them.  Exit status is 0 if  fld‐
	      craw can decode the last file, 1 if it can't.  -i -v shows meta‐
	      data.

	      fldcraw cannot decode JPEG files!!

       -d     Show the raw data as a grayscale image  with  no	interpolation.
	      Good for photographing black-and-white documents.

       -D     Same as -d, but totally raw (no color scaling).

       -h     Output a half-size color image.  Twice as fast as -q 0.

       -q 0   Use high-speed, low-quality bilinear interpolation.

       -q 2   Use Variable Number of Gradients (VNG) interpolation.

       -q 3   Use Adaptive Homogeneity-Directed (AHD) interpolation.

       -f     Interpolate  RGB	as  four colors.  Use this if the output shows
	      false 2x2 meshes with VNG or mazes with AHD.

       -B sigma_domain sigma_range
	      Use a bilateral filter to smooth noise while  preserving	edges.
	      sigma_domain  is	in  units  of  pixels, while sigma_range is in
	      units of CIELab colorspace.  Try -B 2 4 to start.

       -b brightness
	      By default, fldcraw writes 8-bit PGM/PPM/PAM with a BT.709 gamma
	      curve  and  a 99th-percentile white point.  If the result is too
	      light or too dark, -b lets you adjust it.	 Default is 1.0.

       -4     Write 16-bit linear pseudo-PGM/PPM/PAM with no gamma  curve,  no
	      white point, and no -b option.

       -T     Write TIFF output (with metadata) instead of PGM/PPM/PAM.

       -k black
	      Set the black point.  Default depends on the camera.

       -a     Automatic	 color	balance.   The default is to use a fixed color
	      balance based on a white card photographed in sunlight.

       -w     Use the color balance specified by the camera.  If this can't be
	      found, print a warning and revert to the default.

       -r mul0 mul1 mul2 mul3
	      Specify  your  own  raw color balance.  These multipliers can be
	      cut and pasted from the output of fldcraw -v.

       -H 0   Clip all highlights to solid white (default).

       -H 1   Leave highlights unclipped in various shades of pink.

       -H 2-9 Reconstruct highlights.  Low numbers favor whites; high  numbers
	      favor  colors.   Try  -H	5 as a compromise.  If that's not good
	      enough, do -H 9, cut out the  non-white  highlights,  and	 paste
	      them into an image generated with -H 3.

       -m     Same as -o 0.

       -o [0-5]
	      Select the output colorspace when the -p option is not used:

		   0   Raw color (unique to each camera)
		   1   sRGB D65 (default)
		   2   Adobe RGB (1998) D65
		   3   Wide Gamut RGB D65
		   4   Kodak ProPhoto RGB D65
		   5   XYZ

       -p camera.icm [ -o output.icm ]
	      Use  ICC	profiles to define the camera's raw colorspace and the
	      desired output colorspace (sRGB by default).

       -p embed
	      Use the ICC profile embedded in the raw photo.

       -t [0-7,90,180,270]
	      Flip the output image.  By default,  fldcraw  applies  the  flip
	      specified by the camera.	-t 0 disables all flipping.

       -s [0-99]
	      Select  which raw image to decode if the file contains more than
	      one.  For example, Fuji Super CCD SR cameras generate  a	second
	      image underexposed four stops to show detail in the highlights.

       -j     For Fuji Super CCD cameras, show the image tilted 45 degrees, so
	      that each output pixel corresponds to one raw pixel.

	      For most cameras, -s and -j are silently ignored.

SEE ALSO
       pgm(5),	ppm(5),	 pam(5),   pnmgamma(1),	  pnmtotiff(1),	  pnmtopng(1),
       gphoto2(1), cjpeg(1), djpeg(1)

AUTHOR
       Written by David Coffin, dcoffin a cybercom o net

			       November 4, 2006			    fldcraw(1)
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