Linux and UNIX Man Pages

Linux & Unix Commands - Search Man Pages

gouldtoppm(1) [plan9 man page]

gouldtoppm(1)						      General Commands Manual						     gouldtoppm(1)

NAME
gouldtoppm - convert Gould scanner file into a portable pixmap SYNOPSIS
gouldtoppm [gouldfile] DESCRIPTION
Reads a file produced by the Gould scanner as input. Produces a portable pixmap as output. SEE ALSO
ppm(5) AUTHOR
Copyright(C) 1990 by Stephen Paul Lesniewski 20 May 1990 gouldtoppm(1)

Check Out this Related Man Page

ppmtopict(1)                                                  General Commands Manual                                                 ppmtopict(1)

NAME
ppmtopict - convert a portable pixmap into a Macintosh PICT file SYNOPSIS
ppmtopict [ppmfile] DESCRIPTION
Reads a portable pixmap as input. Produces a Macintosh PICT file as output. The generated file is only the data fork of a picture. You will need a program such as mcvert to generate a Macbinary or a BinHex file that contains the necessary information to identify the file as a PICT file to MacOS. Even though PICT supports 2 and 4 bits per pixel, ppmtopict always generates an 8 bits per pixel file. BUGS
The picture size field is only correct if the output is to a file since writing into this field requires seeking backwards on a file. How- ever the PICT documentation seems to suggest that this field is not critical anyway since it is only the lower 16 bits of the picture size. SEE ALSO
picttoppm(1), ppm(5), mcvert(1) AUTHOR
Copyright (C) 1990 by Ken Yap <ken@cs.rocester.edu>. 15 April 1990 ppmtopict(1)
Man Page

2 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users

Shopt -s histappend

What is the point of this? Whenever I close my shell it appends to the history file without adding this. I have never seen it overwrite my history file. # When the shell exits, append to the history file instead of overwriting it shopt -s histappend (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: cokedude
3 Replies

2. UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users

What's your most useful shell?

What's your most useful shell? /bin/sh /bin/csh /bin/ksh /bin/tcsh /bin/bash (249 Replies)
Discussion started by: zylwyz
249 Replies