PDL::Graphics::IIS man page on Peanut

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IIS(3)		      User Contributed Perl Documentation		IIS(3)

NAME
       PDL::Graphics::IIS - Display PDL images on IIS devices
       (saoimage/ximtool)

SYNOPSIS
	use PDL::Graphics::IIS;
	saoimage ( -geometry => '800x800' );
	iis rvals(100,100);

DESCRIPTION
       This module provides an interface to any image display 'device' which
       support the 'IIS protocol' - viz the SAOimage and Ximtool X-windows
       programs, the old SunView imtool program and presumably even the
       original IIS CRT itself if they aren't all in museums!

       These programs should be familiar to astronomer's - they are used by
       the common IRAF system. The programs and their HTML documentation can
       be obtained from the following URLs:

	SAOimage: http://tdc-www.harvard.edu/software/saoimage.html
	Ximtool:  http://iraf.noao.edu/iraf/web/projects/x11iraf/x11iraf.html

       Non-astronomer's may find they quite nifty for displaying 2D data.

       The Perl variable $stdimage is exported from the module and controls
       the frame buffer configuration currently in use. The default value is
       "imt1024" which specifies a "1024x1024" frame buffer. Other values
       supported by the module are:

	imt512, imt800, imt1024, imt1600, imt2048, and imt4096.

       If you have a $HOME/.imtoolrc you can use it to specify other frame
       buffer names and configurations in exactly the same way you can in
       IRAF. Here is a sample file:

	-------------------snip-------------------------
	# Format:  configno nframes width height
	 1  2  512  512		# imt1|imt512
	 2  2  800  800		# imt2|imt800
	 3  2 1024 1024		# imt3|imt1024
	 4  1 1600 1600		# imt4|imt1600
	 5  1 2048 2048		# imt5|imt2048
	 6  1 4096 4096		# imt6|imt4096
	 7  1 8192 8192		# imt7|imt8192
	 8  1 1024 4096		# imt8|imt1x4
	 9  2 1144  880		# imt9|imtfs	full screen (1152x900 minus frame)
	10  2 1144  764		# imt10|imtfs35 full screen at 35mm film aspect ratio
	-------------------snip-------------------------

       (Note: some versions of SAOimage may not even work if this file is not
       present. If you get funny error messages about 'imtoolrc' try copying
       the above to $HOME/.imtoolrc or /usr/local/lib/imtoolrc)

       The Perl variable $iisframe is also exported from the module and
       controls which display frame number to use in programs such as Ximtool
       which supports multiple frames. This allows you to do useful things
       such as blink between images.

       The module communicates with the IIS device down FIFO pipes (special
       UNIX files) - unlike IRAF this module does a pretty decent job of
       intelligently guessing which file names to use for the pipes and will
       prompt for their creating if absent. Also if SAOimage or Ximtool are
       started from within Perl using the module this will guarantee correct
       file names!

FUNCTIONS
       iis

       Displays an image on a IIS device (e.g. SAOimage/Ximtool)

	iis $image, [ { MIN => $min, MAX => $max,
			TITLE => 'pretty picture',
			FRAME => 2 } ]
	iis $image, [$min,$max]

	(image(m,n),[\%options]) or (image(m,n),[min(),max()])

       Displays image on a IIS device. If "min()" or "max()" are omitted they
       are autoscaled. A good demonstration of PDL threading can be had by
       giving "iis()" a data *cube* - "iis()" will be repeatedly called for
       each plane of the cube resulting in a poor man's movie!

       If supplied, "TITLE" is used to label the frame, if no title is
       supplied, either the "OBJECT" value stored in the image header or a
       default string is used (the title is restricted to a maximum length of
       32 characters).

       To specify which frame to draw to, either use the package variable
       $iisframe, or the "FRAME" option.

       iiscur

       Return cursor position from an IIS device (e.g. SAOimage/Ximtool)

	($x,$y) = iiscur($ch)

       This function puts up an interactive cursor on the IIS device and
       returns the "($x,$y)" position and the character typed ($ch) by the
       user.

       iiscirc

       Draws a circle on a IIS device (e.g. SAOimage/Ximtool)

	(x(),y(),radius(),colour())

	iiscirc $x, $y, [$radius, $colour]

       Draws circles on the IIS device with specied points and colours.
       Because this module uses PDL::PP threading you can supply lists of
       points via 1D arrays, etc.

       An amusing PDL idiom is:

	perldl> iiscirc iiscur

       Note the colours are the same as IRAF, viz:

	201 = cursor color (white)
	202 = black
	203 = white
	204 = red
	205 = green
	206 = blue
	207 = yellow
	208 = cyan
	209 = magenta
	210 = coral
	211 = maroon
	212 = orange
	213 = khaki
	214 = orchid
	215 = turquoise
	216 = violet
	217 = wheat

       saoimage

       Starts the SAOimage external program

	saoimage[(command line options)]

       Starts up the SAOimage external program. Default FIFO devices are
       chosen so as to be compatible with other IIS module functions. If no
       suitable FIFOs are found it will offer to create them.

       e.g.:

	perldl> saoimage
	perldl> saoimage( -geometry => '800x800' )

       ximtool

       Starts the Ximtool external program

	ximtool[(command line options)]

       Starts up the Ximtool external program. Default FIFO devices are chosen
       so as to be compatible with other IIS module functions. If no suitable
       FIFOs are found it will offer to create them.

       e.g.

	perldl> ximtool
	perldl> ximtool (-maxColors => 64)

BUGS
       None known

AUTHOR
       Copyright (C) Karl Glazebrook 1997.  All rights reserved. There is no
       warranty. You are allowed to redistribute this software / documentation
       under certain conditions. For details, see the file COPYING in the PDL
       distribution. If this file is separated from the PDL distribution, the
       copyright notice should be included in the file.

perl v5.10.0			  2008-08-29				IIS(3)
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