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montage(1)					     montage(1)

NAME
       montage - creates a composite image by combining several
       separate images

SYNOPSIS
       montage [ options ...] file [ [ options ...] file ...]
       output_file

DESCRIPTION
       montage creates a composite image by combining several
       separate images. The images are tiled on the composite
       image with the name of the image optionally appearing just
       below the individual tile.

       The composite image is constructed in the following man-
       ner.  First, each image specified on the command line,
       except for the last, is scaled to fit the maximum tile
       size.  The maximum tile size by default is 120x120.  It
       can be modified with the -geometry command line argument
       or X resource.  See OPTIONS for more information on com-
       mand line arguments. See X(1) for more information on X
       resources.  Note that the maximum tile size need not be a
       square.	To respect the aspect ratio of each image append
       ~ to the geometry specification.

       Next the composite image is initialized with the color
       specified by the -background command line argument or X
       resource.  The width and height of the composite image is
       determined by the title specified, the maximum tile size,
       the number of tiles per row, the tile border width and
       height, the image border width, and the label height.  The
       number of tiles per row specifies how many images are to
       appear in each row of the composite image.  The default is
       to have 5 tiles in each row and 4 tiles in each column of
       the composite.  A specific value is specified with -tile.
       The tile border width and height, and the image border
       width defaults to the value of the X resource -border-
       width.  It can be changed with the -borderwidth or -geome-
       try command line argument or X resource. The label height
       is determined by the font you specify with the -font com-
       mand line argument or X resource.  If you do not specify a
       font, a font is chosen that allows the name of the image
       to fit the maximum width of a tiled area.  The label col-
       ors is determined by the -background and -foreground com-
       mand line argument or X resource.  Note, that if the back-
       ground and foreground colors are the same, labels will not
       appear.

       Initially, the composite image title is placed at the top
       if one is specified (refer to -foreground X resource).
       Next, each image is set onto the composite image, sur-
       rounded by its border color, with its name centered just
       below it.  The individual images are left-justified within
       the width of the tiled area.  The order of the images is

ImageMagick		 1 May 1994				1

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       the same as they appear on the command line unless the
       images have a scene keyword.  If a scene number is speci-
       fied in each image, then the images are tiled onto the
       composite in the order of their scene number.  Finally,
       the last argument on the command line is the name assigned
       to the composite image.	By default, the image is written
       in the MIFF format and can be viewed or printed with dis-
       play(1).

       Note, that if the number of tiles exceeds the default num-
       ber of 20 (5 per row, 4 per column), more than one compos-
       ite image is created. To ensure a single image is pro-
       duced, use -tile to increase the number of tiles to meet
       or exceed the number of input images.

       Finally, Finally, to create one or more empty spaces in
       the sequence of tiles, use the NULL image format.

EXAMPLES
       To create a montage of a cockatoo, a parrot, and a hum-
       mingbird and write it to a file called birds, use:

	    montage cockatoo.miff parrot.miff hummingbird.miff birds.miff

       To tile several bird images so that they are at most 256
       pixels in width and 192 pixels in height, surrounded by a
       red border, and separated by 10 pixels of background
       color, use:

	    montage -geometry 256x192+10+10 -bordercolor red birds.* montage.miff

       To create an unlabeled parrot image, 640 by 480 pixels,
       and surrounded by a border of black, use:

	    montage -geometry 640x480 -bordercolor black -label "" parrot.miff bird.miff

       To create an image of an eagle with a textured background,
       use:

	    montage -texture bumps.jpg eagle.jpg eagle.png

       To join several GIF images together without any extraneous
       graphics (e.g. no label, no shadowing, no surrounding tile
       frame), use:

	 montage +frame +shadow +label -geometry 50x50+0+0 -tile 5x1 *.gif joined.gif

OPTIONS
       -adjoin
	      join images into a single multi-image file.

       -colors value
	      preferred number of colors in the image.

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	      The actual number of colors in the image may be
	      less than your request, but never more.  Note, this
	      is a color reduction option.  Images with less
	      unique colors than specified with this option will
	      remain unchanged. Refer to quantize(9) for more
	      details.

	      Note, options -dither, -colorspace, and -treedepth
	      affect the color reduction algorithm.

       -colorspace value
	      the type of colorspace: GRAY, OHTA, RGB, Transpar-
	      ent, XYZ, YCbCr, YIQ, YPbPr, or YUV.

	      Color reduction, by default, takes place in the RGB
	      color space.  Empirical evidence suggests that dis-
	      tances in color spaces such as YUV or YIQ corre-
	      spond to perceptual color differences more closely
	      than do distances in RGB space.  These color spaces
	      may give better results when color reducing an
	      image.  Refer to quantize(9) for more details.

	      The Transparent color space behaves uniquely in
	      that it preserves the matte channel of the image if
	      it exists.

	      The -colors or -monochrome option is required for
	      this option to take effect.

       -comment string
	      annotate an image with a comment.

	      By default, each image is commented with its file
	      name.  Use this option to assign a specific comment
	      to the image.  Optionally you can include the image
	      filename, type, width, height, or scene number by
	      embedding special format characters.  Embed %f for
	      filename, %d for directory, %e for filename exten-
	      tion, %t for top of filename, %m for magick, %w for
	      width, %h for height, %s for scene number, %b for
	      file size, or \n for newline.  For example,

		   -comment "%m:%f %wx%h"

	      produces an image comment of MIFF:bird.miff 512x480
	      for an image titled bird.miff and whose width is
	      512 and height is 480.

	      If the first character of string is @, the image
	      comment is read from a file titled by the remaining
	      characters in the string.

       -compose operator
	      the type of image composition.

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	      By default, each of the composite image pixels are
	      replaced by the corresponding image tile pixel. You
	      can choose an alternate composite operation:

		  over
		  in
		  out
		  atop
		  xor
		  plus
		  minus
		  add
		  subtract
		  difference
		  bumpmap
		  replace

	      The operations behaves as follows:

       over   The result will be the union of the two image
	      shapes, with composite image obscuring image in the
	      region of overlap.

       in     The result is simply composite image cut by the
	      shape of composite image window.	None of the image
	      data of image will be in the result.

       out    The resulting image is composite image with the
	      shape of image cut out.

       atop   The result is the same shape as image image, with
	      composite image obscuring image where the image
	      shapes overlap.  Note this differs from over
	      because the portion of composite image outside
	      image's shape does not appear in the result.

       xor    The result is the image data from both composite
	      image and image that is outside the overlap region.
	      The overlap region will be blank.

       plus   The result is just the sum of the image data.  Out-
	      put values are cropped to 255 (no overflow).  This
	      operation is independent of the matte channels.

       minus  The result of composite image - image, with under-
	      flow cropped to zero.  The matte channel is ignored
	      (set to 255, full coverage).

       add    The result of composite image + image, with over-
	      flow wrapping around (mod 256).

       subtract
	      The result of composite image - image, with

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montage(1)					     montage(1)

	      underflow wrapping around (mod 256).  The add and
	      subtract operators can be used to perform
	      reversible transformations.

       difference
	      The result of abs(composite image - image).  This
	      is useful for comparing two very similar images.

       bumpmap
	      The result of image shaded by composite image.

       replace
	      The resulting image is image replaced with compos-
	      ite image.  Here the matte information is ignored.

	      The image compositor requires a matte, or alpha
	      channel in the image for some operations. This
	      extra channel usually defines a mask which repre-
	      sents a sort of a cookie-cutter for the image.
	      This is the case when matte is 255 (full coverage)
	      for pixels inside the shape, zero outside, and
	      between zero and 255 on the boundary.  If image
	      does not have a matte channel, it is initialized
	      with 0 for any pixel matching in color to pixel
	      location (0,0), otherwise 255 (to work properly
	      borderwidth must be 0).

       -compress type
	      the type of image compression: No, RunlengthEn-
	      coded, or Zip.

	      Specify +compress to store the binary image in an
	      uncompressed format.  The default is the compres-
	      sion type of the specified image file.

       -crop <width>{%}x<height>{%}{+-}<x offset>{+-}<y offset>
	      preferred size and location of the cropped image.
	      See X(1) for details about the geometry specifica-
	      tion.

	      To specify a percentage width or height instead,
	      append %. For example to crop the image by ten
	      percent on all sides of the image, use -crop 10%.

	      Use cropping to tile only a particular area of an
	      image.  Use -crop 0x0 to remove edges that are the
	      background color.

	      The equivalent X resource for this option is crop-
	      Geometry (class CropGeometry).  See X RESOURCES for
	      details.

       -density <width>x<height>
	      vertical and horizontal resolution in pixels of the

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montage(1)					     montage(1)

	      image.

	      This option specifies an image density when decod-
	      ing a Postscript or Portable Document page.  The
	      default is 72 pixels per inch in the horizontal and
	      vertical direction.

       -display host:display[.screen]
	      specifies the X server to contact; see X(1).

	      Specify +display if an X server is not available.
	      The label font is obtained from the X server.  If
	      none is available, the composite image will not
	      have labels. Since the X server is necessary to
	      read X resources, all options must be set via the
	      command line when +display is specified.

       -dispose method
	      GIF disposal method.

	      Here are the valid methods:

		   0	No disposal specified.
		   1	Do not dispose.
		   2	Restore to background color.
		   3	Restore to previous.

       -dither
	      apply Floyd/Steinberg error diffusion to the image.

	      The basic strategy of dithering is to trade inten-
	      sity resolution for spatial resolution by averaging
	      the intensities of several neighboring pixels.
	      Images which suffer from severe contouring when
	      reducing colors can be improved with this option.

	      The -colors or -monochrome option is required for
	      this option to take effect.

       -draw string
	      annotate an image with one or more graphic primi-
	      tives.

	      Use this option to annotate an image with one or
	      more graphic primitives.	The primitives include

		   rectangle
		   circle
		   polygon
		   color
		   matte
		   text
		   image

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	      Rectangle, color, matte, text, and image require an
	      upper left and lower right coordinate.  Circle
	      requires the center coordinate and a coordinate on
	      the outer edge.  Finally, polygon requires three or
	      more coordinates defining its boundaries. Coordi-
	      nates are integers separated by an optional comma.
	      For example, to define a circle centered at 100,100
	      that extends to 150,150 use:

		   -draw 'circle 100,100 150,150'

	      Use color to change the color of a pixel. Follow
	      the pixel coordinate with a method:

		   point
		   replace
		   floodfill
		   reset

	      Consider the target pixel as that specified by your
	      coordinate.  The point method recolors the target
	      pixel.  The replace method recolors any pixel that
	      matches the color of the target pixel.  Floodfill
	      recolors any pixel that matches the color of the
	      target pixel and is a neighbor.  Finally, reset
	      recolors all pixels.

	      Use matte to the change the pixel matte value to
	      transparent.  Follow the pixel coordinate with a
	      method (see the color primitive for a description
	      of methods).  The point method changes the matte
	      value of the target pixel.  The replace method
	      changes the matte value of any pixel that matches
	      the color of the target pixel.  Floodfill changes
	      the matte value of any pixel that matches the color
	      of the target pixel and is a neighbor. Finally
	      reset changes the matte value of all pixels.

	      Use text to annotate an image with text.	Follow
	      the text coordinates with a string.  If the string
	      has embedded spaces, enclose it in double quotes.
	      Optionally you can include the image filename,
	      type, width, height, or scene number by embedding
	      special format characters.  Embed %f for filename,
	      %d for directory, %e for filename extention, %t for
	      top of filename, %m for magick, %w for width, %h
	      for height, %s for scene number, %b for file size,
	      or \n for newline.  For example,

		   -draw 'text 100,100 "%m:%f %wx%h"'

	      annotates the image with MIFF:bird.miff 512x480 for
	      an image titled bird.miff and whose width is 512
	      and height is 480.

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	      If the first character of the string is @, the text
	      is read from a file titled by the remaining charac-
	      ters in the string.

	      Use image to composite an image with another image.
	      Follow the image coordinates with the filename of
	      an image.

	      If the first character of string is @, the text is
	      read from a file titled by the remaining characters
	      in the string.

	      You can set the primitive color, font color, and
	      font bounding box color with -pen, -font, and -box
	      respectively.  Options are processed in command
	      line order so be sure to use -pen before the -draw
	      option.

       -font name
	      use this font when annotating the image with text.

	      Convert contacts an X server to obtain the font.
	      If an X server is not available, a Postscript font
	      is used.	You can set the pointsize with -point-
	      size.

       -frame surround the image with an ornamental border.

	      The color of the border is specified with the -mat-
	      tecolor command line option.  If no frame is
	      desired, use +frame.

       -gamma value
	      level of gamma correction.

	      The same color image displayed on two different
	      workstations may look different due to differences
	      in the display monitor.  Use gamma correction to
	      adjust for this color difference. Reasonable val-
	      ues extend from 0.8 to 2.3.

	      You can apply separate gamma values to the red,
	      green, and blue channels of the image with a gamma
	      value list delineated with slashes (i.e.
	      1.7/2.3/1.2).

       -geometry <width>x<height>+<border width>+<border
       height>{!}{<}{>}
	      preferred tile and border size of each tile of the
	      composite image.

	      By default, the width and height are maximum val-
	      ues.  That is, the image is expanded or contracted

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	      to fit the width and height value while maintaining
	      the aspect ratio of the image.  Append an exclama-
	      tion point to the geometry to force the image size
	      to exactly the size you specify.	For example, if
	      you specify 640x480! the image width is set to 640
	      pixels and height to 480. If only one factor is
	      specified, both the width and height assume the
	      value.

	      Use > to change the dimensions of the image only if
	      its size exceeds the geometry specification.  <
	      resizes the image only if its dimensions is less
	      than the geometry specification.	For example, if
	      you specify 640x480> and the image size is 512x512,
	      the image size does not change.  However, if the
	      image is 1024x1024, it is resized to 640x480.

	      Each image is surrounded by a border whose size in
	      pixels is specified as <border width> and <border
	      height> and whose color is the background color.
	      By default, the tile size is 256x256 and there is
	      no border.

	      The equivalent X resource for this option is image-
	      Geometry (class ImageGeometry).  See X RESOURCES
	      for details.

       -gravity direction
	      direction image gravitates to within a tile.  See
	      X(1) for details about the gravity specification.

	      A tile of the composite image is a fixed width and
	      height.  However, the image within the tile may not
	      fill it completely (see -geometry).  The direction
	      you choose specifies where to position the image
	      within the tile.	For example Center gravity forces
	      the image to be centered within the tile. By
	      default, the image gravity is Center.

       -interlace type
	      the type of interlacing scheme: No, Line, Plane, or
	      Partition.  The default is Plane.

	      This option is used to specify the type of inter-
	      lacing scheme for raw image formats such as RGB or
	      YUV.  No means do not interlace (RGBRGBRGBRGBRG-
	      BRGB...), Line uses scanline interlacing
	      (RRR...GGG...BBB...RRR...GGG...BBB...), and Plane
	      uses plane interlacing
	      (RRRRRR...GGGGGG...BBBBBB...).  Partition is like
	      plane except the different planes are saved to
	      individual files (e.g.  image.R, image.G, and
	      image.B).

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	      Use Line, or Plane to create an interlaced GIF or
	      progressive JPEG image.

       -label name
	      assign a label to an image.

	      By default, each image is labeled with its file
	      name.  Use this option to assign a specific label
	      to the image.  Optionally you can include the image
	      filename, type, width, height, or scene number in
	      the label by embedding special format characters.
	      Embed %f for filename, %d for directory, %e for
	      filename extention, %t for top of filename, %m for
	      magick, %w for width, %h for height, %s for scene
	      number, %b for file size, or \n for newline.  For
	      example,

		   -label "%m:%f %wx%h"

	      produces an image label of MIFF:bird.miff 512x480
	      for an image titled bird.miff and whose width is
	      512 and height is 480.

	      If the first character of string is @, the image
	      label is read from a file titled by the remaining
	      characters in the string.

       -matte store matte channel if the image has one.

       -mode type
	      the type of montage: Frame, Unframe, Concatentate.
	      The default is Unframe.

	      This option is for convenience.  You can obtain the
	      desired result by setting individual options (e.g.
	      Unframe is equivalent to +frame +shadow +border-
	      width).

       -monochrome
	      transform the image to black and white.

       -page <width>x<height>{+-}<x offset>{+-}<y offset>
	      preferred size and location of the Postscript page.

	      Use this option to specify the dimensions of the
	      Postscript page in pixels per inch or a TEXT page
	      in pixels.  The default for a Postscript page is to
	      center the image on a letter page 612 by 792 pix-
	      els. The margins are 1/2" (i.e.  612x792+42+42).
	      Other common sizes are:

		  Letter      612x 792
		  Tabloid     792x1224
		  Ledger     1224x 792

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montage(1)					     montage(1)

		  Legal 612x1008
		  Statement   396x 612
		  Executive   540x 720
		  A3	  842x1190
		  A4	  595x 842
		  A5	  420x 595
		  B4	  729x1032
		  B5	  516x 729
		  Folio 612x 936
		  Quarto      610x 780
		  10x14 720x1008

	      For convenience you can specify the page size by
	      media (e.g.  A4, Ledger, etc.).

	      To place a Postscript image with a given size on a
	      given location on a page, use -page +HOFFSET+VOFF-
	      SET -geometry WIDTHxHEIGHT (fill in numbers). Note:
	      this is only for generating Postscript, not Encap-
	      sulated Postscript.

	      To position a GIF image, use -page +LEFT+TOP (e.g.
	      -page +100+200).

	      The default page dimensions for a TEXT image is
	      612x792.

       -pointsize value
	      pointsize of the Postscript font.

       -quality value
	      JPEG quality setting.

	      Quality is 0 (worst) to 100 (best). The default is
	      75.

       -rotate degrees{<}{>}
	      apply Paeth image rotation to the image.

	      Use > to rotate the image only if its width exceeds
	      the height.  < rotates the image only if its width
	      is less than the height.	For example, if you spec-
	      ify -90> and the image size is 480x640, the image
	      is not rotated by the specified angle.  However, if
	      the image is 640x480, it is rotated by -90 degrees.

	      Empty triangles left over from rotating the image
	      are filled with the color defined as bordercolor
	      (class borderColor).

       -scene value
	      image scene number.

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       -shadow
	      add a shadow beneath a tile to simulate depth.

       -size <width>{%}x<height>{%}{+offset}{!}
	      width and height of the image.

	      Use this option to specify the width and height of
	      raw images whose dimensions are unknown such as
	      GRAY, RGB, or CMYK.  In addition to width and
	      height, use -size to skip any header information in
	      the image or tell the number of colors in a MAP
	      image file, (e.g. -size 640x512+256).

       -texture filename
	      name of texture to tile onto the image background.

       -tile <width>x<height>
	      specifies how many tiles are to appear in each row
	      and column of the composite image.

	      Specify the number of tiles per row with width and
	      tiles per column with height.  For example if you
	      want 1 tile in each row and a maximum of 10 tiles
	      in the composite image, use -tile 1x10.  The
	      default is to have 5 tiles in each row and 4 tiles
	      in each column of the composite.

       -transparency color
	      make this color transparent within the image.

       -treedepth value
	      Normally, this integer value is zero or one.  A
	      zero or one tells montage to choose a optimal tree
	      depth for the color reduction algorithm.

	      An optimal depth generally allows the best repre-
	      sentation of the source image with the fastest com-
	      putational speed and the least amount of memory.
	      However, the default depth is inappropriate for
	      some images.  To assure the best representation,
	      try values between 2 and 8 for this parameter.
	      Refer to quantize(9) for more details.

	      The -colors or -monochrome option is required for
	      this option to take effect.

       -verbose
	      print detailed information about the image.

	      This information is printed: image scene number;
	      image name;  image size; the image class (Direct-
	      Class or PseudoClass);  the total number of unique
	      colors;  and the number of seconds to read and
	      write the image.

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       In addition to those listed above, you can specify these
       standard X resources as command line options:  -back-
       ground, -bordercolor, -borderwidth, -font, -foreground,
       -mattecolor, or -title.	See X RESOURCES for details.

       Options are processed in command line order.  Any option
       you specify on the command line remains in effect until it
       is explicitly changed by specifying the option again with
       a different effect.  For example, to montage two images,
       the first with 32 colors and the second with only 16 col-
       ors, use:

	    montage -colors 32 cockatoo.1 -colors 16 cockatoo.2
       cockatoo.miff

       Change - to + in any option above to reverse its effect.
       For example, specify +dither to not apply error diffusion
       to an image.

       By default, the image format is determined by its magic
       number. To specify a particular image format, precede the
       filename with an image format name and a colon (i.e.
       ps:image) or specify the image type as the filename suffix
       (i.e. image.ps). See convert(1) for a list of valid image
       formats.

       When you specify X as your image type, the filename has
       special meaning. It specifies an X window by id, name, or
       root.  If no filename is specified, the window is selected
       by clicking the mouse in the desired window.

       Specify input_file as - for standard input, output_file as
       - for standard output.  If input_file has the extension .Z
       or .gz, the file is uncompressed with uncompress or gunzip
       respectively.  If output_file has the extension .Z or .gz,
       the file size is compressed using with compress or gzip
       respectively.  Finally, precede the image file name with |
       to pipe to or from a system command.

       Use an optional index enclosed in brackets after a file
       name to specify a desired subimage of a multi-resolution
       image format like Photo CD (e.g. img0001.pcd[4]) or a
       range for MPEG images (e.g. video.mpg[50-75]).  A subimage
       specification can be disjoint (e.g. image.tiff[2,7,4]).
       For raw images, specify a subimage with a geometry (e.g.
       -size 640x512 image.rgb[320x256+50+50]).

       Single images are written with the filename you specify.
       However, multi-part images (e.g. a multi-page Postscript
       document with +adjoin specified) are written with the
       filename followed by a period (.) and the scene number.
       You can change this behavior by embedding a printf format
       specification in the file name.	For example,

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montage(1)					     montage(1)

	    image%02d.miff

       montages files image00.miff, image01.miff, etc.

       Note, a composite MIFF image displayed to an X server with
       display behaves differently than other images.  You can
       think of the composite as a visual image directory.
       Choose a particular tile of the composite and press a but-
       ton to display it.  See display(1) and miff(5) for
       details.

X RESOURCES
       montage options can appear on the command line or in your
       X resource file. Options on the command line supersede
       values specified in your X resource file.  See X(1) for
       more information on X resources.

       All montage options have a corresponding X resource.  In
       addition, montage uses the following X resources:

       background (class Background)
	      Specifies the preferred color to use for the com-
	      posite image background.	The default is #ccc.

       borderColor (class BorderColor)
	      Specifies the preferred color to use for the com-
	      posite image border.  The default is #ccc.

       borderWidth (class BorderWidth)
	      Specifies the width in pixels of the composite
	      image border.  The default is 2.

       font (class Font)
	      Specifies the name of the preferred font to use
	      when displaying text within the composite image.
	      The default is 9x15, fixed, or 5x8 determined by
	      the composite image size.

       foreground (class Foreground)
	      Specifies the preferred color to use for text
	      within the composite image.  The default is black.

       matteColor (class MatteColor)
	      Specify the color of an image frame.  A 3D  effect
	      is achieved  by using highlight and shadow colors
	      derived from this color.	The default value is
	      #ccc.

       title (class Title)
	      This resource specifies the title to be placed at
	      the top of the composite image.  The default is not
	      to place a title at the top of the composite image.

ImageMagick		 1 May 1994			 14

montage(1)					     montage(1)

ENVIRONMENT
       display
	      To get the default host, display number, and
	      screen.

SEE ALSO
       display(1), animate(1), import(1), mogrify(1), convert(1),
       combine(1), xtp(1)

COPYRIGHT
       Copyright 1997 E. I. du Pont de Nemours and Company

       Permission to use, copy, modify, distribute, and sell this
       software and its documentation for any purpose is hereby
       granted without fee, provided that the above copyright
       notice appear in all copies and that both that copyright
       notice and this permission notice appear in supporting
       documentation, and that the name of E. I. du Pont de
       Nemours and Company not be used in advertising or public-
       ity pertaining to distribution of the software without
       specific, written prior permission.  E. I. du Pont de
       Nemours and Company makes no representations about the
       suitability of this software for any purpose.  It is pro-
       vided "as is" without express or implied warranty.

       E. I. du Pont de Nemours and Company disclaims all war-
       ranties with regard to this software, including all
       implied warranties of merchantability and fitness, in no
       event shall E. I. du Pont de Nemours and Company be liable
       for any special, indirect or consequential damages or any
       damages whatsoever resulting from loss of use, data or
       profits, whether in an action of contract, negligence or
       other tortious action, arising out of or in connection
       with the use or performance of this software.

ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
       The MIT X Consortium for making network transparent graph-
       ics a reality.

       Michael Halle, Spatial Imaging Group at MIT, for the ini-
       tial implementation of Alan Paeth's image rotation algo-
       rithm.

       David Pensak, E. I. du Pont de Nemours and Company, for
       providing a computing environment that made this program
       possible.

       Paul Raveling, USC Information Sciences Institute, for the
       original idea of using space subdivision for the color
       reduction algorithm.

AUTHORS
       John Cristy, E.I. du Pont de Nemours and Company Incorpo-
       rated

ImageMagick		 1 May 1994			 15

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