pnmrotate man page on CentOS

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Pnmrotate User Manual(0)			      Pnmrotate User Manual(0)

NAME
       pnmrotate - rotate a PNM image by some angle

SYNOPSIS
       pnmrotate [-noantialias] [-background=color] angle [pnmfile]

DESCRIPTION
       This program is part of Netpbm(1).

       pnmrotate  reads	 a PNM image as input.	It rotates it by the specified
       angle and produces the same kind of PNM image as output.

       The input is the file named by pnmfile or Standard Input if  you	 don't
       specify pnmfile.	 The output goes to Standard Output.

       The  resulting  image  is  a  rectangle that contains the (rectangular)
       input image within it, rotated with respect to its  bottom  edge.   The
       containing  rectangle  is  as  small as possible to contain the rotated
       image.  The background of the containing image is a single  color  that
       pnmrotate  determines to be the background color of the original image,
       or that you specify explicitly.

       angle is in decimal degrees (floating point),  measured	counter-clock‐
       wise.  It can be negative, but it should be between -90 and 90.

       You  should  use pamflip instead for rotations that are a multiple of a
       quarter turn.  It is faster and more accurate.

       For rotations greater than 45 degrees you may get better results if you
       first  use  pamflip  to do a 90 degree rotation and then pnmrotate less
       than 45 degrees back the other direction.

       The rotation algorithm is Alan Paeth's three-shear method.  Each	 shear
       is implemented by looping over the source pixels and distributing frac‐
       tions to each of the destination pixels.	 This has  an  'anti-aliasing'
       effect  -  it  avoids  jagged edges and similar artifacts.  However, it
       also means that the original colors or gray levels  in  the  image  are
       modified.   If  you  need to keep precisely the same set of colors, you
       can use the -noantialias option.

       The program runs faster and uses less real memory with the -noantialias
       option.	 It  uses  a  large amount of virtual memory either way, as it
       keeps a copy of the input image and a copy of the output image in  mem‐
       ory,  using  12	bytes  per  pixel for each.  But with -noantialias, it
       accesses this memory sequentially in half a dozen passes, with  only  a
       few pages of memory at a time required in real memory.

       In  contrast,  without  -noantialias, the program's real memory working
       set size is one page per input image row plus one page per output image
       row.  Before Netpbm 10.16 (June 2003), -noantialias had the same memory
       requirement.

OPTIONS
       All options can be abbreviated to their shortest	 unique	 prefix.   You
       may use two hyphens instead of one to designate an option.  You may use
       either white space or equals signs  between  an	option	name  and  its
       value.

       -background=color
	      This determines the color of the background on which the rotated
	      image sits.

	      Specify the color (color) as described for the argument  of  the
	      ppm_parsecolor() library routine ⟨libppm.html#colorname⟩ .

	      By  default, if you don't specify this option, pnmrotate selects
	      what appears to it to be the background color  of	 the  original
	      image.   It determines this color rather simplisticly, by taking
	      an average of the colors of the two top corners of the image.

	      This option was new in Netpbm  10.15.   Before  that,  pnmrotate
	      always behaved as is the default now.

       -noantialias
	      This  option  forces  pnmrotate  to  simply  move	 pixels around
	      instead of synthesizing output pixels from multiple  input  pix‐
	      els.   The  latter could cause the output to contain colors that
	      are not in the input, which may not be desirable.	 It also prob‐
	      ably  makes the output contain a large number of colors.	If you
	      need a small number of colors, but it doesn't matter if they are
	      the  exact  ones	from the input, consider using pnmquant on the
	      output instead of using -noantialias.

	      Note that to ensure the output does not contain colors that  are
	      not  in  the input, you also must consider the background color.
	      See the -background option.

REFERENCES
       'A Fast Algorithm for General Raster Rotation' by Alan Paeth,  Graphics
       Interface '86, pp. 77-81.

SEE ALSO
       pnmshear(1), pamflip(1), pnmquant(1), pnm(1)

AUTHOR
       Copyright (C) 1989, 1991 by Jef Poskanzer.

netpbm documentation		30 August 2002	      Pnmrotate User Manual(0)
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