NAME
pnmmontage - create a montage of PNM images
SYNOPSIS
pnmmontage
[-header=headerfile]
[-quality=n]
[-prefix=prefix]
[-0|-1|-2|...|-9]
pnmfile...
DESCRIPTION
This program is part of netpbm(1).
pnmmontage packs images of differing sizes into a
minimum-area composite image, optionally producing a C header file
with the locations of the subimages within the composite image.
OPTIONS
- -header
- Tells pnmmontage to write a C header file of the
locations of the original images within the packed image. Each
original image generates four #defines within the packed file:
xxxX, xxxY, xxxSZX, and xxxSZY, where xxx is the name of the file,
converted to all uppercase. The ouput also includes #defines
OVERALLX and OVERALLY, which specifies the total size of the
montage image.
- -prefix
- Tells pnmmontage to use the specified prefix on all of
the #defines it generates.
- -quality
- Before attempting to place the subimages, pnmmontage
will calculate a minimum possible area for the montage; this is
either the total of the areas of all the subimages, or the width of
the widest subimage times the height of the tallest subimage,
whichever is greater. pnmmontage then initiates a
problem-space search to find the best packing; if it finds a
solution that is (at least) as good as the minimum area times the
quality as a percent, it will break out of the search. Thus, -q
100 will find the best possible solution; however, it may take
a very long time to do so. The default is -q 200.
- -0, -1, ... -9
- These options control the quality at a higher level than
-q; -0 is the worst quality (literally pick the first
solution found), while -9 is the best quality (perform an
exhaustive search of problem space for the absolute best packing).
The higher the number, the slower the computation. The default is
-5.
NOTES
Using -9 is excessively slow on all but the smallest
image sets. If the anymaps differ in maxvals, then pnmmontage will
pick the smallest maxval which is evenly divisible by each of the
maxvals of the original images.
SEE ALSO
pnmcat(1),
pnmindex(1),
pnm(1),
pam(1),
pbm(1),
pgm(1),
ppm(1)
AUTHOR
Copyright (C) 2000 by Ben Olmstead.