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Ppmtopjxl User Manual(0) Ppmtopjxl User Manual(0)

NAME

ppmtopjxl - convert a PPM image to an HP PaintJet XL PCL file

SYNOPSIS

ppmtopjxl [-nopack] [-gamma n] [-presentation] [-dark] [-diffuse] [-cluster] [-dither] [-xshift s] [-yshift s] [-xshift s] [-yshift s] [{-xsize|-width|-xscale} s] [{-ysize|-height|-yscale} s] [ppmfile]

DESCRIPTION

This program is part of Netpbm(1).

ppmtopjxl reads a PPM image as input and produces a PCL file suitable for printing on an HP PaintJet XL printer as output.

The generated file is not suitable for printing on a normal PrintJet printer. The -nopack option generates a file which does not use the normal TIFF 4.0 compression method. This file might be printable on a normal PaintJet printer (not an XL).

The -gamma option sets the gamma correction for the image. The useful range for the PaintJet XL is approximately 0.6 to 1.5.

You an alter the rendering algorithm used for images with the -dither, -cluster, and -diffuse options. These options select ordered dithering, clustered ordered dithering, or error diffusion respectively. You can use the -dark option to enhance images with a dark background when they are reduced in size. The -presentation option turns on presentation mode, in which two passes are made over the paper to increase ink density. You should use this only for images where quality is critical.

You can resize the image by setting the -xsize and -ysize options. The parameter to either of these options is interpreted as the number of dots to set the width or height to, but you may append an optional dimension of `pt' (points), `dp' (decipoints), `in' (inches), or `cm' (centimetres). If you specify only one dimension, ppmtopjxl will scale the other one appropriately.

The options -width and -height are synonyms of -xsize and -ysize.

You can alternatively use the -xscale and -yscale options to scale the image by a simple factor.

You can shift the image on the page with the -xshift and -yshift options. These move the image the specified dimensions right and down.

SEE ALSO

ppm(1)

AUTHOR

Angus Duggan

14 March 1991 netpbm documentation