1Pamtopng User Manual(0)                                Pamtopng User Manual(0)
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3
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NAME

6       pamtopng - convert a Netpbm image to PNG
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8

SYNOPSIS

10       pamtopng     [-verbose]     [-transparent=color]    [-background=color]
11       [-gamma=value] [-chroma='wx wy
12         rx ry gx gy bx by'] [-srgbintent=intent] [-time=[yy]yy-mm-dd
13         hh:mm:ss] [-text=file] [-ztxt=file] [-itxt=file]  [-interlace]  [pnm‐
14       file]
15
16

OPTION USAGE

18       Minimum  unique abbreviation of option is acceptable.  You may use dou‐
19       ble hyphens instead of a single hyphen to denote options.  You may  use
20       white space in place of the equals sign to separate an option name from
21       its value.
22
23

DESCRIPTION

25       This program is part of Netpbm(1).
26
27       pamtopng reads a Netpbm image as input and produces a PNG image as out‐
28       put.
29
30       Color  component  values  in PNG files are either 8 or 16 bits wide, so
31       where necessary pamtopng scales colors to  have  a  maxval  of  255  or
32       65535.  In that case, it will add an sBIT chunk to indicated the origi‐
33       nal bit-depth.
34
35       pamtopng works only on images with maxval 1, 3, 15, 255, or 65535.  You
36       can  use  pamdepth to convert an image with some other maxval to one of
37       these.
38
39       pamtopng produces a color PNG from a color PAM, even if the only colors
40       in  the  image are shades of gray.  To create a graycale PNG, from such
41       an image (which might be slightly smaller), you can  use  other  Netpbm
42       programs to convert the input to grayscale.
43
44
45   Alternative: pnmtopng
46       Netpbm  contains  another  program for generating PNG images: pnmtopng.
47       pnmtopng is a much older program - it is in fact the first  program  in
48       the  world  that could generate a PNG.  pnmtopng is a complex, feature-
49       laden program.  It lets you control various arcane aspects of the  con‐
50       version  and create PNGs with various arcane features.  It does various
51       transformations on the image to create the greatest compression  possi‐
52       ble,  to a degree that probably doesn't make any difference in the mod‐
53       ern world.
54
55       The main advantage pamtopng has over pnmtopng is that  the  former  can
56       use  the  transparency channel of a PAM image to generate the transpar‐
57       ency information in the PNG.  In contrast, handling of the alpha  chan‐
58       nel is very cumbersome with pnmotpng.
59
60       One  difference that does not exist, that some people might incorrectly
61       infer from the names is the possible input formats.  Both programs  can
62       take PBM, PGM, PPM, and PAM input.
63
64       Because pnmtopng has been around virtually forever, programs and proce‐
65       dures that use it are more portable than those that use pamtopng.   Its
66       age and popularity also probably make it have fewer bugs.
67
68       pamtopng does not have any way to do what the following do in pnmtopng:
69
70
71
72-palette
73
74-history
75
76-filter
77
78-size
79
80-paeth
81
82-hist
83
84-nofilter
85
86-sub
87
88-up
89
90-avg
91
92-force
93
94-libversion
95
96-compression
97
98-comp_xxx
99
100
101       These are some of the other functions of pnmtopng that pamtopng lacks:
102
103
104
105       •      When  you  specify a transparent or background color that is not
106              in the image, pnmtopng can optionally  choose  the  closest  one
107              that  is in the image.  pamtopng always uses the exact color you
108              specify.
109
110
111       Features that exist in both programs are controlled by largely the same
112       command syntax.  But there are these differences:
113
114
115
116pnmtopng's  -rgb  option  is  -chroma in pamtopng.  -chroma is a
117              better name, and in fact was the name that pnmtopng used  origi‐
118              nally,  but we had to change it when we had to change the syntax
119              of the option value to conform to the rest of Netpbm.
120
121
122pnmtopng's -modtime option is -time in pamtopng.  The origin  of
123              -modtime is analogous to that of -rgb.
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125
126
127
128

OPTIONS

130       In  addition  to  the options common to all programs based on libnetpbm
131       (most notably -quiet, see
132        Common Options ⟨index.html#commonoptions⟩ ), pamtopng  recognizes  the
133       following command line options:
134
135
136
137
138       -transparent=color
139              pamtopng marks the specified color as transparent in the PNG im‐
140              age.
141
142              Specify the color (color) as described for the argument  of  the
143              pnm_parsecolor()                 library                 routine
144              ⟨libnetpbm_image.html#colorname⟩ .  E.g. red or rgb:ff/00/0d.
145
146
147       -background=color
148              This causes pamtopng to create a background color chunk  in  the
149              PNG output which can be used for subsequent transparency channel
150              or transparent color conversions.  Specify color the same as for
151              -transparent.
152
153
154
155
156       -gamma=value
157              This  causes  pamtopng to create a gAMA chunk.  This information
158              helps describe how the color values in the PNG  must  be  inter‐
159              preted.   Without  the  gAMA  chunk, whatever interprets the PNG
160              must get this information separately (or just  assume  something
161              standard).  If your input is a true PPM or PGM image, you should
162              specify -gamma=.45.  But sometimes people generate images  which
163              are  ostensibly  PPM  except  the  image  uses a different gamma
164              transfer function than the one specified for PPM.  A common case
165              of  this  is  when  the image is created by simple hardware that
166              doesn't have digital computational ability.  Also,  some  simple
167              programs  that  generate  images from scratch do it with a gamma
168              transfer in which the gamma value is 1.0.
169
170
171
172
173       -chroma=chroma_list
174              This option specifies how red, green, and blue component  values
175              of a pixel specify a particular color, by telling the chromatic‐
176              ities of those 3 primary illuminants and  of  white  (i.e.  full
177              strength of all three).
178
179              The  chroma_list  value  is a blank-separated list of 8 floating
180              point decimal numbers.  The CIE-1931 X and Y chromaticities  (in
181              that  order) of each of white, red, green, and blue, in that or‐
182              der.
183
184              This information goes into the PNG's cHRM chunk.
185
186              In a shell command, make sure you use quotation  marks  so  that
187              the blanks in chroma_list don't make the shell see multiple com‐
188              mand arguments.
189
190
191       -srgbintent=intent
192              This asserts that the input is a pseudo-Netpbm image  that  uses
193              an  sRGB  color space (unlike true Netpbm) and indicates how you
194              intend for the colors to be rendered.  It causes pamtopng to in‐
195              clude an sRGB chunk in the PNG image that specifies that intent,
196              so see the PNG documentation for more information on  what  this
197              really means.
198
199              intent is one of:
200
201
202
203perceptual
204
205relativecolorimetric
206
207saturation
208
209absolutecolorimetric
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211
212
213       -text=filename
214              This  option  lets you include arbitrary text strings in the PNG
215              output, as tEXt chunks.
216
217              filename is the name of a file that contains your text strings.
218
219              The output contains a distinct tEXt chunk for each entry in  the
220              file.
221
222              Here is an example of a text string file:
223
224                   Title           PNG file
225                   Author          John Doe
226                   Description     how to include a text chunk
227                                      PNG file
228                   "Creation Date" 2015-may-11
229                   Software        pamtopng
230
231              The file is divided into entries, each entry comprising consecu‐
232              tive lines of text.  The first line of an entry  starts  in  the
233              first  column (i.e. the first column is not white space) and ev‐
234              ery other line has white space in the first column.   The  first
235              entry starts in the first line, so it is not valid for the first
236              line of the file to have white space in its first column.
237
238              The first word in an entry is the key of the text  string  (e.g.
239              'Title').   It begins in column one of the line and continues up
240              to, but not including, the first delimiter character or the  end
241              of  the  line,  whichever  is first.  You can enclose the key in
242              double quotes in which case the key  can  consists  of  multiple
243              words.  The quotes are not part of the key.  The text string per
244              se begins after the key and any delimiter characters  after  it,
245              plus the text in subsequent continuation lines.
246
247              There  is  no limit on the length of a file line or entry or key
248              or text string.  There is no limit on the number of entries.
249
250
251       -ztxt=filename
252              The same as -text, except the text string is compressed  in  the
253              PNG output.  pamtopng uses zTXt chunks instead of a tEXt chunks.
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255
256
257
258       -itxt=filename
259              Similar  to  -text,  but  the  text strings can be in a language
260              other than English.  The PNG image indicates what language  that
261              is  and  includes  the  text string key both in English and that
262              language.  pamtopng uses iTXt chunks instead of tEXt chunks.
263
264              For each record, you must specify the language and give the  key
265              both in English and in the text string language.
266
267              Example:
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269                   Language        nl-NL  Taal             nl-NL
270                      Title           nl-NL  Titel            PNG file
271                      Author          nl-NL  Auteur           Pietje Puk
272                      Description     nl-NL  Omschrijving     Tekst in het Nederlands.
273
274              The  language  specification is based on the ISO 639-1 standard,
275              see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_ISO_639-1_codes for the
276              valid  codes.   The  format is either a two character "nl" or an
277              extended code like "en-US".
278
279
280       -time='[yy]yy-mm-dd hh:mm:ss'
281              This option allows you to specify the modification time value to
282              be placed in the PNG output.  You can specify the year parameter
283              either as a two or four digit value.
284
285
286
287
288       -interlace
289              This causes the PNG file to be interlaced, in Adam7 format.  The
290              interlaced  format is one in which the raster data starts with a
291              low-resolution representation of the entire image, then  contin‐
292              ues  with additional information for the entire image, then even
293              more information, etc.  In Adam7 in particular, there are  seven
294              such passes of the whole image.  This is useful when you are re‐
295              ceiving the image over a slow communication line as  someone  is
296              waiting  to  see  it.   The simplest thing to do in that case is
297              wait for the entire image to arrive  and  then  display  it  in‐
298              stantly,  but  then  the user is wasting time staring at a blank
299              space until the whole image arrives.  With the standard  non-in‐
300              terlaced  format,  the  data  arrives row-by-row starting at the
301              top, so the displayer could display each row of the image as  it
302              arrives and gradually paint down to the bottom.  But with an in‐
303              terlaced image, the displayer can start by showing a low-resolu‐
304              tion version of the image, then gradually improve the display as
305              more data arrives.
306
307              When you specify this option, pamtopng must hold the entire  im‐
308              age  in  memory  at  once, whereas without it, the program holds
309              only one raster row at a time.  If you don't have enough  memory
310              for  that,  you  might suffer extreme slowdowns or failure - not
311              just in the process running pamtopng, but potentially throughout
312              the  system  that shares memory with it.  pnmtopng does not have
313              this limitation (it holds only one row at a time in memory  even
314              when generating an interlaced PNG).
315
316              This option was new in Netpbm 10.86 (March 2019).
317
318
319       -verbose
320              This  causes the program to display various facts about the con‐
321              version.
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323
324
325
326
327
328

SEE ALSO

330       pngtopam(1), pnmtopng(1), pam(1), pnm(1)
331
332       For  information  on  the  PNG  format,  see  http://www.w3.org/TR/PNG/
333http://www.w3.org/TR/PNG/⟩         ,        http://libpng.org/pub/png/
334http://libpng.org/pub/png/⟩                                          ,
335       http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_ISO_639-1_codes
336http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_ISO_639-1_codes⟩              and
337       http://schaik.com/png/http://schaik.com/png/⟩ .
338
339

HISTORY

341       pamtopng was new in Netpbm 10.70 (June 2015).
342
343       Before pamtopng, the two ways to create PNG images with Netpbm were pn‐
344       mtopng and pamrgbatopng.  The history of the former is discussed above.
345       The latter was added to Netpbm in 2005 as a cheap way to fill a signif‐
346       icant need that pnmtopng did not: the ability to turn the alpha channel
347       in a PAM image into the alpha channel in a PNG image.
348
349       Handling  of the alpha channel with pnmtopng is very cumbersome (as was
350       dealing with alpha channels in general before the introduction  of  the
351       PAM  format).   pamrgbatopng could do what people wanted with the alpha
352       channel, but nothing else.  It was a very small program with  literally
353       no command line options.
354
355       The  goal in those days was eventually to expand pnmtopng to do the PAM
356       alpha channel thing, rename it to pamtopng,  and  retire  pamrgbatopng.
357       But  pnmtopng  is such a complex program, because of its dizzying array
358       of features and its need for backward compatibility, that  adding  that
359       one  capability  to it was a daunting task and for ten years nobody at‐
360       tempted it.
361
362       In 2015, one of the authors of the original pnmtopng  (from  before  it
363       was  even  part of Netpbm -- a program that shared essentially no lines
364       of code with pnmtopng of 2015) decided to go in a different  direction.
365       While  many  features of pnmtopng were pretty important and easy to im‐
366       plement, many others were probably of no use in the modern world or  at
367       least  not  important enough to justify the complexity they lent to the
368       code.  (The features thought to be outdated were  ones  that  were  in‐
369       tended to make the PNG output slightly smaller - something considerably
370       less important with the declining cost of computer resources).
371
372       And there was an opportunity to drop those features: We could  use  the
373       new  name 'pamtopng' for a new program, keep the existing program under
374       the name 'pnmtopng', and avoid most backward compatibility trouble.
375
376       Therefore, Willem van Schaik wrote an intermediate level  program  that
377       had all the most important features of pnmtopng, plus the alpha channel
378       handling of pamrgbatopng, with nice, simple code.  That was pamtopng.
379
380       Because pamrgbatopng had no options, pamtopng was  backward  compatible
381       with  it  without even trying.  Therefore, as soon as we added pamtopng
382       to Netpbm, we removed pamrgbatopng and recommended that pamrgbatopng be
383       installed as an alias for pamtopng.
384
385
386

AUTHOR

388       Copyright  (C)  1995-1997  by  Alexander Lehmann and Willem van Schaik.
389       Copyright (C) 2015 by Willem van Schaik.
390

DOCUMENT SOURCE

392       This manual page was generated by the Netpbm tool 'makeman'  from  HTML
393       source.  The master documentation is at
394
395              http://netpbm.sourceforge.net/doc/pamtopng.html
396
397netpbm documentation             13 March 2019         Pamtopng User Manual(0)
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