NAME¶
pvalue - convert RADIANCE picture to/from alternate formats
SYNOPSIS¶
pvalue [
options ] [
file ]
pvalue -r [
options ] [
file1 [
file2 file3 ] ]
DESCRIPTION¶
Pvalue converts the pixels of a RADIANCE picture to or from another
format. In the default mode, pixels are sent to the standard output, one per
line, in the following ascii format:
xpos ypos red green blue
If no
file is given, the standard input is read.
The reverse conversion option
(-r) may be used with a single input file
or when reading from the standard input, but if the second form is used with
three separate input files, the three primaries are presumed to be separated
in these files.
- -u
- Print only unique values in the output, skipping runs of
equal pixels. Specifying +u turns this option off, which is the
default.
- -o
- Print original values, before exposure compensation. If the
input file is in XYZE format, the Y (green) channel will correspond to
units of candelas/meter^2. Otherwise, the RGB values should be in spectral
watts/steradian/meter^2. Specifying +o uses final exposed values,
which is the default.
- -h
- Do not print header. Specifying +h causes the header
to be printed, which is the default.
- -H
- Do not print the resolution string. (See also the -r
option below.) Specifying an input resolution for reverse conversion also
turns this option off. Specifying +H causes the resolution string
to be printed, which is the default.
- -s nbytes
- Skip the specified number of bytes on the input header.
This option is useful for skipping unintelligible headers in foreign file
formats. (Does not work when reading from standard input.)
- -e exposure
- Adjust the exposure by the amount specified. If the
exposure is being given as a conversion factor, use +e instead, so
an EXPOSURE line will not be recorded in the header (if any).
- -g gamma
- Set gamma correction for conversion. When converting from a
RADIANCE picture to another format, the inverse gamma is applied to
correct for monitor response. When converting to a RADIANCE picture
(-r option), the gamma is applied directly to recover the linear
values. By default, gamma is set to 1.0, meaning no gamma
correction is performed.
- -d
- Data only, do not print x and y pixel position.
- -da
- Same as -d.
- -di
- Print ascii integer values from 0 to 255+. If +di is
given, the integer values will be preceded by the x and y pixel
locations.
- -db
- Output binary byte values from 0 to 255.
- -dw
- Output binary 16-bit words from 0 to 65535.
- -dW
- Output binary 16-bit words from 0 to 65535,
byte-swapped.
- -df
- Output binary float values.
- -dF
- Output byte-swapped binary float values.
- -dd
- Output binary double values.
- -dD
- Output byte-swapped binary double values.
- -R
- Reverse ordering of colors so that the output is blue then
green then red. The default ordering (specified with +R) is red
then green then blue.
- -n
- The RGB values are non-interleaved, meaning that all the
red, green and blue data are stored together in separate chunks.
Interleaving may be turned on with the +n option, which is the
default.
- -b
- Print brightness values rather than RGB. Specifying
+b turns this option off, which is the default.
- -pP
- Put out only the primary P, where P is one of
upper or lower case 'R', 'G' or 'B' for red, green or blue, respectively.
This option may be used to separate the Radiance primaries into three
files with three separate runs of pvalue, or only one file when
only one primary is needed. Note that there is no space between this
option and its argument.
- -r
- Perform reverse conversion. Input is in the format given by
the other options. The x and y resolution must be specified on the command
line, unless the image file contains a Radiance resolution string at the
beginning (see -H option above and -y option below).
Specifying +r converts from a Radiance picture to other values,
which is the default.
- -p xr yr xg yg xb yb xw yw
- On reverse conversion, RGB input uses the given set of
color primaries. These are written into the output header with the
PRIMARIES variable.
- -pXYZ
- On reverse conversion, input is in CIE XYZ coordinates,
rather than RGB. The Y channel is assumed to be in candelas/meter^2.
- -y res
- Set the output y resolution to res. If +y is
specified, then the scanlines are assumed to be in increasing order (ie.
bottom to top). The default value for this option is 0, which means that
the picture size and scanline order must appear as the first line after
the header (if any) in the input file. Either an upper or lower case 'Y'
may be used for this option. Since Radiance files always contain such a
line, this option has no effect for forward conversions.
- +x res
- Set the output x resolution to res. If -x is
specified, then the scanlines are assumed to be in decreasing order (ie.
right to left). The ordering of the -y and +x options
determines whether the scanlines are sorted along x or along y. Most
Radiance pictures are sorted top to bottom, then left to right. This
corresponds to a specification of the form "-y yres +x xres".
Either an upper or lower case 'X' may be used for this option. Like the
-y option, -x options have no effect for forward
conversions.
EXAMPLE¶
To look at the original, unique pixels in picture:
-
- pvalue -o -u picture | more
To convert from a 512x400 8-bit greyscale image in bottom to top, left to right
scanline ordering:
-
- pvalue -r -db -b -h +y 400 +x 512 input.im > flipped.hdr
pflip -v flipped.hdr > final.hdr
AUTHOR¶
Greg Ward
BUGS¶
The
-r option does not work with the
-u option. Also, input pixel
locations are ignored during a reverse conversion, so this information is not
used in determining the scanline ordering or picture size.
SEE ALSO¶
getinfo(1),
pcompos(1),
pfilt(1),
pflip(1),
protate(1),
ra_xyze(1),
rpict(1),
rtrace(1),
rvu(1)