pnmscalefixed - Man Page
scale a PNM file quickly
Examples (TL;DR)
- Scale an image such that the result has the specified dimensions:
pnmscalefixed -width width -height height path/to/input.pnm > path/to/output.pnm
- Scale an image such that the result has the specified width, keeping the aspect ratio:
pnmscalefixed -width width path/to/input.pnm > path/to/output.pnm
- Scale an image such that its width and height is changed by the specified factors:
pnmscalefixed -xscale x_factor -yscale y_factor path/to/input.pnm > path/to/output.pnm
Description
This program is part of Netpbm(1).
pnmscalefixed is like pamscale except that it uses fixed point arithmetic internally instead of floating point, which may make it run faster. In turn, it is less accurate and may distort the image. It also lacks many of the features of pamscale.
Use the pamscale user manual with pnmscalefixed. This document only describes the difference. Avoid any feature mentioned in the pamscale manual as not existing before Netpbm 9.9.
pnmscalefixed uses fixed point 12 bit arithmetic. By contrast, pamscale uses floating point arithmetic which on most machines is probably 24 bit precision. This makes pnmscalefixed run faster (30% faster in one experiment), but the imprecision can cause distortions at the right and bottom edges.
The distortion takes the following form: One pixel from the edge of the input is rendered larger in the output than the scaling factor requires. Consequently, the rest of the image is smaller than the scaling factor requires, because the overall dimensions of the image are always as requested. This distortion will usually be very hard to see.
pnmscalefixed with the -verbose option tells you how much distortion there is.
The amount of distortion depends on the size of the input image and how close the scaling factor is to an integral 1/4096th.
If the scaling factor is an exact multiple of 1/4096, there is no distortion. So, for example doubling or halving an image causes no distortion. But reducing it or enlarging it by a third would cause some distortion. To consider an extreme case, scaling a 100,000 row image down to 50,022 rows would create an output image with all of the input squeezed into the top 50,000 rows, and the last row of the input copied into the bottom 22 rows of output.
pnmscalefixed could probably be modified to use 16 bit or better arithmetic without losing anything. The modification would consist of a single constant in the source code. Until there is a demonstrated need for that, though, the Netpbm maintainer wants to keep the safety cushion afforded by the original 12 bit precision.
pnmscalefixed does not have pamscale's -nomix option.
Options
In addition to the options common to all programs based on libnetpbm (most notably -quiet, see Common Options ), pnmscalefixed recognizes the following command line options:
- -xsize
- -width
- -ysize
- -height
- -xscale
- -yscale
- -pixels
- -xysize
- -reduce
These options determine the scale factors. See the pamscale(1) user manual for details.
- -verbose
Report details of the transformation.
History
pnmscalefixed was originally pnmscale. In Netpbm 9.9 (November 2000) pnmscale was rewritten to use floating point arithmetic; the former fixed point arithmetic version was renamed pnmscalefixed.
See Also
pamscale(1), pamstretch(1), pamstretch-gen(1), pbmreduce(1), pbmpscale(1), pamenlarge(1), pnmscale(1), pnm(1), pam(1)
Document Source
This manual page was generated by the Netpbm tool 'makeman' from HTML source. The master documentation is at