ppmcaption(1)ppmcaption(1)NAMEppmcaption - add text captions to PPM, PGM, or PBM images
SYNOPSISppmcaption [-font bdf-file] [-scale float] [-blur int]
[-opacity float] [-fg color] [-bg color] [-pos x y]
[-left] [-right] [-center] [-text string]
DESCRIPTION
The ppmcaption program adds text to a PPM, PGM, or PBM
image. Multiple blocks of text can be placed on the
image, with varying fonts, font sizes, colors, and trans
parency.
OPTIONSppmcaption accepts the following options:
-font filename
Specifies a BDF font file to load. If a default
font was built in to the program at compile-time,
the default is to use that. Otherwise this must
be the name of a file in Adobe Binary Distribution
Format that specifies a bitmap font, and it must
be specified before the first -text argument.
If there is a builtin font, you can reload it with
-font builtin.
-scale float
Scale the currently-selected font up or down by
the given ratio, e.g., 0.5 divides the font size
in half. When scaling down, the font will be
nicely anti-aliased onto the background image.
However, when scaling up (> 1.0), the font will
get pixellated.
Note that -scale operations are cumulative: for
cleanest results, it's best to reload the font
(with -font) before re-scaling.
-blur integer
Add an N pixel halo around the currently selected
font, so that it is visible on both light and dark
backgrounds. The font will be in the current
foreground color, and the halo in the background
color.
It tends to look better to scale then blur, rather
than the other way around.
Like -scale, -blur operations are cumulative.
Note that large blur values are pretty slow.
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ppmcaption(1)ppmcaption(1)-opacity float
How transparent to draw the next block of text.
0.0 means invisible, 1.0 means solid.
-fg color
Foreground color of next block of text. Default
is black.
-bg color
Background color (color of blur halo). Default is
white.
A small number of color names are supported
("black", "white", etc.) or hexadecimal triplets
of the form "#RRGGBB" may be used.
-pos X Y
Where to position the next block of text. Posi
tive numbers are measured from the upper left of
the image; Negative numbers are measured from the
bottom right of the image. So "-10" means near
the right (or bottom) edge, regardless of the
image size.
-left The next block of text will be flush-left, that
is, have its left edge at the current position
(this is the default.)
-right The next block of text will be flush-right, that
is, have its right edge at the current position.
-center The next block of text will be centered on top of
the current position. Note that this only applies
to the X position, not Y: multi-line text is also
centered on X, but grows down.
-text string
Place the given text in the image at the current
position and in the current font. Newlines are
allowed; tabs are not handled.
If the text contains percent (%) characters, they
are interpreted as for strftime(3), so you can
easily put timestamps into images.
-time time_t
This sets the time which will be formatted by per
cent directives in the -text arguments. It
defaults to the current time, but you can make it
be the write-date of the input file by saying
-time file, or can set it to a specific time by
specifying a number of seconds after the Epoch
(Jan 1, 1970.)
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ppmcaption(1)ppmcaption(1)SEE ALSOppm(5)strftime(3)UPDATES
See http://www.jwz.org/ppmcaption/ for updates.
You can find some common fonts in BDF form here:
http://ftp.x.org/pub/R6.4/xc/fonts/bdf/100dpi/
COPYRIGHT
Copyright 2001 by Jamie Zawinski. Permission to use,
copy, modify, distribute, and sell this software and its
documentation for any purpose is hereby granted without
fee, provided that the above copyright notice appear in
all copies and that both that copyright notice and this
permission notice appear in supporting documentation. No
representations are made about the suitability of this
software for any purpose. It is provided "as is" without
express or implied warranty.
AUTHOR
Jamie Zawinski <jwz@jwz.org>, 22-May-2001
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