NAME
pamseq - generate PAM image of a numerical sequence of tuple values
SYNOPSIS
pamseq [-tupletype=tupletype] depth maxval [-min=n,n,...] [-max=n,n,...] [-step=n,n,...]
All options can be abbreviated to their shortest unique prefix. You may use two hyphens instead of one to designate an option. You may use either white space or an equals sign between an option name and its value.
DESCRIPTION
This program is part of Netpbm(1).
pamseq
generates a PAM image of a specified depth and specified
maxval that consists of a single row. The row consists of
tuples
containing sample values in a numerical sequence.
For example
pamseq 1 4
generates a 5
pixel wide image of 1 row with depth 1 tuples containing
these
samples, in order from left to right:
0 1 2 3 4
The following example uses depth 2:
pamseq 2 2
The resulting
image is a 9 pixel wide image of 1 row with depth 2
containing
these samples, in order from left to right;
(0,0) (0,1) (0,2) (1,0) (1,1) (1,2) (2,0) (2,1) 2,2)
You can choose
the starting and ending sample values and the step for each
plane: Here is an example of that:
pamseq 1 255 -min=4 -max=8 -step=2
This generates
4 6 8
In two dimensions:
pamseq 2 255 -min=0,4 -max=2,8 -step=1,2
(0,4) (0,6) (0,8) (1,4) (1,6) (1,8) (2,4) (2,6) (2,8)
pamseq
varies first the highest numbered plane, then the next lower
numbered plane, etc. Within each plane, the program varies
from low sample
value to high.
OPTIONS
In addition to
the options common to all programs based on libnetpbm (most
notably -quiet, see
Common Options ),
pamseq recognizes the following command line options:
-tupletype
This is the value of the "tuple_type" attribute of the created PAM image. It can be any string up to 255 characters.
-min=n,n,...
This gives the starting value
for the sequence in each plane. The number
of comma-separated numbers must be equal to the number of
planes in the
image (its depth). Each number must be a whole number no
greater than
the maxval of the image. The first number is for Plane 0,
the second for
Plane 1, etc.
The default is 0 in every plane.
This option was new in Netpbm 10.99 (June 2022).
-max=n,n,...
This is
analogous to -min, giving the ending value for the
sequence.
Each value must
be at least as great as the corresponding -min
value.
The default is the maxval in every plane.
This option was new in Netpbm 10.99 (June 2022).
-step=n,n,...
This is
analogous to -min, giving the step value for the
sequence (difference between two consecutive numbers).
Each value must be positive and no greater than the maxval.
The default is 1.
This option was new in Netpbm 10.99 (June 2022).
USAGE
To create a
simple ramp of the values 0..255, for input to various
matrix calculations, try
pamseq 1 255
(Before pamseq existed, pgmramp was often pressed into service for this).
To create a PPM
color map of all the possible colors representable with a
maxval of 5, do
pamseq 3 5 -tupletype=RGB | pamtopnm
Again, with a modern program based on the Netpbm library, you don’t need the pamtopnm because a PAM RGB image is equivalent to a PPM image.
You can use such a color map with pnmremap(1) to quantize the colors in an image. With the maxval of 5 given in the example, you get a color map of the set of "web safe" colors as defined by Netscape. Most web browsers guarantee that they can produce at least these 216 colors (215 plus black).
pamrestack can often produce a useful two-dimensional image from pamseq’s single row.
pamseq 2 255 -min=0,4 -max=2,8 -step=1,2 | pamrestack -width=3
(0,4) (0,6)
(0,8)
(1,4) (1,6) (1,8)
(2,4) (2,6) (2,8)
SEE ALSO
pnmremap(1), pamtopnm(1), pamrestack(1), pam(1)
HISTORY
pamseq was added to Netpbm in June 2002.
DOCUMENT SOURCE
This manual page was generated by the Netpbm tool ’makeman’ from HTML source. The master documentation is at