NAME
pnmremap - replace colors in a PNM image with colors from another set
SYNOPSIS
pnmremap
-mapfile=palettefile
[-floyd|-fs|-nfloyd|-nofs]
{[-norandom]|randomseed=n}
[-firstisdefault]
[-verbose]
[-missingcolor=colorspec]
[pnmfile]
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).
pnmremap replaces the colors in an input image with those from a palette you specify. Where colors in the input are present in the palette, they just stay the same in the output. But where the input contains a color that is not in the palette, pnmremap gives you these choices:
• |
Choose the closest color from the palette. | ||
• |
Choose the first color from the palette. | ||
• |
Use a color specified by a command option (-missing). | ||
• |
Dither. This means rather than mapping pixel by pixel, pnmremap uses colors from the palette to try to make multi-pixel regions of the output have the same average color as the input (for another kind of dithering, see ppmdither). |
Two reasons to use this program are: 1) you want to reduce the number of colors in the input image; and 2) you need to feed the image to something that can handle only certain colors.
To reduce colors, you can generate the palette with pnmcolormap.
By default, pnmremap maps an input color that is not in the palette to the closest color that is in the palette. Closest means with the smallest Cartesian distance in the red, green, blue brightness space (smallest sum of the squares of the differences in red, green, and blue ITU-R Recommendation BT.709 gamma-adjusted intensities).
You can instead specify a single default color for pnmremap to use for any color in the input image that is not in the palette. Use the -missing option for this.
You can also specify that the first color in the palette image is the default. Use the -firstisdefault option for this.
The palette is simply a PNM image. The colors of the pixels in the image are the colors in the palette. Where the pixels appear in the image, and the dimensions of the image, are irrelevant. Multiple pixels of the same color are fine. However, a palette image is typically a single row with one pixel per color.
If you specify -missing, the color you so specify is in the palette in addition to whatever is in the palette image.
For historical reasons, Netpbm sometimes calls the palette a "colormap." But it doesn’t really map anything. pnmremap creates its own map, based on the palette, to map colors from the input image to output colors.
Palette/Image
Type Mismatch
In the simple case, the palette image is of the same depth
(number of planes, i.e. number of components in each tuple
(pixel)) as the input image and pnmremap just does a
straightforward search of the palette for each input tuple
(pixel). In fact, pnmremap doesn’t even care if
the image is a visual image.
But what about when the depths differ? In that case, pnmremap converts the input image (in its own memory) to match the palette and then proceeds as above.
There are only two such cases in which pnmremap knows how to do the conversion: when one of them is tuple type RGB, depth 3, and the other is tuple type GRAYSCALE or BLACKANDWHITE, depth 1; and vice versa.
In any other case, pnmremap issues and error message and fails.
Note that as long as your input and palette images are PNM, they’ll always fall into one of the cases pnmremap can handle. There’s an issue only if you’re using some exotic PAM image.
Before Netpbm 10.27 (March 2005), pnmremap could not handle the case of a palette of greater depth than the input image. (It would issue an error message and fail in that case). You can use ppmtoppm to increase the depth of the input image to work around this limitation.
In any case, the output image has the same tuple type and depth as the palette image.
Multiple
Image Stream
pnmremap handles a multiple image input stream,
producing a multiple image output stream. The input images
need not be similar in any way.
Before Netpbm 10.30 (October 2005), pnmremap ignored any image after the first.
Examples
pnmcolormap testimg.ppm 256 >palette.ppm
pnmremap -map=palette.ppm testimg.ppm >reduced_testimg.ppm
To limit colors to a certain set, a typical example is to create an image for posting on the World Wide Web, where different browsers know different colors. But all browsers are supposed to know the 216 "web safe" colors which are essentially all the colors you can represent in a PPM image with a maxval of 5. So you can do this:
pamseq 3 5 >websafe.pam
pnmremap -map=websafe.pam testimg.ppm >websafe_testimg.ppm
Another useful
palette is one for the 8 color IBM TTL color set, which you
can create with
pamseq 3 1 >ibmttl.pam
If you want to quantize one image to use the colors in another one, just use the second one as the palette. You don’t have to reduce it down to only one pixel of each color, just use it as is.
The output image has the same type and maxval as the palette image.
PARAMETERS
There is one parameter, which is required: The file specification of the input PNM file.
OPTIONS
In addition to
the options common to all programs based on libnetpbm (most
notably -quiet, see
Common Options ),
pnmremap recognizes the following command line
options:
-mapfile=palettefilename
This names the file that contains the palette image.
This option is mandatory.
-floyd |
||
-fs |
-nofloyd
-nofs |
These options determine whether pnmremap does Floyd-Steinberg dithering. Without Floyd-Steinberg, pnmremap selects the output color of a pixel based on the color of only the corresponding input pixel. With Floyd-Steinberg, pnmremap considers regions of pixels such that the average color of a region is the same in the output as in the input. The dithering effect appears as a dot pattern up close, but from a distance, the dots blend so that you see more colors than are present in the color map. |
As an example, if your color map contains only black and white, and the input image has 4 adjacent pixels of gray, pnmremap with Floyd-Steinberg would generate output pixels black, white, black, white, which from a distance looks gray. But without Floyd-Steinberg, pnmremap would generate 4 white pixels, white being the single-pixel approximation of gray.
Floyd-Steinberg gives vastly better results on images where unmodified quantization has banding or other artifacts, especially when going to a small number of colors such as the above IBM set. However, it does take substantially more CPU time.
-fs is a synonym for -floyd. -nofs is a synonym for -nofloyd.
The default is -nofloyd.
Before Netpbm 10.46 (March 2009), dithering doesn’t work quite as you expect if the color map has a lower maxval than the input. pnmremap reduces the color resolution to the color map’s maxval before doing any dithering, so the dithering does not have the effect of making the image, at a distance, appear to have the original maxval. In current Netpbm, it does.
-norandom
This option affects a detail of the Floyd-Steinberg dithering process. It has no effect if you aren’t doing Floyd-Steinberg dithering.
By default, pnmremap initializes the error propagation accumulator to random values to avoid the appearance of unwanted patterns. This is an extension of the original Floyd-Steinberg algorithm.
A drawback of this is that the same pnmremap on the same input produces slightly different output every time, which makes comparison difficult.
With -norandom, pnmremap initializes the error accumulators to zero and the output is completely predictable.
Alternatively, you can use -randomseed to get randomization across the image, but still have repeatable results.
You cannot specify this along with -randomseed.
-norandom was new in Netpbm 10.39 (June 2007).
-randomseed=n
This option affects a detail of the Floyd-Steinberg dithering process. It has no effect if you aren’t doing Floyd-Steinberg dithering.
This option supplies the seed for the random number generator used in the randomization process described in the explanation of the -norandom option. If you run pnmremap twice with the same -randomseed value, you will get identical results.
If you do not specify -randomseed, pnmremap chooses a seed at random, adding another level of randomness to the dithering.
You cannot specify this along with -norandom.
This option was new in Netpbm 10.82 (March 2018).
-firstisdefault
This tells pnmremap to map any input color that is not in the palette to the first color in the palette (the color of the pixel in the top left corner of the palette image)
See DESCRIPTION .
If you specify -firstisdefault, the maxval of your input must match the maxval of your palette image.
-missingcolor=colorspec
This specifies the default color for pnmremap to map to a color in the input image that isn’t in the palette. color may or may not be in the palette image; it is part of the palette regardless.
colorspec is as described for the argument of the pnm_parsecolor() library routine .
If you specify -missingcolor, the maxval of your input must match the maxval of your palette image.
-verbose
Display helpful messages about the mapping process.
SEE ALSO
pnmcolormap(1), pamlookup(1), pnmquant(1), ppmquantall(1), pamdepth(1), ppmdither(1), ppmquant(1), pamseq(1), ppm(1)
HISTORY
pnmremap first appeared in Netpbm 9.23 (January 2002). Before that, its function was available only as part of the function of pnmquant (which was derived from the much older ppmquant). Color quantization really has two main subfunctions, so Netpbm 9.23 split it out into two separate programs: pnmcolormap and pnmremap and then Netpbm 9.24 replaced pnmquant with a program that simply calls pnmcolormap and pnmremap.
AUTHOR
Copyright (C) 1989, 1991 by Jef Poskanzer.
DOCUMENT SOURCE
This manual page was generated by the Netpbm tool ’makeman’ from HTML source. The master documentation is at