README for sam2p by pts@fazekas.hu at Sun Dec 30 19:30:17 CET 2001 -- Fri Mar 22 19:25:03 CET 2002 Sat Apr 27 00:39:12 CEST 2002 Wed Jul 3 01:20:40 CEST 2002 Wed Feb 5 19:46:51 CET 2003 grammatical corrections by Steve Turner at Mon Jan 10 00:53:46 CET 2005 This is the README file for sam2p, a raster to PostScript/PDF image conversion program. This file contains a 5-minute turbo tutorial for new and impatient users (search for the phrase `Turbo tutorial' in your text editor). As of now, this README file is the only, and definitive, documentation of sam2p. sam2p is a UNIX command line utility written in ANSI C++ that converts many raster (bitmap) image formats into Adobe PostScript or PDF files and several other formats. The images are not vectorized. sam2p gives full control to the user to specify standards-compliance, compression, and bit depths. In some cases sam2p can compress an image 100 times smaller than the PostScript output of many other common image converters. sam2p provides ZIP, RLE and LZW (de)compression filters even on Level1 PostScript devices. A testimonial from Grant Ingram, UK: Anyway this is just a quick note to say thanks for writing the sam2p utility which I am using to create EPS figures of photographs for my thesis -- it works very well producing image sizes that are some 3% of the ones produced by ImageMagick. Does sam2p generate small EPS (and PDF) files? A testimonial from Tom Schneider, US: -rw------- 1 toms delila 88628 Mar 3 17:38 prototype-small.eps -rw------- 1 toms delila 7979299 Feb 24 12:25 prototype.eps Good GRIEF you have written a nice program!!!! The file is 90 fold smaller than the one from Imagemagick's convert. That image that was 90x smaller had been bugging me because it was so large that xdvi would strongly hesitate while I passed by the page. Now it just has a minor delay, thanks to you. Many thanks to Steve Turner for reviewing and making corrections to this documentation. The author of sam2p recommends his program over other image converters because of the following reasons: -- sam2p produces much smaller output -- sam2p gives the user complete control over the data layout of the output image. This includes Compression, SampleFormat and TransferEncoding. -- sam2p is fast -- sam2p doesn't depend on external libraries. (But it does depend on external programs for _reading_ JPEG, TIFF and PNG files.) -- sam2p supports the mainstream image formats of today without compromise. sam2p has many file format fine-tuning features that are missing from most other converter utilities. For example: TIFF ZIP compression, TIFF LZW compression, TIFF JPEG compression, transparent PNG files, BMP RLE-4 and RLE-8 compression, etc. -- sam2p supports all levels (versions) of the PostScript language and output images have the smallest file size allowed by the LanguageLevel. -- PostScript ZIP, RLE and LZW compression is provided for _all_ LanguageLevels (!), even for PSL1 (which appeared in 1980). You can print your ZIP-compressed images onto your ancient printer of the 1980s. -- sam2p supports all versions of PDF, and as with PostScript, output images have the smallest file size allowed by the version. -- output images of sam2p are always compliant to the standard selected by the user -- output images of sam2p are real-world compatible, i.e the author has tested them with many common image processing programs, for example: Ghostscript, pdfTeX, xpdf, Acrobat Reader, The GIMP, ImageMagick, xv, Acrobat Distiller, QuarkXPress, InDesign. The author has also tested PostScript files on HP and OkiData printers. -- sam2p converts every pixel faithfully, preserving all the 24 RGB bits intact. There is no quality or information loss unless you ask for it. -- sam2p uses only a minimal number of libraries. You don't have to install 33Mb of ballast software to use sam2p. Image libraries (libtiff etc.) are _not_ used, the math library is not used, libstdc++ is not used, zlib is not used. Long-term limitations: -- only DeviceRGB color space, with the Indexed, Gray and RGB image types -- Indexed images are limited to a maximum of 256 colors -- alpha channel and transparency supported only for Indexed images: only one color may be transparent -- the entire input image is read into memory. During operation both the input and the output images may be held in memory. Status ~~~~~~ sam2p is currently beta software. It is available from: http://www.inf.bme.hu/~pts/sam2p/ http://www.inf.bme.hu/~pts/sam2p-latest.tar.gz http://sam2p.sf.net/ The documentation is incomplete, but -- together with the examples -- it is quite useful. Please have a look at the home page to find articles and more documentation (the PDF docs are much more eye-pleasing than this README). The source code contains valuable comments, but they may be hard to find unless you're deeply into developing sam2p. The author is developing sam2p in his free time. (He is studying and working in non-free time.) The imaging model is complete. Image output routines are stable and adequate. Reasonable defaults are provided for all command line options. sam2p can usually find the best SampleFormat automatically. There is an educated (but not perfect) default guess for the Compression. See subsection {OutputRule combinations} about all planned formats. The most important short-term limitations: -- The code hasn't been extensively tested. The author welcomes bug reports. -- The code hasn't been profiled for speed bottlenecks. (Although it seems to be faster than ImageMagick convert(1) in most situations.) Turbo tutorial ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Quick compilation instructions: 1. ./configure --enable-lzw --enable-gif 2. make 3. Copy the `sam2p' executable to your $PATH, or invoke it as `./sam2p'. Quick try: -- ./sam2p examples/pts2.pbm try.eps -- ./sam2p examples/pts2.pbm try.pdf -- ./sam2p examples/pts2.pbm try.ps -- ./sam2p examples/pts2.pbm try.png -- ./sam2p examples/pts2.pbm try.tiff -- ./sam2p examples/pts2.pbm try.xpm -- ./sam2p examples/pts2.pbm try.bmp -- ./sam2p examples/pts2.pbm try.jpg A really short User's guide """"""""""""""""""""""""""" To convert an image, call: ./sam2p Example: ./sam2p examples/pts2.pbm try.eps To print an image as a full PostScript page, call: ./sam2p [MARGIN-SPECS] ps: - | lpr Example: ./sam2p -m:1cm examples/pts2.pbm ps: - | lpr To convert an image to be included as EPS (Encapsulated PostScript) into (La)TeX documents, call: ./sam2p Example: ./sam2p examples/pts2.pbm test.eps In file.tex: \usepackage{graphicx} ... \includegraphics{test} To convert an image to be included as PDF into pdf(La)TeX documents, call: ./sam2p Example: ./sam2p examples/pts2.pbm test.pdf In file.tex: \usepackage{graphicx} ... \includegraphics{test} If you have a large image file (possibly originating from dumb software), you can reduce the image size and keep the same filename. (Please note that some meta-information may be lost using this method.) This operation is _DANGEROUS_ if you don't have a backup, because due to a software or hardware problem, sam2p might clobber time image file so the actual image gets lost. To overwrite a file in-place, call: ./sam2p -- Example: ./sam2p test.tiff -- You may specify a compression method (or supply other command line options) to make a file even smaller, call: ./sam2p [OPTIONS] Example: ./sam2p -c:zip test.tiff test2.tiff See the detailed documentation of available command-line options elsewhere in this document. You may also read section {FAQ} for more information. Too see a list about the supported input and output image file formats, call: ./sam2p Example output: This is sam2p v0.39. Available Loaders: JAI PNG JPEG TIFF PNM BMP GIF LBM XPM PCX TGA. Available Appliers: XWD Meta Empty BMP PNG TIFF6 TIFF6-JAI JPEG-JAI JPEG PNM GIF89a XPM PSL1C PSL23+PDF PDF-JAI PSL2-JAI l1fa85g P-TrOpBb. Usage: [...] The list of ``Available Loaders'' lists the input image file formats. All except for JAI are self-explanatory. JAI is JPEG-as-is, it means reading a JPEG file and writing back the exactly same image into an other JPEG variant, without quality loss. From the list of ``Available Appliers'' one can derive the supported output image file formats. XWD, BMP, PNG, TIFF6, JPEG, PNM, GIF89a and XPM are self-explanatory. TIFF6-JAI, JPEG-JAI, PDF-JAI and PSL2-JAI are JPEG variants into which JAI files (see above) can be saved. While the names of the remaining appliers may be quite cryptic to the beginner user; most of those appliers provide sam2p's excellent support for writing PS, EPS and PDF files. sam2p operation modes ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ sam2p is a command line utility (i.e, without a graphical user interface), so it can be used by composing a command line with the appropriate options and parameters, and launching it. See sections ``Turbo tutorial'' and ``One-liner mode'' for more details. sam2p is not interactive, it doesn't ask questions; thus it is completely suitable for batch processing and automation. sam2p doesn't log errors, but its STDERR can be redirected to a log file quite easily. There are three modes sam2p can operate in: -- one-liner mode: (since sam2p 0.37) the user, perhaps, has to type a long command line, specifying the input and the output file name, output file format, compression options, etc. Most of the functionality of sam2p is available in a quite intuitive way in one-liner mode. Users of the `convert' utility from ImageMagick and `tiff2ps' and `tiffcp' will find that one-liner mode of sam2p is very similar to them. This mode is recommended for impatient users. Due to the nature of sam2p development, some new functionality of job mode might be missing from one-liner mode. Please report this as a bug. -- job mode: the user has to write a ``job'' file (recommended extension: .job), which specifies all conversion parameters, including the input and output file name. The name of the job file must be passed to sam2p. This mode is recommended for expert users who want to retain full control of all aspects of the final output. All functionality is available in job mode. This is especially useful in repetative but time separated jobs. -- GUI mode: This is completely experimental, and will be very probably dropped in the near future. Try executing sam2p.tk (TCL/Tk is required). Please don't use GUI mode, use one-liner mode instead! The flexability of a one-liner (or job) mode is nearly imposible to encompas in a GUI. No more documentation is provided for GUI mode. There might be a Micro$oft Windoze version of sam2p available in the near future, but very probably you won't get real GUI with radio boxes, lists and file selection dialogs. You'll have to start sam2p from the DOS prompt... One-liner mode ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ This section contains a reference-style summary for the one-liner mode. The author knows that this section is quite incomprehensible, and a bit old. He is planning to completely rewrite it to be readable for the novice user. The order of the arguments and options is significant. Input file extension is discarded. The file format is recognised by its magic number. Output file extension gives a hint for /FileFormat: .ps :\ .eps : \ where PS: implies scale to fit page .epsi : > PSL1 PSLC PSL2 PSL3 and .epsf : / EPS: implies no scale changes [E]PS::/ also see Q9 in FAQs below .pdf : \ PDF1.0 PDF1.2 (and) PDF: : / PDFB1.0 PDFB1.2 .gif : GIF89a .pnm : PNM (for use with transparency) .pbm : PNM /SampleFormat/Gray1 .pgm : PNM /SampleFormat/Gray8 .ppm : PNM /SampleForamt/Rgb8 .pam : PAM .pip : PIP .empty : Empty .meta : Meta .jpeg : JPEG .jpg : " .tiff : TIFF .tif : " .png : PNG .xpm : XPM .bmp : BMP /Compression/RLE .rle : BMP /Compression/RLE Options (case insensitive): -- --tmpremove {true|false} : remove temporary files after completion. Set to false for debugging. Default: true. -- -j -j:job : display in-memory .job file -- -j:warn : be verbose and display warnings about impossible combinations in the .job file -- -j:quiet : print only error and fatal error messages, suppress warnings, notices etc. Must be put at the beginning of the command line to suppress initial banners, too. For example, `sam2p -j:quiet in.gif out.eps'. -- -s:Indexed1:Indexed4:Indexed8: Try /SampleFormats in this order, and try all others after these. Can be specified separately (e.g `-s Indexed1 -s Indexed2:Indexed8') -- -s:Indexed1:Indexed4:Indexed8:stop: Try only these /SampleFormats in this order. Can be specified separately (e.g `-s Indexed1:Indexed2 -s Indexed8:stop') -- -s:Indexed1:Indexed4:Indexed8:stopq: Try only these /SampleFormats in this order, be quiet (no warnings on failures). Can be specified separately (e.g `-s Indexed1:Indexed2 -s Indexed8:stop') -- -s:tr equivalent to `-s Transparent:Opaque:Mask:Transparent2:Transparent4:Transparent8' -- -l:... : /LoadHints(...) -- disabled: -a: /LoadHints(asis) extra /Compression/JAI; load JPEG files (and others as-is) -- -1 -ps:1 PSL1: : [tiff2ps] hint /FileFormat/PSL1 among /PSL* -- -1c -ps:1c -ps:c PSLC: : [pts] hint /FileFormat/PSLC among /PSL* -- -2 -ps:2 PSL2: EPS2: : [tiff2ps,imagemagick] default hint /FileFormat/PSL2 among /PSL* -- -3 -ps:3 PSL3: : [pts] hint /FileFormat/PSL3 among /PSL* -- -pdf:b0 PDFB1.0: : [pts] hint /FileFormat/PDFB1.0 among /PDF* (PDF 1.0 with inline image) -- -pdf:b2 PDFB1.2: : [pts] default hint /FileFormat/PDFB1.2 among /PDF* (PDF 1.2 with inline image; default because image processors usually keep inline images intact, so they wouldn't want to inefficiently recompress our image) -- -pdf:0 PDF1.0: : [pts] hint /FileFormat/PDF1.0 among /PDF* (PDF 1.0 with XObject image) -- -pdf:2 PDF1.2: : [pts] hint /FileFormat/PDF1.2 among /PDF* (PDF 1.2 with XObject image) -- EPS: EPSF: : [pts] hint /FileFormat/PSL2 or /FileFormat/PSL3 (for /Compression/ZIP) -- PDF: : [pts] hint /FileFormat/PDFB1.0 or /FileFormat/PDFB1.2 (for /Compression/ZIP) -- PS: : [pts] hint /Scale/RotateOK /FileFormat/PSL2 or /FileFormat/PSL3 (for /Compression/ZIP) -- PS2: : [imagemagick] hint /Scale/RotateOK /FileFormat/PSL2. Deprecated, please use PS:. -- -e:0 -e:none : /Scale/None -- -e -e:1 -e:scale : /Scale/OK -- -e:rot -e:rotate : /Scale/RotateOK -- GIF: GIF89a: : [imagemagick,pts] /FileFormat/GIF89a -- JPEG: JPG: : [imagemagick,pts] /FileFormat/JPEG -- TIFF: TIF: : [imagemagick,pts] /FileFormat/TIFF -- PNG: : [imagemagick] /FileFormat/PNG -- XPM: : [imagemagick] /FileFormat/XPM -- BMP: : [imagemagick] /FileFormat/BMP -- Empty: : [pts] /FileFormat/Empty -- Meta: : [pts] /FileFormat/Meta -- PIP: : [pts] /FileFormat/PIP -- PAM: : [pts] /FileFormat/PAM -- PNM: : [imagemagick] /FileFormat/PNM (for use with transparency) -- PBM: : [imagemagick] /FileFormat/PNM /SampleFormat/Gray1 -- PGM: : [imagemagick] /FileFormat/PNM /SampleFormat/Gray8 -- PPM: : [imagemagick] /FileFormat/PNM /SampleFormat/Rgb8 -- -t:bin : [pts] hint /TransferEncoding/Binary (default unless /PS*) -- -t:hex : [pts] hint /TransferEncoding/Hex (default for /PSL1 /PSLC) -- -t:a85 : [pts] hint /TransferEncoding/A85 (default for /PSL2 /PSL3) -- -t:ascii : [pts] hint /TransferEncoding/ASCII -- -t:lsb1 -f:lsb2msb : [pts,tiffcp] hint /TransferEncoding/LSBfirst -- -t:msb1 -f:msb2lsb : [pts,tiffcp] hint /TransferEncoding/MSBfirst -- -c:none : [pts,tiffcp] non-default hint /Compression/None -- -c:lzw : [pts,tiffcp] hint /Compression/LZW -- -c:lzw:(1..99) : [pts] hint /Compression/LZW /Predictor ... -- -c:zip : [pts,tiffcp] hint /Compression/ZIP -- -c:zip:(1..99) : [pts] hint /Compression/ZIP /Predictor ... -- -c:zip:(1..99):(-1..9) : [pts] hint /Compression/ZIP /Predictor ... /Effort ... -- -c:(rle|packbits) : [pts,tiffcp] hint /Compression/RLE -- -c:(rle|packbits):(0..) : [pts] hint /Compression/RLE /RecordSize ... -- -c:fax : [pts] hint /Compression/Fax -- -c:fax:(-1..) : [pts] hint /Compression/Fax /K ... -- -c:dct : [pts] hint /Compression/DCT /DCT<<>> -- -c:dct:... : [pts] hint /Compression/DCT /DCT<<...>> -- -c:jpeg : [pts,tiffcp] hint /Compression/JAI, /Compression/IJG -- -c:jpeg:(0..100) : [pts] hint /Compression/JAI, /Compression/IJG /Quality ... -- -c:ijgi : [pts,tiffcp] hint /Compression/IJG -- -c:ijg:(0..100) : [pts] hint /Compression/IJG /Quality ... -- -c:g4 : [pts] equivalent to -c:fax:-1 -- -c:g3 -c:g3:1d : [pts] equivalent to -c:fax:0, -c:fax -- -c:g3:2d : [pts] equivalent to -c:fax:-2 -- -c:jai : [pts] hint /Compression/JAI -- -m:dpi:(dimen) : set /ImageDPI to `dimen' -- -m:(dimen) \ : set all margins (/TopMargin,/BottomMargin, /LeftMargin, /RightMargin) to `dimen' -m:all:(dimen) \ : /LeftMargin, /RightMargin) to `dimen' -m:a:(dimen) : -- -m:horiz:(dimen) \ : set /LeftMargin and /RightMargin to `dimen' -m:h:(dimen) \ : -m:x:(dimen) : -- -m:vert:(dimen) \ : set /TopMargin and /BottomMargin to `dimen' -m:v:(dimen) \ : -m:y:(dimen) : -- -m:left:(dimen) \ : set /LeftMargin to `dimen' -m:l:(dimen) : -- -m:right:(dimen) \ : set /RightMargin to `dimen' -m:r:(dimen) : -- -m:top:(dimen) \ : set /TopMargin to `dimen' -m:t:(dimen) \ : -m:up:(dimen) \ : -m:u:(dimen) : -- -m:bottom:(dimen) \ : set /BottomMargin to `dimen' -m:b:(dimen) \ : -m:down:(dimen) \ : -m:d:(dimen) : -- -- : if given as last arg, then OutputFile:=InputFile -- -- : if given earlier than last arg, then treat other args as filenames -- -transparent:(rgb) Change the all pixels having the specified RGB color to transparent. Previously transparent pixels are not changed. See FAQ answer A44 for an exampe. Default and fallback compression types for each file format: -- PSL1 PSLC : /RLE -- PSL2 PDFB1.0 PDF1.0 : /JAI /RLE -- PSL3 PDFB1.2 PDF1.2 : /JAI /ZIP -- GIF89a : /LZW -- XPM PNM PAM PIP Empty Meta : )/None) -- JPEG : /JAI /IJG -- TIFF : /JAI /LZW? /RLE -- PNG : /ZIP -- BMP : /RLE Overview of job mode ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ In the ``job mode'' sam2p doesn't accept any command line options. It must be controlled from the ``job'' files. In ''job mode'' sam2p expects a single command line argument: the name of the Job file (file format described in section {Jobs}). sam2p runs that single job, prints debug, info, notice, warning and error messages (etc.), and creates a single output file: a PS or a PDF. For multiple jobs and/or multiple output files, one has to run sam2p multiple times. The details about the output file format (including standards-compliance, compression and transfer encoding) are specified in the Job file and other files. Thus, in order to make use of the (basic and) advanced features of sam2p in job mode, you have to: 1. Understand the basic concepts (i.e read through this manual, and have a look at the examples). 2. Prepare the input raster (bitmap) graphics file in one of the supported input formats (see section {Supported input formats}). 3. Decide the name of the output file. 4. Decide some or all details of the output format. 5. Create a Job file that describes those details. 6. Invoke the program `sam2p' with the name of the Job file as a single command-line argument (or `-' if the Job file is fed on STDIN). 7. Read warning and error messages (printed to STDOUT and STDERR), and retry if necessary. Compilation and installation ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ External software required for running sam2p: -- a UNIX system with a fairly standard BSD or POSIX C library (C++ libraries are not required), or a Win32 system with MSVCRT.DLL (install Wordpad to get MSVCRT.DLL) -- optionally: the libjpeg `cjpeg' utility for /Compression/IJG -- optionally: the libjpeg `djpeg' utility for reading JPEG files -- optionally: tif22pnm (uses libtiff) from the author of sam2p -- optionally: png22pnm (uses libpng) from the author of sam2p -- optionally: the Ghostscript `gs' utility for /Compression/DCT -- optionally: the Ghostscript `gs' utility for /Compression/Fax These do not work yet (in version 0.44): -- optionally: the `lzw_codec' utility for alternative /Compression/LZW -- optionally: the GNU `gzip' utility for alternative /Compression/ZIP -- optionally: the Info-ZIP `zip' utility for alternative /Compression/ZIP For Win32 compilation, see later. Software required for UNIX compilation: -- a UNIX system -- a working, GNU-compatible C++ compiler (preferably GNU G++ >=2.91. Known working compilers: g++-2.91 g++-2.95 g++-3.0 g++-3.1 g++-3.2) -- GNU Make (`make -v' should print `GNU Make') -- Perl >=5.004 (no external Perl modules are required) -- a Bourne-compatible shell (preferably GNU Bash >=2.0) -- the following libraries are _not_ required: libjpeg, libtiff, libpng, libungif, PDFlib, zlib, libm, libstdc++ -- optionally: GNU autoconf >=2.53 (version number is important, see AC_C_CONST) Compilation: # compile and install required programs autoconf # optional, for experts only export CC=gcc-3.2 CXX=g++-3.2 # optional, for experts only ./configure --enable-gif --enable-lzw make # the stand-alone utility `./sam2p' is now built make install # optional, may not work If installation doesn't work, please copy the file `sam2p' to somewhere in your $PATH, for example /usr/local/bin. Please also copy the README to a directory like /usr/share/doc/sam2p. There is no man page -- the documentation is the readme. Testing: ./sam2p ./sam2p examples/ptsbanner_zip.job ./sam2p examples/pts2.pbm try.eps gs test.ps # try other examples: examples/*.job On Debian systems, you'll need GNU Make, Perl, GNU Bash and any of the following packages for compilation: apt-get install libc6-dev gcc-2.95 g++-2.95 apt-get install libc6-dev gcc-3.0 g++-3.0 apt-get install libc6-dev gcc-3.1 g++-3.1 apt-get install libc6-dev gcc-3.2 g++-3.2 apt-get install libc6-dev gcc-3.3 g++-3.3 apt-get install libc6-dev gcc-3.4 g++-3.4 Please also run any of the following before ./configure: export CC=gcc-2.95 CXX=g++-2.95 export CC=gcc-3.0 CXX=g++-3.0 # or g++-3.1 etc. Optionally, you may install any of apt-get install gccchecker apt-get install autoconf sam2p has been tested with a wide variety of GNU C++ compilers, including g++-2.91, g++-2.95, g++-3.0, g++-3.1, g++-3.2, i386-uclibc-g++-2.95, checkerg++-2.95. The program must be compilable _without_ _warnings_ with any of g++-2.91, g++-2.95, g++-3.0, g++-3.1, g++-3.2. If there is a compilation error, send a brief e-mail to the author immediately! Portability ~~~~~~~~~~~ sam2p is quite portable on UNIX systems. It runs on: Debian GNU/Linux Slink 2.2.13 glibc-2.0.7 (development platform) Debian GNU/Linux Potato 2.2.18 glibc-2.1.3 Debian GNU/Linux Sid 2.4.17 glibc-2.2.5 Digital OSF1 V4.0 1229 alpha Slackware 8.0/8.1 2.4.5 libc-2.2.3 gcc-2.95.3 SunOS 5.7 Generic_106541-17 sun4u sparc SUNW,Ultra-2 gcc-2.95.2 SunOS 5.8 Generic_108528-12 sun4u sparc gcc-3.0.4 Also it runs on Win32 in command line (sam2p.exe) and GUI mode (vcsam2p.exe). Command line mode is stable and it is recommended on this platform. It should work on any Linux or BSD system without modification. Porting to other Unices should be quite easy. The author welcomes portability patches. Porting to non-UNIX systems may be hard. Reasons: -- Those systems might not have GNU Make, Perl or a Bourne-compatible shell installed. So the Makefile supplied won't work, and many man hours of extra work would be necessary. -- sam2p uses the popen(3) library call to communicate with external processes. This call might not be available on non-UNIX systems. -- sam2p expects that the $PATH contains the external binaries. Some systems tend to have empty or misconfigured $PATH. On some systems, `gs' is called `gswin32c.exe' etc. sam2p 0.38 has been compiled and run successfully on: -- Linux 2.2.8 Debian Slink, g++-2.91 -- Linux 2.4.18-ac3 Debian SID, g++-2.95, g++-3.0, g++-3.1, g++-3.2 Executable size: 318kB. -- Linux 2.4.2 Debian Potato, gcc version 2.95.2 20000220 (Debian GNU/Linux) No warnings. Compilation took 0:47, executable size: 330kB. -- Linux 2.2.16-3 Red Hat Linux release 6.2 (Zoot), gcc version egcs-2.91.66 19990314/Linux (egcs-1.1.2 release) No warnings. Compilation took 0:44, executable size: 324kB. -- OSF1 V4.0 564 alpha, gcc version 2.7.2.2 (tons of: warning: cast discards `const' from pointer target type, tons of: warning: the meaning of `\x' varies with -traditional tons of: warning: cast increases required alignment of target type) Compilation took 5 minutes, executable size: 550kB. -- SunOS 5.7 Generic_106541-19 sun4u sparc SUNW,Ultra-2, gcc version 3.1 (some: warning: cast from `char*' to `int*' increases required alignment of target type) Compilation took 2:50, executable size: 437kB. -- SunOS 5.8 Generic_108528-15 sun4u sparc, gcc version 3.1.1 (some: warning: cast from `char*' to `int*' increases required alignment of target type) Compilation took 1:26, executable size: 437kB. -- Slackware 8.0/8.1, kernel 2.4.5, libc.6.so (libc-2.2.3) gcc-2.95.3 sam2p 0.42 has been compiled and run successfully on: -- Windows 98, Visual C++ 6.0 -- Windows 98, MSYS, MingGW, G++ 3.2 Win32 compilation instructions for command-line mode ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ To compile sam2p.exe, the Win32 equivalent of the UNIX utility sam2p, you have to install these build dependencies first: -- MinGW and MSYS, available from http://www.mingw.org -- Perl 5.004 or newer (only perl.exe and perl5*.dll are required), available from http://www.perl.com. Note that this will be a long download and a bloated install, but after that, just copy perl.exe and the single perl5*.dll to your C:\WINDOWS directory, and uninstall the rest. To build sam2p: 1. Install all the build dependencies. 2. Open the MSYS terminal window from the start menu. 3. Run `explorer .' to figure out what is the current working directory. Let's call this directory the MSYS home. 4. Download the sam2p sources into the MSYS home: http://www.inf.bme.hu/~pts/sam2p-latest.tar.gz 5. Unpack the sources. Run: tar xzvf sam2p-latest.tar.gz tar xvf sam2p-latest.tar.gz # if the previous one doesn't work 6. Run `cd sam2p-*.*' to enter the sam2p source directory. It should contain a newer version of this README and the file sam2p_main.cpp. 7. Run `perl -edie' to check whether Perl is correctly installed. It should print a line beginning with `Died '. If no such line appears (or you get a `command not found' error message), go and install Perl first. Run `echo $PATH' to find out where MSYS is searching for perl.exe. Copy perl.exe to one of those directories. 8. Run ./configure --enable-gif --enable-lzw make 9. The file sam2p.exe is now created in the current directory. Use it. You may copy it to another directory right now: cp sam2p.exe 'C:\Program Files' 10. You should invoke sam2p.exe from the command line (COMMAND.COM or CMD.EXE) with the _appropriate_ arguments, described elsewhere in this document. Don't put it into the Start menu, it won't work. (a window will flash in and disappear, showing an error message that you haven't supplied the right arguments). 11. The file bts2.tth is also created. It is an important file, because it is required for the GUI compilation. 12. Don't forget to install tif22pnm.exe to load TIFF files, djpeg.exe to load JPEG files, cjpeg.exe to save JPEG files, and png22pnm.exe to load PNG files. The installation instructions for these programs are not given here. Win32 compilation instructions for GUI mode ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ vcsam2p.exe is a preliminary, alpha-stage attempt to provide a Win32 GUI for sam2p.exe. Currently it can load and display images, but not cannot save them. vcsam2p.exe is not ready for production use. Feel free to enhance the code. Just remember to semd me copies. You'll need Visual Studio 6.0 installed. 1. Download the sam2p sources: http://www.inf.bme.hu/~pts/sam2p-latest.tar.gz 2. Download untarka.exe to be able to unpack the sources: http://www.inf.bme.hu/~pts/untarka.exe 3. Unpack the sources. Run: untarka.exe sam2p-latest.tar.gz A directory sam2p-*.* will be created, containing a newer version of this README and the file config-vc6.h 4. You'll need bts2.tth. You can get an old, possibly outdated and buggy version directly: http://www.inf.bme.hu/~pts/bts2.tth Or, you may compile sam2p under Linux (or Win32 command-line), and copy the generated bts2.tth from there. Copy bts2.tth to the same directory as config-vc6.h 5. Start the Visual C++ 6.0 environment. 6. File / Open Workspace / File type: Projects Filename: vcsam2p.dsp Build / Set Active Configuration: vcsam2p - Win32 Release Build / Build vcsam2p.exe Build / Execute vcsam2p.exe 7. Don't forget to install tif22pnm.exe to load TIFF files, djpeg.exe to load JPEG files, cjpeg.exe to save JPEG files, and png22pnm.exe to load PNG files. The installation instructions for these programs are not given here. Please report and fix bugs in vcsam2p.exe Copyright ~~~~~~~~~ sam2p is written and owned by Szabó Péter . sam2p contains code from various people. sam2p may be used, modified and redistributed only under the terms of the GNU General Public License, found in the file COPYING in the distribution, or at http://www.fsf.org/licenses/gpl.html Supported input formats ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ -- PNM, PBM, PGM, PPM (preferred formats for non-transparent images) -- PNM+PGM, PNM+PBM. The input is a concatenation of a PNM and a P[GB]M file with the same dimensions. The second P[GB]M contains the alpha channel. -- XPM (preferred formats for indexed images with transparency) -- BMP -- GIF, with transparency -- LBM (IFF ILBM), with transparency -- TGA (Targa) -- baseline JPEG JFIF (limited by /Compression/JAI) -- PCX -- JPEG, is supported with libjpeg/djpeg -- TIFF, is supported with the author's tif22pnm, with transparency; also works in a limited way with tifftopnm (Debian package libtiff-tools) -- PNG, is supported with the author's png22pnm, with transparency (part of the tif22pnm sources); also works in a limited way with libpng/pngtopnm (Debian package graphics/pnmtopng); with transparency -- PS, EPS, PDF: Ghostscript is needed (`gs' or `gswin32c.exe'), see also FAQ question Q39. Note that only the major features of these file formats are supported. sam2p is able to load most of these files, but not all of them. Important, but unsupported input formats: -- XBM -- XWD -- Utah RLE Input image model ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ A (sampled, raster, bitmap) image is a rectangular array of pixels (dots) plus some metadata. Each pixel is represented by an unsigned integer which is BPC (BitsPerComponent) and CPP (ComponentsPerPixel) wide. The image coordinate system (X,Y) is defined as: upper left corner is (0,0), upper right corner is (Width-1,0), lower right corner is (Width-1,Height-1). (Note that this is the natural, traditional top->down, left->right system, and it is different from PostScript and PDF!). Some pixels of the image may be without color: they're transparent. A transparent pixel is not painted, so whatever was left under it on the paper, remains visible. (On the other hand, a colored pixel overrides the pixel below unconditionally. E.g a white pixel overrides a black pixel, a half-gray pixel, and also another white pixel; but a transparent pixel leaves the original one visible.). Notions referring to transparent pixels are: transparency, opacity, transparent, opaque, alpha channel, matte channel. Images are read from image files on disk. The file format is autodetected (see section {Supported input formats}), and it can also be specified in the Job file (NOT implemented yet). Not all file formats are able to specify all pixel data and metadata, so additional hints (such as the transparent color or the name of the image author) can be specified in Job files. Sample formats ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ The image pixels could be packed to bytes according to several sample formats. Each output file (both EPS and PDF) has its own SampleFormat (notation: capitals). A color is either transparent or it is an opaque RGB triplet (8*3 bits). The number of colors is the number of colors actually _used_. So unused palette entries, and e.g unused #555555 in gray-4 are not counted. If PSLC is required, but the printer is only PSL1, then the color image will be printed grayscale. When _choosing_ the output format, sam2p doesn't degrade image quality. For example, if an image has only two colors: #000001 and #ffffff, sam2p won't allow the gray-1 sample format, but with #000000 and #ffffff, it will. The user is expected to have an image editor in which she can adjust image colors precisely (such as in the Dialogs/(Indexed palette) dialog of The GIMP). Supported Sample Formats: Name: Fast compatibility Slow compatibility Criteria for the image -- Comment(...) transparent: (specialisation of mask) all - the whole image is transparent -- implemented with empty image body opaque: (specialisation of mask and indexed-1) all - the whole image contains the same, opaque color -- implemented with `setrgbcolor', `fill' mask: (specialisation of transparent-2) all - a transparent and a non-transparent color (any may be missing) -- display a Warning if the whole image is transparent or opaque, because transparent or opaque would be a better choice -- implemented with a single call to `imagemask' indexed-1: all - exactly 2 non-transparent colors or 1 non-transparent color -- display a Warning if only 1 non-transparent color, because opaque would be a better choice -- display a Notice if colors are in black (#000000) and white (#ffffff), beacuse gray-1 would be a better choice -- implemented with a `setrgbcolor', `fill', and a single call to `imagemask' indexed-2: PSL2, PDF1.0?? PSLC 3 or 4 non-transparent colors or 1..2 non-transparent colors -- display a Warning if only 1..2 non-transparent colors, because opaque or indexed-1 would be a better choice -- display a Notice if colors are in (#000000, #555555, #aaaaaa, #ffffff), beacuse gray-2 would be a better choice -- implemented with the /Indexed color space or colorimage + manual palette lookup -- users with a PSL1 printer without PSLC should use transparent-* indexed-4: PSL2, PDF1.0?? PSLC 5..16 non-transparent colors or 1..4 non-transparent colors -- display a Warning if only 1..4 non-transparent colors, because opaque, indexed-1 or indexed-2 would be a better choice -- display a Warning if all components are #00 or #ff, because rgb-1 would be a better choice (3 bits over 4 bits) -- display a Notice if colors are in (#000000, #111111, ..., #ffffff), beacuse gray-4 would be a better choice -- implemented with the /Indexed color space or colorimage + manual palette lookup -- users with a PSL1 printer without PSLC should use transparent-* indexed-8: PSL2, PDF1.0?? PSLC 17..256 non-transparent colors or 1..16 non-transparent colors -- display a Warning if only 1..16 non-transparent colors, because opaque, indexed-1, indexed-2, indexed-4 would be a better choice -- display a Warning if all components are #00, #55, #aa or #ff, because rgb-2 would be a better choice (6 bits over 8 bits) -- display a Notice if all colors are gray, beacuse gray-8 would be a better choice -- implemented with the /Indexed color space or colorimage + manual palette lookup -- users with a PSL1 printer without PSLC should use transparent-* transparent-2: all - 0..1 transparent and 1..3 non-transparent colors -- display a Notice that color separation was done (which can decrease speed and compression) -- display a Warning if no transparent color, because `indexed-2' would be a better choice -- display a Warning if only 1 non-transparent color, because `mask' would be a better choice -- implemented with multiple calls to `setrgbcolor', `imagemask' transparent-4: all - a transparent and 1..15 non-transparent colors -- display a Notice that color separation was done (which can seriously decrease speed and compression) -- display a Warning if only 1..3 non-transparent colors, because `mask' or `transparent-2' would be a better choice -- implemented with multiple calls to `setrgbcolor', `imagemask' transparent-8: all - a transparent and 1..255 non-transparent colors -- display a Warning that color separation was done (which can seriously decrease speed and compression) -- display a Warning if only 1..15 non-transparent colors, because `mask', `transparent-2' or `transparent-4' would be a better choice -- implemented with multiple calls to `setrgbcolor', `imagemask' gray-1: all - colors are in black (#000000) and white (#ffffff) -- display a Warning if only 1 color, because opaque would be a better choice -- implemented with the multiple-argument `image' gray-2: all - colors are in (#000000, #555555, #aaaaaa, #ffffff) -- display a Warning if only 1..2 colors, because opaque, indexed-1, or gray-1 would be a better choice -- implemented with the multiple-argument `image' gray-4: all - colors are in (#000000, #111111, ..., #ffffff) -- display a Warning if only 1..4 colors, because opaque, indexed-1, gray-1, indexed-2 or gray-2 would be a better choice -- implemented with the multiple-argument `image' gray-8: all - colors must be gray -- display a Warning if only 1..16 colors, because opaque, indexed-1, gray-1, indexed-2, gray-2, indexed-4 or gray-4 would be a better choice -- implemented with the multiple-argument `image' rgb-1: PSLC, PDF1.0 - color components must be #00 or #ff (8 colors max) -- display a Warning if all colors are gray -- display a Warning if only 1..4 colors, because opaque, indexed-1, indexed-2 (or gray-*) would be a better choice -- implemented with `colorimage' rgb-2: PSLC, PDF1.0 - color components must be #00, #55, #aa or #ff (64 colors max) -- display a Warning if all colors are gray -- display a Warning if only 1..16 colors, because opaque, indexed-1, indexed-2 or indexed-4 (or gray-*) would be a better choice choice (this includes the case when color components are in #00, #ff) -- implemented with `colorimage' rgb-4: PSLC, PDF1.0 - color components must be #00, #11, ... #ff (4096 colors max) -- display a Warning if all colors are gray -- display a Warning if only 1..256 colors, because opaque, indexed-1, indexed-2, indexed-4 or indexed-8 (or gray-*) would be a better choice (this includes the case when color components are in #00, #55, #aa, #ff) -- implemented with `colorimage' rgb-8: PSLC, PDF1.0 - no transparency -- display a Warning if all colors are gray -- display a Warning if only 1..256 colors, because opaque, indexed-1, indexed-2, indexed-4 or indexed-8 (or gray-*) would be a better choice -- display a Warning if all color components are in #00, #11, ... #ff, because rgb-4 would be a better choice -- implemented with `colorimage' The following directed (acyclic) graph represents that some formats should be tried earlier than others to avoid most Warning and Notice messages. The graph was created according to the descriptions above. EarlierFormat LaterFormat transparent mask opaque mask opaque indexed-1 indexed-1 indexed-2 indexed-2 indexed-4 indexed-4 indexed-8 gray-1 gray-2 gray-2 gray-4 gray-4 gray-8 rgb-1 rgb-2 rgb-2 rgb-4 rgb-4 rgb-8 gray-1 indexed-1 gray-2 indexed-2 gray-4 indexed-4 gray-8 indexed-8 rgb-1 indexed-4 rgb-2 indexed-8 mask transparent-2 transparent-2 transparent-4 transparent-4 transparent-8 opaque gray-1 indexed-1 gray-2 indexed-2 gray-4 indexed-4 gray-8 opaque rgb-1 gray-1 rgb-1 gray-2 rgb-2 gray-4 rgb-4 gray-8 rgb-8 indexed-2 rgb-1 indexed-4 rgb-2 indexed-8 rgb-4 indexed-8 rgb-8 Every directed acyclic graph (DAG) has a topological ordering on its nodes. Such an ordering can be computed by the UNIX (Version 7 AT&T UNIX) utility tsort(1). Its output on the author's machine: opaque transparent gray-1 indexed-1 mask transparent-2 gray-2 indexed-2 transparent-4 rgb-1 gray-4 indexed-4 transparent-8 rgb-2 gray-8 indexed-8 rgb-4 rgb-8 This ordering should be taken into account when someone develops her Rule Profile. Rules having SampleFormats listed earlier should be earlier in the Rule Profile to avoid Warning and Notice messages. The availability (and also Warnings and Notices) of a Sample Format for a particular image can be easily decided after answering the following characteristic questions: -- Is transparency _used_? -- How many _used_ non-transparent colors are there? (257 if >=257) -- Is there a non-gray color? -- How many bits are required (maximum) for each component? Output rules ~~~~~~~~~~~~ Every detail of the output file format is precisely determined by the Output Rule. The Output Rule may be specified in the Job file, or is automatically chosen from several pre-defined output rules in the Output Profile (see section {Output profiles} elsewhere in this document). Output rule entries: -- FileFormat: enum (see section {Standards} for detailed information), no default /PSL1 -- PostScript Level1 /PSLC -- PostScript Level1 with the CMYK and `colorimage' extension /PSL2 -- PostScript Level2 (default) /PSL3 -- PostScript Level3 /PDFB1.0 -- PDF version 1.0, BI inline image, see 4.8.6 in PDFRef.pdf /PDFB1.2 -- PDF version 1.2, BI inline image, see 4.8.6 in PDFRef.pdf /PDF1.0 -- PDF version 1.0, XObject image, see 4.8.4 in PDFRef.pdf /PDF1.2 -- PDF version 1.2, XObject image, see 4.8.4 in PDFRef.pdf /GIF89a /Empty /Meta /PNM /PAM /PIP /TIFF /JPEG /PNG /XPM -- SampleFormat: enum, no default, see section {Sample formats} /Opaque /Transparent /Gray1 /Indexed1 /Mask /Transparent2 /Gray2 /Indexed2 /Transparent4 /Rgb1 /Gray4 /Indexed4 /Transparent8 /Rgb2 /Gray8 /Indexed8 /Rgb4 /Rgb8 /Asis -- accept contents of the JAI file /Bbox -- no image, only bounding box information -- WarningOK: boolean; this Output Rule is enabled iff WarningOK is true or SampleFormat causes no warnings, default: true -- TransferEncoding: enum, no default /Binary -- Binary (RawBits, see pbm(5), pgm(5), ppm(5)) (Binary integers are stored in any byte order allowed by /FileFormat) /ASCII -- ASCII (text, chars: 9,10,13,32..126), used with transparent and opaque /Hex /AHx -- Hex ((PSL1), PDF1.0, PSL2 ASCIIHexEncode filter) /A85 -- A85 (PSL2 PDF1.0, ASCII85Encode filter) /MSBfirst -- Binary data with integers stored in MSB first byte order. If 0x41424344 is represented as "ABCD", the byte order is called: big endian, MSB, MSB first (preferred), most significant byte first, most significant bit first, MSB-to-LSB, network byte order, m68k byte order. QuarkXPress 3 can read only TIFF files with MSB-to-LSB byte order. /LSBfirst -- Binary data with integers stored in LSB first byte order. If 0x41424344 is represented as "DCBA", the byte order is called: little endian, LSB, LSB first (preferred), least significant byte first, least significant bit first, LSB-to-MSB, VAX byte order, PC (i386) byte order. -- Compression: enum /None -- None (default) /LZW -- LZW (PSL2 PDF1.0 LZWEncode filter EarlyChange=true, UnitLength=8 LowBitFirst=false) /ZIP /Flate /Fl -- ZIP (PSL3 PDF1.2 FlateEncode filter without options) /RLE /RunLength /RunLengthEncoded /RL /PackBits -- RLE (PSL2 PDF1.0 RunLengthEncode filter, similar to TIFF PackBits) /Fax /CCITTFax /CCF -- Fax (PSL2 PDF1.0 CCITTFaxEncode filter, Uncompressed=true!, K=-1,0,1, EndOfLine=false, EncodedByteAlign=false, Columns=..., Rows=0, EndOfBlock=true, BlackIs1=false, DamagedRowsBeforeError=0) /DCT -- DCT (PSL2 PDF1.0 DCTEncode, options in JPEG stream) /IJG /JPEG /JPG /JFIF -- IJG (PSL2 PDF1.0 DCTEncode, options in JPEG stream; the IJG libjpeg library is used for compression, respecting the quality value 0..100). This requires /SampleFormat/Rgb8 or /SampleFormat/Gray8. This doesn't work with /SampleFormat/Asis. /JAI -- JAI (PSL2 PDF1.0 DCTEncode, options in JPEG stream; JPEG-as-is: the input file must be a JPEG file -- its contents are transferred unmodified into the /DCTDecode JPEG stream). This requires /SampleFormat/Asis, and doesn't work with any other /SampleFormats -- Predictor: enum (see later), default: 25, numbering same as PSL1 filter. 1 -- no predictor. (default) Must be this unless Compression is /LZW or /Flate 2 -- TIFF predictor 2 (horizontal differencing) 10 -- PNG predictor, None function 11 -- PNG predictor, Sub function 12 -- PNG predictor, Up function 13 -- PNG predictor, Average function 14 -- PNG predictor, Paeth function 15 -- PNG predcitor, individually chosen for each line (absolute minimum) This is the same as what libpng uses by default when creating PNG. 25 -- Pick 15 or 1 based on the SampleFormat: use 15 for Gray8 and Rgb8, and use 1 (no predictor) for everything else. This is the default. 45 -- PNG predcitor, individually chosen for each line (unsigned minimum) Don't use this, it is quite inefficient. 55 -- PNG predcitor, individually chosen for each line (signed minimum) Don't use this, it is quite inefficient. -- Transparent: color. Default: null. Specify a color forced to be transparent. Old transparency, if exists, is blacked! -- Hints: dict see below The Hints member of the Output Rule contains a dict with the following elements: -- TopMargin : dimen; desired vertical gap between the top line of the page and the top line of the raster. Default: 0. Ignored unless for PS and PDF output. See docs about `dimen' elsewhere in this document. -- BottomMargin : dimen; desired vertical gap between the bottom line of the raster and the bottom line of the page. Default: 0. Ignored unless for PS and PDF output. See docs about `dimen' elsewhere in this document. -- LeftMargin : dimen; desired horizontal gap between the left line of the page and the left line of the raster. Default: 0. Ignored unless for PS and PDF output. See docs about `dimen' elsewhere in this document. -- RightMargin : dimen; desired horizontal gap between the right line of the raster and the right line of the page. Default: 0. Ignored unless for PS and PDF output. See docs about `dimen' elsewhere in this document. -- ImageDPI : positive number; resolution of bitmap image in dots per inch. Default: 72, which means no scaling. -- Scale : enum /None -- don't scale (zoom, magnify) the image (default) /OK -- scale PS image to fit page (x factor == y factor) /RotateOK -- scale and/or rotate PS image to fit page (x factor == y factor) -- EncoderBPL : int >=1 (bits per scanline, <= rlen) -- EncoderCoumns : int >=1 (pixels per scanline) -- EncoderRows : int >=1 -- EncoderColors : int >=1 -- PredictorColumns : uint; also used if compression is /Fax (reasonable default) -- PredictorColors : 1..3; number of color _components_ (reasonable default) -- PredictorBPC : 1, 2, 4, 8 (reasonable default), /BitsPerComponent entry in PS and PDF -- Effort : -1..9, must be -1 unless Compression is /ZIP (-1 means 5, default) -- RecordSize : uint, default: 0. Compression must be /RLE -- K : int, default: 0 (-2..infty). Compression must be /Fax. -1 means G4 1d encoding, 0 meangs G3 1D encoding, -2 means G3 2D encoding with arbitrary height, positive value means G3 2D encoding with that height. -- Quality : 0..100, used by IJG libjpeg when compression is /IJG. default: 75 -- ColorTransform : 0..2. For IJG, this _must_ be 0 for Gray and 1 for RGB, so its value is ignored. For DCT, its value is respected: use 0 or 1 only. See DCTEncode in subsubsection 3.13.3 in PLRM.pdf, and for a better documentation: see the sources and docs of libjpeg. -- TransferCPL : number of data characters per line. Must be positive when TransferEncoding is /Hex or /A85, and must be zero otherwise. Default: 78 -- DCT : dict, default: <<>>. Additional parameters for the /DCTEncode filter -- Comment : string, default: empty -- Title : string, default: empty -- Subject : string, default: empty -- Author : string, default: empty -- Creator : string, default: empty -- Producer : string, default: empty -- Created : string, default: now -- Produced : string: default: now Metric units """""""""""" Certain parameters have type `dimen'. This is a metric dimension, measured in any of the following real-word distance metric units: -- 1 bp = 1 bp (big point) -- 1 in = 72 bp (inch) -- 1 pt = 72/72.27 bp (point) -- 1 pc = 12*72/72.27 bp (pica) -- 1 dd = 1238/1157*72/72.27 bp (didot point) [about 1.06601110141206 bp] -- 1 cc = 12*1238/1157*72/72.27 bp (cicero) -- 1 sp = 72/72.27/65536 bp (scaled point) -- 1 cm = 72/2.54 bp (centimeter) -- 1 mm = 7.2/2.54 bp (millimeter) Note: If it helps: American typesetters use 72 points per US inch, thus 10 pt text will yield 72 chars per normal line of US Letter (like an IBM Selectric) 12 pt text will yield 65 chars per normal line of US Letter (US normal typewritter). Each image pixel is assumed to be 1 bp wide and 1 bp tall. A dimen is an integer or real number, followed by optional whitespace and an optional unit (any of `bp', `in', `pt', `pc', `dd', `cc', `sp', `cm', `mm'). The default unit is `bp', i.e a bare number is a dimen measured in `bp'. The following dimens are all one inch long: `72', `72bp', `72 bp', `1in', `1 in', `2.54cm', `25.4mm', `72.27pt', `6pc', `4736286.72sp'. Note: MiniPS and TeX use the same units. OutputRule combinations ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ In the final version of sam2p, the following combinations will be supported: LZW >=2 Binary|Hex|A85 >=PSL2|>=PDF1.0 Mask|Gray*|RGB*|Indexed* LZW >=2 Binary|Hex|A85 >=PSL2|>=PDF1.0 Transparent+ ZIP >=2 Binary|Hex|A85 >=PSL3|>=PDF1.2 Mask|Gray*|RGB*|Indexed* ZIP >=2 Binary|Hex|A85 >=PSL3|>=PDF1.2 Transparent+ None|ZIP|LZW|RLE|Fax|DCT|IJG 1 Binary|Hex|A85 >=PSL2|>=PDF1.0 Mask|Gray*|RGB*|Indexed* None|ZIP|LZW|RLE|Fax|DCT|IJG 1 Binary|Hex|A85 >=PSL2|>=PDF1.0 Transparent+ None 1 ASCII >=PSL1|>=PDF1.0 Opaque None 1 ASCII >=PSL1|>=PDF1.0 Transparent ZIP 1 Binary|Hex|A85 >=PSL1 Gray*|RGB*|Indexed* ZIP 1 Binary|Hex|A85 >=PSL1 Mask|Gray1|Indexed1 ZIP 1 Binary|Hex|A85 >=PSL1 Transparent+ None 1 Binary|Hex|A85 >=PSL1 Gray*|RGB*|Indexed* None 1 Binary|Hex|A85 >=PSL1 Mask|Gray1|Indexed1 None 1 Binary|Hex|A85 >=PSL1 Transparent+ RLE 1 Binary|Hex|A85 >=PSL1 Gray*|RGB*|Indexed* RLE 1 Binary|Hex|A85 >=PSL1 Mask|Gray1|Indexed1 RLE 1 Binary|Hex|A85 >=PSL1 Transparent+ JAI 1 Binary|Hex|A85 >=PSL2|>=PDF1.0 Asis TTM files ~~~~~~~~~ TTM stands for Template Toy Macro. A TTM file is a dirty hack for generating templates with auto-calculated lengths and offsets. Currently they are used for generating PDF output files (/FileFormat/PDFB10 etc.). The syntax of a TTM file is MiniPS (i.e a minimalistic PostScript, similar to .job files). The TTM file must contain a single MiniPS array. The elements of the array are called chunks. Each chunk causes some bytes to be appended to the output file. Data is appended in the order the chunks are listed in the TTM file, but the data calculation order may be different. This way it is possible to write (calc) the length of a chunk not written (filled in) yet. The very first chunk has number zero. different. This way it is possible to write the length of a chunk not written yet. The very first chunk has number zero. The chunk types: -- string: backtick-sequences will be substituted (e.g ``w' to the width of the image, in pixels) by writeTemplate(). The result is appended to the output file. -- positive integer: The offset (zero-based byte-position of the very first character of chunk 0) of the specified chunk will be appended to the output file. Only chunks already appearead may be specified this way. If the specified chunk is an array, then printf("%10u") will be called to print the number (this is useful for making PDF xref tables), otherwise printf("%u") will be called. -- negative integer: The length (measured in bytes, after substitutions) of the specified chunk will be appended to the output file, using printf("%u"). Only chunks already calculated may be specified this way. -- zero: error -- array: the array is interpreted as a standalone TTM subfile, and the rules are applied recursively. This subfile contains sub-chunks, and the subchunks may be arrays themselves. -- other MiniPS types: error The chunks are calculated in the following order: first the array chunks are calculated (recursively) in order of appearance, followed by the non-array chunks in order of appearance. A TTM file can have up to 64 top-level chunks. Example: [ 1 %0 [ (pts) ] %1.0 -1 %2 ] The output file will be: `3pts0000000001' since chunk 1 has length 3 and offset 1. Example job file ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ <<%sam2p job % This is file (named test0.job). /InputFile (test0.pbm) /OutputFile (test0.pdf) /Profile [ % This in-line profile is preferred over the defaults << /FileFormat/PDF10 /SampleFormat/Gray1 /TransferEncoding/Binary /Compression/Fax /Hints<> >> (pdf10.jib) run % elements found in external file ] >> See the directory examples/*.job in the sam2p sources. FAQ ~~~ Q1. Should I care about /LoadHints (,asis,) when loading JPEG files? A1. No, sam2p guesses it by magic (in both job mode and one-liner mode). However, you may want to set it manually in job mode: /LoadHints () % use djpeg /LoadHints (,asis,) % don't use djpeg % nothing: automatic guess, based on /Compression/JAI Q2. How do I convert a JPEG file to PostScript Level2 EPS? A2. In one-liner mode, just run: ./sam2p Example: ./sam2p try.jpg try.eps In one-liner mode, if you have both the djpeg and cjpeg utilities (budled with libjpeg from IJG (Independent JPEG Group)), _and_ you want to adjust quality vs size of the output, just run: ./sam2p -c:jpeg: Example: ./sam2p -c:jpeg:60 try.jpg try.eps In job mode, just run sam2p with the following .job file: <<%sam2p-job; % conversion is possible without external utilities cjpeg and djpeg % No quality loss, just verbatim adata copying. /InputFile (INPUT.jpg) /OutputFile (OUTPUT.eps) /Profile [ << /FileFormat/PSL2 /SampleFormat/Asis /TransferEncoding/A85 /Compression/JAI >> ] >> Alternatively, to adjust quality vs size, use the following .job file: <<%sam2p-job; % external utilities cjpeg and djpeg are required % This uses a JPEG decompression (djpeg), plus lossy JPEG compression % (cjpeg), so there might be quality loss! /InputFile (INPUT.jpg) /OutputFile (OUTPUT.eps) /Profile [ << /FileFormat/PSL2 /SampleFormat/Rgb8 /TransferEncoding/A85 /Compression/IJG /Hints << /Quality 40 % 0..100 (should be at least around 30) >> >> ] >> Q3. How do I convert a GIF file to PostScript Level2 EPS? A3. Check that sam2p has been compiled with GIF support: run sam2p, and examine its console output. It should contain a line: Available Loaders: ... GIF ... If GIF doesn't appear in the line, please recompile sam2p with: make clean ./configure --enable-gif --enable-lzw make cp sam2p /usr/local/bin After that, run sam2p again, and check for the line above again. In one-liner mode, just run: ./sam2p Example: ./sam2p try.gif try.eps In job mode, if the GIF file doesn't have transparent pixels, run sam2p with the following .job file: <<%sam2p-job; /InputFile (INPUT.gif) /OutputFile (OUTPUT.eps) /Profile [ << /FileFormat/PSL2 /SampleFormat/Indexed8 /TransferEncoding/A85 /Compression/None >> ] >> If the GIF file has transparent pixels, run sam2p with the following .job file: <<%sam2p-job; /InputFile (INPUT.gif) /OutputFile (OUTPUT.eps) /Profile [ << /FileFormat/PSL2 /SampleFormat/Transparent8 /TransferEncoding/A85 /Compression/None >> ] >> Q4. How do I covert a JPEG file to a TIFF/JPEG output file? A4. A TIFF/JPEG file is a TIFF file (_not_ a JPEG file!), in which the image data is compressed with JPEG (DCTEncode compression). The Compression TIFF tag value is 7. (There is also Compression==6, which corresponds to the old, obsolete JPEG format defined in the old TIFF6.0 spec.) In one-liner mode, autodetection is magical. Just run: ./sam2p Example: ./sam2p try.jpg try.tiff In job mode, run sam2p with the following .job file: <<%sam2p-job; /InputFile (INPUT.jpg) /OutputFile (OUTPUT.tiff) %/LoadHints (asis) % default for /Compression/JAI /Profile [ << /FileFormat/TIFF /SampleFormat/Asis /TransferEncoding/Binary /Compression/JAI >> ] >> See also {FAQ question Q5} for compatibility notes. Q5. The TIFF/JPEG file generated by sam2p is invalid! I cannot read it with any programs. A5. No, it isn't invalid, but most of the programs (including those found in libtiff) cannot deal with TIFF files with JPEG compression. Compatibility notes: -- tif22pnm 0.03 (from the author of sam2p) can read TIFF/JPEG files perfectly. That's because it calls the TIFFRGBAImageGet() function of libtiff, which works. -- sam2p 0.37 can read TIFF/JPEG files, beacuse it calls tif22pnm to do the job. Sam2p can write TIFF/JPEG files as well. -- GIMP 1.0.2: error message: `Unknown photometric number 6'. GIMP TIFF import filter cannot deal with the YCbCr color space (which is the most common and de facto standard color space in non-grayscale JPEG files). It works, however, with grayscale JPEGs. -- tifftopnm from libtiff-tools 3.4beta037-5.1: `unknown photometric: 6'. Ditto. (Unfortunately tifftopnm doesn't call TIFFRGBAImageGet(), it just tries to re-implement an obsolete version of the function.) -- `tiffcp -c jpeg' from libtiff-tools 3.4beta037-5.1 creates a perfectly legal TIFF/JPEG file. -- tiffcp from libtiff-tools 3.4beta037-5.1 cannot load a file created by itself (`tiffcp -c jpeg')! There is no problem with grayscale images, but color images have one component removed. -- xv 3.10a: Ditto. -- display from ImageMagick 4.04: strange error message about libraries: `JPEGLib: Wrong JPEG library version: library is 61, caller expects 62.' Simple conclusion: -- Use sam2p or `tiffcp -c jpeg' to create a TIFF/JPEG. (Be aware that `tiffcp -c jpeg' cannot read a TIFF/JPEG: it can only create one.) -- Use tif22pnm to load or decode a TIFF/JPEG. -- In your own C programs, call the TIFFRGBAImageGet() function to read TIFF image data. -- Don't use anything else if you want to avoid compatibility problems. Q6. Does sam2p support transparency and alpha channels? A6. sam2p supports only bilevel transparency (i.e a pixel is either fully opaque or fully transparent), and only with indexed images. Transparency is supported when loading indexed PNG, TIFF, PNM, GIF, LBM and XPM files. A PNM file with transparency is a regular PBM/PGM/PPM file with a PBM image appended to it as the alpha channel (black pixel is transparent). For transparent output, the user has to specify /Transparent, /Mask, /Transparent2, /Transparent4 or /Transparent8 as /SampleFormat. This works with: -- /FileFormat/PSL1+ /SampleFormat/Transparent -- /FileFormat/PDF1.0+ /SampleFormat/Transparent -- /FileFormat/PDFB1.0+ /SampleFormat/Transparent -- /FileFormat/PSL1+ /SampleFormat/Mask -- /FileFormat/PDF1.0+ /SampleFormat/Mask -- /FileFormat/PDFB1.0+ /SampleFormat/Mask -- /FileFormat/GIF89a /SampleFormat/Mask -- /FileFormat/PNM /SampleFormat/Mask -- /FileFormat/TIFF /SampleFormat/Mask -- /FileFormat/PNG /SampleFormat/Mask -- /FileFormat/XPM /SampleFormat/Mask -- /FileFormat/PSL1+ /SampleFromat/Transparent+ -- /FileFormat/GIF89a /SampleFormat/Transparent+ -- /FileFormat/PNM /SampleFormat/Transparent+ -- /FileFormat/TIFF /SampleFormat/Transparent+ -- /FileFormat/PNG /SampleFormat/Transparent+ -- /FileFormat/XPM /SampleFormat/Transparent+ Q7. How large is a pixel of PostScript and PDF files generated by sam2p in real-world metric units (inches or centimeters)? A7. 72 big points == 1 inch == 2.54 centimeters 1 pixel == 1 big point Q8. I have an image with transparent pixels. What happens if I convert it to /Rgb* or /Gray*? A8. Either of the following will happen: -- You get an error message, sam2p refuses to ignore transparency. Please use /SampleFormat/Transparent+, or call an image manipulation program to remove transparency from the image before feeding it to sam2p. -- Transparency information will be lost, and the color of formerly transparent pixels will be undefined. This would be a bug in sam2p, you should report it. However, if you loaded a GIF file, and transformed it to /Gray8 or /Rgb8, the original palette entry (RGB triplet) is faithfully preserved. Q9. How do I generate a PostScript page ready for immediate printing with margins and the image properly scaled to fit the page? How do I create a PostScript file that will automatically scale the image to the maximum when printed? A9. To print an image as a full PostScript page, call: ./sam2p [MARGIN-SPECS] ps: - | lpr Example: ./sam2p -m:1cm examples/pts2.pbm ps: - | lpr To create a PostScript file for printing, call: ./sam2p [MARGIN-SPECS] [ps:] Example: ./sam2p -m:1cm examples/pts2.pbm try.ps The `-m' option above is sets all four margins to `1 cm'. You can set the margins individually: Example: ./sam2p -m:left:7mm -m:right:1cm -m:top:0.5in \ -m:bottom:18bp examples/pts2.pbm try.ps As you can see in this example, you may specify dimensions in various metric units, see subsection {Metric units}. You are strongly encouraged to print raster images with sam2p. Be aware that The GIMP 1.2 printing plugin has several weird contrast setting problems (even for /Gray1 images); white pixels will be gray etc. Other utilities may add unnecessary text banners or scale the image inappropriately. In one-liner mode, sam2p guesses from the file extension and the selector (`ps:') whether the desired output file format is PostScript (fit single page) or Encapsulated PostScript (leave size as-is, suitable for inclusion into TeX documents). In job mode, without /Scale/OK and /Scale/RotateOK in /Hints, sam2p outputs EPS (Encapsulated PostScript) with /FileFormat/PSL*. EPS files should be included as figures into other documents (such as TeX and InDesign), not printed alone. If you just want to print a sampled image alone, please use your favourite graphics manipulation program instead of sam2p. In job mode, create a .job file for the EPS file, and add /Hints. For example: <<%sam2p-job; /InputFile (test.in) /OutputFile (test.ps) /Profile [ << /FileFormat/PSL2 /SampleFormat/Rgb8 /TransferEncoding/A85 /Compression/None /Predictor 1 /Hints << /Scale/OK % or /Scale/RotateOK /LeftMargin 12 % measured as number/72 inches /Rightargin 12 % measured as number/72 inches /TopMargin 12 % measured as number/72 inches /BottomMargin 12 % measured as number/72 inches >> >> ] >> Q10. Do the EPS files created by sam2p conform to some specifications? The EPS output of sam2p conforms to the following Adobe specifications: 5001.DSC_Spec.pdf 5002.EPSF_Spec.pdf DSC and ADSC are: Adobe Document Structuring Conventions. They are comments with lines beginning with `%!' and `%%' in PS and EPS files. An excerpt: The following example illustrates the proper use of DSC comments in a typical page description that an application might produce when including an EPS file. For an EPS file that is represented as %!PS-Adobe-3.0 EPSF-3.0 %%BoundingBox: 4 4 608 407 %%Title: (ARTWORK.EPS) %%CreationDate: (10/17/89) (5:04 PM) %%EndComments ...PostScript code for illustration.. showpage %%EOF DSC comments discussion: %!PS-Adobe-3.0 EPSF-3.0 (mandatory) %%BoundingBox: ... ... ... ... (mandatory) %%Extensions: CMYK (optional, for /PSLC) %%LanguageLevel: 2 (optional, for /PSL2) %%LanguageLevel: 3 (optional, for /PSL3) %%Creation (strongly recommended) %%Title (strongly recommended) %%CreationDate (strongly recommended) %%Trailer (optional) %%EOF (optional) %%DocumentData: Clean7Bit (optional) %%DocumentData: Binary (optional) Q11. I get the error message `sam2p: Error: applyProfile: invalid combination, no applicable OutputRule'. Help! A11. This error message means you have requested an invalid combination of FileFormat, SampleFormat, Compression etc. parameters. If you use one-liner mode, and you're sure that you've specified your will correctly in the command line, please report this error message as a sam2p bug (also specify -j in the command line). If you use job mode, please read on. Example 1: /Compression/Fax is not allowed in /PSL1. Solution 1: specify /FileFormat/PSL2 /Compression/Fax. Example 2: /Compression/IJG requires /SampleFormat/Gray8 or /SampleFormat/Rgb8. Please have a look at the messages `sam2p: Warning: check_rule: ...' to get more specific information. After that, correct your request. Solution 2: specify /Compression/IJG /SampleFormat/Rgb8. Another cause for this message is that your request cannot be applied to the image you've specified. In this case, there is no relevant `sam2p: Warning: check_rule: ...' message. Example 1: you've requested /SampleFormat/Indexed4, but the input image has more than 16 colors. Solution 1: specify /SampleFormat/Rgb8. Example 2: you've requested /SampleFormat/Indexed4, but the input image has transparency. Solution 2: specify /SampleFormat/Transparent8. It is possible, but very unlikely that this error message is caused by a bug in sam2p. Q12. Can I use /Compression/Fax when bits-per-pixel > 1 ? A12. With /FileFormat/PS* and /FileFormat/PDF*, you can (but you shouldn't, because of the possibly poor compression ratio). With /FileFormat/TIFF, you're not allowed to, because the TIFF specification forbids it. Example one-liners: sam2p -s:Indexed8 -c:fax test.gif test.pdf # OK sam2p -s:Indexed8 -c:fax test.gif test.eps # OK sam2p -s:Indexed8 -c:fax test.gif test.tiff # forbidden Q13. Bad luck? A13. Not for me. Q14. Can I use negative margins (i.e /TopMargin -20) to crop the output image? A14. No. Margins are ignored by sam2p unless /FileFormat is /PSL* or /PDF*. Even with these formats, the image is only moved, not cropped. Please use an image manipulation program (e.g The GIMP) to crop your images before feeding them to sam2p. Q15. When I try to print the PostScript output of sam2p, the edge of the image is missing (white). A15. Many printers cannot print to the edge of the paper (so that region is left white). Please increase the margins to a safe value, for example: ./sam2p -m:7mm test.ppm test.ps lpr test.ps See also {FAQ question Q9} for more information about margins. Q16. How do I report a bug in sam2p? A16. Please send an e-mail to the author (pts@fazekas.hu, see more in section {Copyright}) describing the problem. Don't forget to: -- download the latest version of sam2p, and try it with the same image -- describe what sam2p does (incorrectly) -- describe what sam2p should do if there was no bug -- run sam2p without arguments, and attach its output (STDOUT) to the bug report -- attach the exact command line with which you call sam2p to the bug report -- if you spot the bug in one-liner mode, specify the `-j' option in the command line, and attach the messages printed by sam2p (both STDOUT and STDERR) to the bug report -- if you spot the bug in job mode, attach the .job file you are using to the bug report -- attach the input image file to the bug report. Try to attach a file as small as possible. -- if sam2p runs successfully (i.e it prints `Success.'), and it creates an output image, but you think that the output image is incorrect, attach the output image to your bug report -- if you have a similar input image, for which sam2p works fine, attach it to the bug report Q17. How long does the LZW patent held by Unisys last? A17. mcb@cloanto.com (author of http://lzw.info) wrote: Thank you for your interest and mail. I must stress that the "exact" answers you may be looking for may come only from lawyers and courts, and I am none of these. If you consider the IBM, the BT and Unisys US patents, then the last of the three would be the Unisys one, expiring, as the article I think mentions, on June 19, 2003, 24:00. There cannot be other (new) patents on LZW, as far as I know. Please let me know if you find different information. Q18. I want to create an RGB PostScript image, but sam2p creates a Gray one, or it gives me an error message. For example: `./sam2p -1 -s:rgb1 examples/ptsbanner.gif test.eps'. A18. /PSL1 doesn't support RGB images. There are two solutions: -- Use /PSLC or /PSL2 or /PSL3 instead or drop the '-1' alltogether. Examples: ./sam2p -1c -s:rgb1 examples/ptsbanner.gif test.eps # /PSLC ./sam2p -2 -s:rgb1 examples/ptsbanner.gif test.eps # /PSL2 ./sam2p -s:rgb1 examples/ptsbanner.gif test.eps # /PSL2 or /PSL3 -- Use /Mask or /Transparent+. Note that you'll very probably get poor compression ratio. ./sam2p -1 -s:tr:stop examples/ptsbanner.gif test.eps # /PSL1 You can get more (and more useful) error messages from sam2p if you specify the `-j:warn' option. You may also try specifying `-s:rgb1:stop' instead of `-s:rgb1' to force sam2p try /SampleFormat/Rgb1 only. Q19. sam2p doesn't allow me to use /Compression /Fax. For example: `./sam2p -c fax examples/ptsbanner.gif test.eps'. The same command works fine without `-c fax'. A19. /Compression/Fax is intended to be used with images with 1 bit per pixel. However, in PostScript and PDF, you can use it for any image data, but compression ratio will be very poor for other than /Gray1, /Indexed1 or /Mask, of course. You can force sam2p to use /Fax by specifying the desired SampleFormat in option `-s'. Examples: sam2p -s:Indexed8 -c:fax test.gif test.pdf # OK sam2p -s:Indexed8 -c:fax test.gif test.eps # OK sam2p -s:Indexed8 -c:fax test.gif test.tiff # forbidden by TIFF std See {FAQ question Q12} for more information. Q20. Can sam2p convert images with transparency to PDF? A20. Only if the image has at most 1 non-transprent color (/SampleFormat/Mask). See {FAQ question Q6} for details. Although PDF-1.3 supports transparency masks for arbitrary PDF images, sam2p 0.39 doesn't. That's because the author of sam2p hasn't implemented it yet. Q21. I get the error message `sam2p: Warning: buildProfile: ignoring, no handlers for OutputRule'. Help! A21. This means that sam2p doesn't know how to do the conversion you've requested (and it even doesn't know whether the request is erroneous or not). This might be because your request is bad (it is impossible to be fulfilled), or your request is good, but sam2p doesn't know how to deal with it. If you think that the latter is the case, please report this message as a bug. See {FAQ question Q11} for more information. Q22. How do I compile with G++ 3.2? A22. See the answer in section {Compilation and installation}. Don't forget export CC=gcc-3.2 CXX=g++-3.2 Q23. How do I do a `make dist' without running configure again? A23. Just issue make MAKE_DIST=1 dist Q24. I cannot open a JPEG file in the Win32 version. A24. Make sure you have djpeg.exe on your PATH. Simply copy it to your C:\WINDOWS directory. Q25. I cannot open a TIFF file in the Win32 version. A25. Make sure you have tif22pnm.exe on your PATH. Simply copy it to your C:\WINDOWS directory. Q26. I cannot open a PNG file in the Win32 version. A26. Make sure you have png22pnm.exe on your PATH. Simply copy it to your C:\WINDOWS directory. Q27. What is tif22pnm? A27. tif22pnm is a TIFF -> PNM converter written by the author of sam2p. It can load more TIFF files correctly than tifftopnm, ImageMagick convert, xv and The GIMP. The TIFF loader code is based on GIMP 1.3, but has many bugfixes and improvements. sam2p uses tif22pnm to load TIFF files. You can download tif22pnm from http://www.inf.bme.hu/~pts/tif22pnm-latest.tar.gz Q28. What is png22pnm? A28. png22pnm is a PNG -> PNM converter compiled by the author of sam2p. It is based on the excellent pngtopnm utility, but doesn't depend on the NetPBM library (only libpng). sam2p uses png22pnm (or, as a fallback: pngtopm) to load PNG files. png22pnm is part of the tif22pnm package, so you can download it from http://www.inf.bme.hu/~pts/tif22pnm-latest.tar.gz Q29. Can sam2p convert a transparent GIF to PDF? A29. The PDF-1.3 file format supports transparent images, but sam2p doesn't. However, if the image contains at most two colors (including the transparent pixel), sam2p can create a working PDF-1.2 file; use Ghostscript to view it, because Acrobat Reader 5.0 is buggy. However, sam2p supports generating transparent EPS, GIF, PNG, PNM, XPM and TIFF files up to 256 colors. Q30. How do I build my own sam2p debian package? A30. Please download the newest sources from http://www.inf.bme.hu/~pts/sam2p-latest.tar.gz As root, run apt-get update apt-get install debmake fakeroot dpkg apt-get install make g++ gcc perl sed As normal user, run (in the directory containing sam2p_main.cpp): debian/rules clean rm -f build* debian/rules build fakeroot debian/rules binary ls -l ../sam2p_*.deb As root, substitute X and Y, and run: dpkg -i sam2p_X_Y.deb Please also install the tif22pnm and png22pnm packages from the author of sam2p (and the Debian standard libjpeg-progs package), available as Debian source from: http://www.inf.bme.hu/~pts/tif22pnm-latest.tar.gz Q31. Why not use libjpeg/libtiff/libpng/zlib or any other library with sam2p? A31. -- library and .h incompatibilities (the binary would be less portable across Linux systems) -- to avoid forced dependencies -- checkergcc wouldn't work Q32. How do I specify the page size when printing a .ps file (-m and -e command line options)? A32. You cannot. (Use -m to specify the margins.) The page size is autodetected by your printer when the page is printed. So you can print the same .ps file on different printers, and the margins will be all right on all of them. If you really have to specify the page size, edit the .ps file and insert the `a4 ' or `letter ' command after the last line of the first block of lines starting with %%. You may also use something like `1 dict dup /PageSize [ 595 842 ] put setpagedevice ' to exactly specify the page width and height in 1/72 inches. For example, change the PostScript file %!PS-Adobe-3.0 %%Pages: 1 %%DocumentData: Clean7Bit %%LanguageLevel: 1 %%EndComments %%Page: 1 1 save ... % many lines omitted %%Trailer %%EOF to %!PS-Adobe-3.0 %%Pages: 1 %%DocumentData: Clean7Bit %%LanguageLevel: 1 %%EndComments %%Page: 1 1 1 dict dup /PageSize [ 595 842 ] put setpagedevice save ... % many lines omitted %%Trailer %%EOF Please note that PostScript is a programming language, so your changes might be undone by instructions later in the file. You might find the a2ping.pl utility (written by the author of sam2p) useful: a2ping.pl -v --papersize=a4 in.ps out.ps Q33. How do I control ZIP compression ratio? A33. Use sam2p -c:zip:1:0 in.img out.png # uncompressed ZIP carrier sam2p -c:zip:1:1 in.img out.png # normal compression sam2p -c:zip:1:9 in.img out.png # maximum compression Q34. ImageMagick convert creates smaller PNGs. Why? A34. I don't know the real reason. Probably because ImageMagick uses libpng, which is smarter than sam2p. You are probably trying to convert a JPEG or other true color photo to PNG. Try one of the following compression options: sam2p -c:zip:12:7 # 464727 bytes sam2p -c:zip:12:8 # 454271 bytes sam2p -c:zip:12:9 # 447525 bytes sam2p -c:zip:13:9 # 488748 bytes sam2p -c:zip:14:9 # 454182 bytes sam2p -c:zip:15:9 # 453080 bytes convert -quality ? # 454438 bytes Q35. Can sam2p convert large JPEGs to smaller ones (with loss of quality and resolution)? A35. sam2p cannot resize or scale images. So the pixel width and height of the input and output image cannot be changed. If you need that (for example you want to create thumbnails), use the famous convert(1) utility of ImageMagick. For example: convert -scale 444 -quality 50 in.jpg out.jpg # specify out width convert -scale x444 -quality 50 in.jpg out.jpg # specify out height convert -scale "10%" -quality 50 in.jpg out.jpg # specify scale ratio However, it is possible to specify the quality of the JPEG output of sam2p. The quality of 0 means ugly output with small file size, and the quality of 100 means nice output with big file sizes. You can specify intermediate integer quality values (50 and 75 are recommended). Be prepared that qualties above 30 (or so) may not work on all JPEG viewers. For example: sam2p -c ijg:10 large_input.jpg small_output.jpg sam2p uses the cjpeg(1) and djpeg(1) utilities from libjpeg to write and read JPEG files, respectively. If you need more control over your JPEG output, then forget sam2p, and please consult the documentation of those utilities. Q36. Can sam2p convert JPEG to GIF? A36. Yes, it can, but usually not directly. GIF allows a maximum of 256 different colors in an image. A typical RGB JPEG image contains many more colors, so it has to be quantized down to 256 colors first. For example, if the console output of ``sam2p in.jpg out.gif'' contains ``applyProfile: invalid combination, no applicable OutputRule'', then in.jpg must be quantized first: convert in.jpg out1.gif # does the quantization automatically sam2p out1.gif out2.gif # compresses the output image further From out1.gif and out2.gif keep the one with the smaller file size. It is common that convert(1) creates huge GIF files because LZW compression is disabled inside it. sam2p should be compiled with LZW compression and GIF input/output enabled. To check this, run sam2p, and examine its console output. It should contain a line: Available Appliers: ... GIF89a+LZW ... If GIF89a+LZW doesn't appear in the line, please recompile sam2p with: make clean ./configure --enable-gif --enable-lzw make cp sam2p /usr/local/bin , and try again. Q37. I need to transform GIF images of 15 colors to BMPs of 256 colors not compressed. sam2p converts it to BMP 16 colors... A37. Use sam2p -c none -s rgb8 in.gif out.bmp If you get an error message `Error: applyProfile: invalid combination, no applicable OutputRule', it very probably means that your GIF is transparent. Remove the transparent color within an image editor first. Q38. Can sam2p _load_ PDF or EPS files? A38. Yes, if you have Ghostscript installed, and your input EPS file is not too exotic. This has been tested on Linux only. If you experience problems loading EPS files, but no problems loading PDF files, please run a2ping.pl written by the author of sam2p to make your EPS file more compatible. Q39. Can sam2p load an EPS or PDF file with an arbitrary resoultion? A39. Yes. For example use one of sam2p -l:gs=-r216 in.eps out.png sam2p -l:gs=-r216 in.pdf out.png to have resoultion 216 DPI (image scaled 3 times to both directions). Without scaling, 72 DPI is the default. Q40. Can sam2p emit a multi-page PDF or a multi-page PS? A40. No, it can't. Emitting a multi-page document would need a fundamental change of the sam2p architecture. (Should the 2nd page be compressed with a different method? What if the 2nd contains too many colors? Should we keep all previous pages in memory?) I think another program should be written that is able to concatenate EPS/PS or PDF files. I've already written a PDF-merger called pdfconcat, available from http://www.inf.bme.hu/~pts/pdfconcat.c . An EPS-merger would be even easier. But I don't have time to implement these features directly into sam2p soon. Q41. Can sam2p read a multi-page TIFF? A41. sam2p reads only the first page. The auxilary utility tif22pnm could be patched so it extracts other pages, and a new command line option can be added to sam2p that passes the required page number to tif22pnm. But I don't have time to implement these features soon. By the way, multi-page TIFFs can be created with the following command: tiffcp -c g4 d1.tiff d2.tiff d3.tiff output.tiff Q42. Can sam2p convert a multi-page TIFF to a multi-page PDF? A42. No. There are two main problems: See also Q40 and Q41. Q43. How do I convert a TIFF image to a 1-bit black-and-white PDF? Should I use `sam2p -c:fax test.tif test.pdf'? A43. The above will ensure that fax compression is used. What you need for ensuring that the output is 1-bit black-and-white is: sam2p -s:gray1:stop test.tif test.pdf You can also specify a compression algorithm (I recommend -c:zip): sam2p -c:fax -s:gray1:stop test.tif test.pdf sam2p -c:lzw -s:gray1:stop test.tif test.pdf sam2p -c:zip -s:gray1:stop test.tif test.pdf If you get the error message sam2p: Error: applyProfile: invalid combination, no applicable OutputRule then your input test.tif is not really black-and-white. Open it in an image editing program and ensure that the colors are #000000 and #ffffff only. > The tiff is black and white, bilevel - I just want to avoid the > test.pdf from using 8bpp by default (like it does in imagemagick) The default for sam2p is not 8bpp. To see what the default is, run sam2p with the `-j' option and check `OutputRule #1' on the console output. What you are interested in is the /SampleFormat field. Q43. Acrobat Reader (5.0 and 6.0) cannot read the PDFs converted from a JPEG with sam2p. I get the message: `There was an error processing a page. Expected `EI' while parsing an image.'. (The same problem happens with Ghostscript 6.50 with a different error message. xpdf-1.0 reports: bad DCT trailer.) A43. Very probably the JPEG stream of your original input image file is rejected by the PDF viewers. (In fact, Ghostscript 7.x doesn't complain.) sam2p doesn't do strict JPEG validation when converting JPEG to PDF -- it just blindly assumes that the JPEG file is correct. To ensure this, you have to re-encode the JPEG. Instead of this: sam2p bad.jpeg bad.pdf do this: sam2p -c ijg:50 bad.jpeg good.pdf # much slower! or this: temp.pnm cjpeg -quality 50 temp.jpeg sam2p temp.jpeg good.pdf The real reason why Acrobat Reader rejects the JPEG is unknown to me. I also don't know of any baseline JPEG compliance testing software. (But if you re-encode with djpeg and cjpeg, it becomes compliant.) (thanks to Thomas Kraemer for reporting the problem) Q44. How do I create an 1x1 transparent GIF and PNG? A44. Do echo "P1 1 1 0" >one.pbm sam2p -transparent:ffffff one.pbm one.gif sam2p -transparent:ffffff one.pbm one.png Q45. Is it possible to specify a resolution other than 72 DPI, so that the dimensions of the resulting PDF are accurate for print-resolution images? A45. In the most recent version of sam2p, now it is. Just use `-m:dpi:144' to have the output EPS or PDF scaled to double size, or use `-m:dpi:' to have it scaled by a factor of /72. Note that this works only for EPS and PDF output. For all other FileFormat{}s, `-m:dpi:' is ignored. The `-m:dpi:' option doesn't scale the values specified for the other `-m:...' options. To proper way of scaling an image, however, is using your DTP or word processor program to resize it properly. For example, after running `sam2p foo.png foo.pdf', in LaTeX, use % \usepackage{graphicx} \includegraphics[height=10cm]{foo} Q46. Is it legal to use LZW compression? A46. I think so. Also look at Q17. Q47. Help! I cannot compile it on SunOS/Solaris. I get /usr/include/sys/wait.h:90: type specifier omitted for parameter /usr/include/sys/wait.h:90: parse error before `*' A47. Until someone adds a test to ./configure, try adding the line #define siginfo_t void to the end of config2.h, just before running `make'. Q48. Should I run sam2p over all my EPS (or PDF) files, to see if they would become smaller? A48. No! This is a bad idea in general, because you lose information, since the EPS output of sam2p is always rasterized, so it is not scalable anymore. But you may run sam2p over all those EPS files which contain raster graphics. But please be aware that sam2p re-renders everything at 72 DPI (can be overridden by `-l:gs=-r', and the gs rendering sometimes adjusts RGB color values slightly (+-2 on in the 0..255 domain), so there might be quality loss during the _reading_ of the original EPS. There is absolutely no quality loss when sam2p _writes_ the EPS. Q49. Should I run sam2p over all my GIF, TIFF and XPM files, to see if they would become smaller? A49. Yes, run `sam2p --' if you have a backup copy of the original. Otherwise, choose a different filename for output. Q50. Should I run sam2p over all my PNG files, to see if they would become smaller? A50. You might try it, there will be no quality loss, but the general experience of the author is that the tools using libpng (e.g. pnmtopng) produce slightly smaller PNG than sam2p. If you are an image compression specialist, please help the author to find the reason of this, and enhance sam2p. Q51. Should I run sam2p over all my JPEG files, to see if they would become smaller? A51. sam2p doesn't change the file by default. Use the `-c:ijg' option (possibly with a JPEG quality parameter, e.g. `-c:ijg:50') to make sam2p re-encode the JPEG. This is a lossy operation, and the size of the output file depends on quality parameter specified, so it might actually become larger than the original. Please also note that JPEG meta-information (such as EXIF tags inserted by digital cameras) gets completely lost with `-c:ijg'. Q52. How do I use ZIP (Deflate) compression in LanguageLevel 2? A52. Run this: sam2p -c:zip PSL2: in.image out.eps This will make sam2p emit the image decoding procedure so the image will be viewable (veeeery slowly) on LanguageLevel 2 devices, too. It doesn't affect the rendering speed on LanguageLevel 3 devices. Q53. How do I create a GIF from an image with more than 256 colors? A53. You need the pnmquant utility too from NetPbm. Run this: sam2p in.image PPM:- | pnmquant 256 | sam2p - out.gif Or, if you have the convert utility from ImageMagick, run: sam2p in.image PPM:- | convert - out.gif Q54. What is the maximum image size sam2p supports? A54. As of version 0.45, the following limits apply for input images: -- Input image height times image width must be <= 2000000000 pixels. Individual dimensions can be as high as necessary. -- Input image memory must be <= 1000000000 bytes (1 GiB). The memory is computed by multiplying image width, image height and BPC. BPC is number of bytes per pixels. It is 3 for RGB images, 1 for grayscale and indexed (256-color palette) images. For some temporary calculations BPC might go up to 3 even if it is smaller than 3 in the input image, so to be safe, always assume that BPC is 3 in image memory calculations. -- For JPEG input or ouput, image width and height must be <= 65535 pixels. This is an inherent limitation in the JPEG file format. In earlier versions (0.44 or below) the following additional limits applied: -- Image width must be <= 65535 pixels. -- Image height must be <= 65535 pixels. sam2p is a fast image conversion tool: it isn't unnecessarily slow on large images. Its speed is predictable for uncompressed images: it slows down proportionally to the input image memory (see the calculation below). Q55. How do I get the smallest PNG output? A55. If your input image is truecolor, please consider a lossy compression file format (such as JPEG), because the ZIP compression used in PNG is not particularly well-suited for truecolor images. If your input image has only a few colors, specify `-c zip:25:9', which forces the ZIP compression whith a high effort (9) and predictor autodetection (25). This is considerably slower than not specifying any `-c' flag at all, and getting `-c zip:25', because the high effort (9) is slower than the default effort. Please note that `-c zip:25:9' disables the predictor unless the SampleFormat is Rgb8 or Gray8. (This is the same what libpng-1.2.15 does by default.) For large images (of Rgb{1,2,4,8} or Gray{1,2,4,8}), you may want to specify `-c zip:15:9' to forcibly enable the predictor, being autodetected for each image row. Please also note that the free software ``optipng'' and the free-to-use closed-source software PNGOUT (for Win32, Linux and Mac OS X) can produce PNGs about 10% smaller than what sam2p produces -- but they are a 100 times (or even more) slower than sam2p. The tool ``pnmtopng'' (tested with one linked to libpng 1.2.20) does not produce smaller PNGs than sam2p >= 0.46. For older versionf of sam2p, the output of ``pnmtopng'' was about 5--10% smaller. Please also note that the the PNG output of Ghostscript -sDEVICE=pngmono etc. is not optimal. Convert it with sam2p or the tools mentioned above to reduce the file size. Q56. How do I get the smallest PDF output? A56. If your input image is truecolor, specify `-c jpeg', possibly tuning it with a low quality parameter e.g. `-c jpeg:30'. If your input image has only a few colors, specify `-c zip:25:9' or `-c zip:15:9', see also Q55. Please also have a look at Q55. Unfortunately, sam2p doesn't yet support calling external PNG optimizers and converting their output to PDF. Q57. Does sam2p convert images to canonical form, i.e. if I have two source images with identical width, height and RGB8 pixel representation, and I convert both with sam2p with the same flags, will the two output image files be byte-by-byte identical? A57. Yes, since version 0.46-2. The only code code needed for that was sorting the indexed palette. For blackbox input images which sam2p doesn't decompress (e.g. JPEG with /Compression/JAI), the output is only guaranteed to be byte-byte-byte identical, if the input was byte-byte-byte identical. Q58. Can sam2p generate a PDF which is scaled proportionally (i.e. keeping the aspect ratio) to a specified page size, and centered on the page? A58. No, but the Perl script sam2p_pdf_scale.pl bundled with sam2p can post-process the file created by sam2p. For example, to scale and center a PDF on an A4 paper, do: $ sam2p input.img output.pdf $ sam2p_pdf_scale.pl 595 842 output.pdf Please also have a look at the LaTeX package pdfpages.sty for more options. It can also be used to concatenate multiple PDFs. Its documentation: http://www.ctan.org/get/macros/latex/contrib/pdfpages/pdfpages.pdf Example output.tex file: \documentclass{article} \pdfcompresslevel9 \paperwidth 21cm \pdfpagewidth\paperwidth \paperheight29.7cm \pdfpageheight\paperheight \usepackage{pdfpages} \begin{document} \includepdf{output_tmp.pdf} \end{document} How to compile the .tex file above: $ sam2p input.img output_tmp.pdf $ pdflatex output.tex Please note that a2ping.pl or pdftk won't work either. Q59. How does sam2p detect the bounding box of PostScript and EPS input? A59. For PostScript input, the paper size specified in the PostScript code is used, reverting to the system's default paper size if missing. PostScript input is detected by finding `%!PS-Adobe-' at the beginning of the file, but `EPSF-' missing from the first line. Paper size can be specified in the PostScript code using `<> setpagedevice', 'a4', `letter' etc. The comments `%%BoundingBox:' etc. are ignored. For EPS input, the `%%ExactBoundingBox:' is used, reverting to `%%HiResBoundingBox:', reverting to `%%BoundingBox:', reverting to the system's default paper size. The paper size specified in the PostScript code is ignored. EPS input is detected by finding `%!PS-Adobe-' at the beginning of the file and `EPSF-' in the first line. When converting to PostScript, EPS or PDF, the (in.llx, in.lly) coordinates of the input bounding box are not preserved: the output file will always have (0, 0) as its lower left corner and (in.urx-in.llx, in.ury-in.lly) as its upper right corner. Upsampling ~~~~~~~~~~ Here is a figure about upsampling samples bits 1 -> 2 -> 4 -> 8: 0 -> 00 0 1 -> 11 3 00 -> 0000 0 01 -> 0101 5 10 -> 1010 10 11 -> 1111 15 0000 -> 0000 0000 0 0001 -> 0001 0001 17 0010 -> 0010 0010 34 ... 1110 -> 1110 1110 238 1111 -> 1111 1111 255 A 1-bit image has a palette of 2 colors: #00 and #ff. A 2-bit image has a palette of 4 colors: #00, #55, #aa and #ff. A 4-bit image has a palette of 16 colors: #00, #11, #22, ... #ff. An 8-bit image has a palette of 256 colors: #00, #01, #02, ... #ff. Standards ~~~~~~~~~ -- PSL1 is PostScript LanguageLevel1, as defined by Adobe's PostScript Language Reference Manual. -- PSLC is PSL1 with the CMYK extension (including the `colorimage' operator). Supersedes PSL1. -- PSL2 is PostScript LanguageLevel2, as defined by Adobe's PostScript Language Reference Manual. Supersedes PSLC. -- PSL3 is PostScript LanguageLevel3, as defined by Adobe's PostScript Language Reference Manual (PLRM.pdf). Supersedes PSL2. -- PDF1.0 is PDF version 1.0, as defined by Adobe's PDF Reference. -- PDF1.1 is PDF version 1.1, as defined by Adobe's PDF Reference. Supersedes PDF1.0. -- PDF1.2 is PDF version 1.2, as defined by Adobe's PDF Reference. Supersedes PDF1.1. -- PDF1.3 is PDF version 1.3, as defined by Adobe's PDF Reference. Supersedes PDF1.2. -- PDF1.4 is PDF version 1.4, as defined by Adobe's PDF Reference (PDFRef.pdf). Supersedes PDF1.3. -- PDF1.5 is PDF version 1.4, as defined by Adobe's PDF Reference (PDFRef.pdf). Supersedes PDF1.4. -- PBM is Portable Bitmap file format, as defined in NetPBM's pbm(5) UNIX manual page. -- PGM is Portable Graymap file format, as defined in NetPBM's pgm(5) UNIX manual page. -- PPM is Portable Pixmap file format, as defined in NetPBM's ppm(5) UNIX manual page. -- PNM is Portable Anymap file format, as defined in NetPBM's pnm(5) UNIX manual page. It is the union of PGM, PPM and PPM. -- PAM is the new, Portable ...map file format, as defined in NetPBM's pam(5) UNIX manual page. We don't support it yet. -- TIFF is ... v6.0. -- JPEG is baseline JPEG JFIF file format as defined by the Joint Picture Expert Group. -- PNG is Portable Network Graphics file format v1.0, as defined by RFC 2083. Obsolete: Image metadata ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ -- Width: uint -- Height: uint -- ColorSpace: enum (see later), determines PixBits -- PixBits: 1..24 -- Origin: coord -- Comment: string -- FileFormat: -- Predictor: enum (see later), same as PSLanguageLevel1 filter /Predictor 1 -- no predictor 2 -- TIFF predictor 2 (horizontal differencing) 10 -- PNG predictor, None function 11 -- PNG predictor, Sub function 12 -- PNG predictor, Up function 13 -- PNG predictor, Average function 14 -- PNG predictor, Paeth function 15 -- PNG predcitor, individually chosen for each line -- PredictorColumns: uint -- PredictorColors: 1..3 -- PredictorBitsPerComponent: 1, 2, 4, 8 -- CompressionEffort: -1..9 (ZIP) -- CompressionRecordSize: uint (RLE, Fax: K) -- Compression: enum 0 -- None 1 -- LZW (PSL2 PDF1.0 LZWEncode filter EarlyChange=true, UnitLength=8 LowBitFirst=false) 2 -- ZIP (PSL3 PDF1.2 FlateEncode filter without options) 3 -- RLE (PSL2 PDF1.0 RunLengthEncode filter, similar to TIFF PackBits) 4 -- Fax (PSL2 PDF1.0 CCITTFaxEncode filter, Uncompressed=true!, K=-1,0,1, EndOfLine=false, EncodedByteAlign=false, Columns=..., Rows=0, EndOfBlock=true, BlackIs1=false, DamagedRowsBeforeError=0) 5 -- DCT (PSL2 PDF1.0 DCTEncode, options in JPEG stream) 6 -- IJG (PSL2 PDF1.0 DCTEncode, options in JPEG stream; the IJG libjpeg library is used for compression, respecting the quality value 0..100) 7 -- JAI (PSL2 PDF1.0 DCTEncode, options in JPEG stream; JPEG-as-is: the input file must be a JPEG file -- its contents are transferred unmodified into the /DCTDecode JPEG stream) -- TransferEncoding: enum 0 -- Binary (RawBits, see pbm(5), pgm(5), ppm(5)) 1 -- ASCII (text, chars: 9,10,13,32..126) 2 -- Hex ((PSL1), PDF1.0, PSL2 ASCIIHexEncode filter) 3 -- 85 (PSL2 PDF1.0, ASCII85Encode filter) 4 -- base64, _not_ implemented 5 -- quoted-printable, _not_ implemented 6 -- URLencode, _not_ implemented Compatibility notes ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ by pts@fazekas.hu at Wed Nov 14 12:14:15 CET 2001 Fri Mar 22 11:48:36 CET 2002 Sat Apr 20 19:57:44 CEST 2002 Fri Feb 7 11:15:39 CET 2003 -- Ghostscript 6.50 has problems with /FileFormat/PDFB1.0 /SampleFormat/JAI|/IJG/DCT (Error: /syntaxerror in ID). The problem has been fixed in Ghostscript 7.04. With the buggy Ghostscript use /FileFormat/PDF1.0 instead. -- /FileFormat/PDF[B]1.0 /SampleFormat/Mask|/Indexed1 doesn't work on Acrobat Reader 5.0 on Linux: a fully opaque, one-color rectangle is painted. This works fine on gs 6.50 and xpdf 1.0, so Acrobat Reader is assumed to be buggy. -- The GIMP 1.0 cannot load PlanarConfig Separated TIFF images of type GrayA. (But can load PlanarConfig Contiguous GrayA.) -- xv cannot display gray TIFF images with transparency. xv: Sorry, can not handle 2-channel images. -- (lib)tiff FAX compression an PS /CCITTFaxEncode have black and white the opposite way. So `/CCITTFaxEncode <>' has to be applied when creating a TIFF file. -- libtiff 3.5.4 doesn't read or write an indexed image with transparency: Sorry, can not handle contiguous data with PhotometricInterpretation=1, and Samples/pixel=2. (Doesn't work with convert or GIMP.) -- libtiff 3.5.4 doesn't read or write a gray with transparency: Sorry, can not handle contiguous data with PhotometricInterpretation=2, and Samples/pixel=2. (Doesn't work with convert, works with GIMP.) -- libtiff doesn't read or write TIFFTAG_SUBFILETYPE/FILETYPE_MASK + TIFFTAG_PHOTOMETRIC/PHOTOMETRIC_MASK. One has to use TIFFTAG_EXTRASAMPLES instead. -- libtiff (and the TIFF file format) supports only /Predictor 1 and /Predictor 2, with /Compression/LZW and /Compression/ZIP. -- libtiff supports only bpc=8 and bpc=16 with /Predictor 2 -- libtiff and most TIFF-handling utils have buggy support for TIFF/JPEG. See FAQ answer Q4. -- libtiff supports only files with all components having the same BitsPerSample. -- acroread 4.0 can display all possible /Predictor values with /Indexed1. -- Ghostscript 5.50 renders (PDF?) images inaccurately: the last bit of the 8-bit palette sometimes gets wrong. -- Netscape Navigator 4.7 displays transparent PNG images with their bKGD (or an arbitrary color if bKGD not present) as a solid background. This is a bug. -- pdftops 0.92 has serious problems displaying images if /Predictor != 1. The image will be obscured without an error message. Ghostscript 5.50 and Acrobat Reader 4 do not have such problems. -- Ghostscript 5.50 cannot display a PDF with /ColorSpace[/Indexed/DeviceRGB ...]. Acrobat Reader 4, Ghostscript 7.04 and pdftops 0.92 can. -- /Decode is not required in PDF. -- GIMP 1.0 completely ignores the PNG tRNS chunk! (Thus it won't recognise such a transparency in PNG.) Use `pngtopnm -alpha' instead! -- pngtopnm honors the PNG bKGD chunk only if called as `pngtopnm -mix' (and does mixing) -- convert honors the PNG bKGD chunk (and does mixing) -- display doesn't honor the PNG bKGD chunk, but has `-bg' command line option -- xv honors the PNG bKGD chunk (and does mixing) -- PDF procsets (subsection 8.1 of PDFRef.pdf) /PDF /Text /ImageB Grayscale images or image masks /ImageC Color images /ImageI Indexed (color-table) images -- Ghostscript always requires the /Decode entry in image dicts -- /DCTEncode and /DCTDecode supports only BitsPerComponent==8. -- Actually PostScript supports 1,2,4,8,12 BitsPerComponent. PDF1.3 supports only 1,2,4,8. We support only 1, 2, 4 and 8. -- PostScript also supports the CMYK color space, not just gray and RGB. (And also the HSB, which can be transformed to RGB in an ugly way.) -- PostScript supports PNG predictors to enhance compression. -- The PLRM 4.10.6 describes a trick with patterns and imagemask to do transparent images. Unfortunately this doesn't work in Ghostscript 5.50 and xpdf 0.92 (but it works in acroread 4.0), so we don't use it. That's why we have only two *-transparent-* entries. -- ImageMagick EPSI is an EPS with preview (%%BeginPreview .. %%EndPreview) -- ImageMagick EPSF and EPS are equivalent -- ImageMagick EPS* is incredibly slooow because of the bad design, even for LanguageLevel 2. -- ImageMagick EPS* cannot display color images without the colorimage opertor. (We could do some trickery with multiple calls to imagemask.) -- tiff2ps cannot display color images without the colorimage opertor. (We could do some trickery with multiple calls to imagemask.) -- Timing: 1495 x 935 RGB, gs -sDEVICE=bmp16m -sOutputFile=/dev/null time gs -q -sDEVICE=ppmraw -sOutputFile=t.ppm $IN.eps setgray currentgray % PSL1, 0.0=black 1.0=white sethsbcolor % PSL1 setrgbcolor % PSL1 setcmykcolor % PSL2; not in PSL1 Algorithms, code comments ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ RGB -> Gray """"""""""" gray = 0.299*red + 0.587*green + 0.114*blue (NTSC video std) gray = (306.176*red + 601.088*green + 116.736*blue) >> 10 perl -e 'no integer;for(@ARGV){y/#//d;$N=hex($_);$R=0.299*($N>>16)+0.587*(($N>>8)&255)+0.114*($N&255);print $R/255," ",sprintf("#%02x",int($R+0.5)),"\n"}' '#0f0f0f' Rgb2 -> Gray """""""""""" perl -e 'no integer;for(@ARGV){print"$_ ";y/#//d;$N=hex($_);$R=0.299*($N>>16)+0.587*(($N>>8)&255)+0.114*($N&255); print "",$R/255," ",sprintf("#%02x",int($R+0.5)),"\n"}' 000000 000055 0000aa 0000ff 005500 005555 0055aa 0055ff 00aa00 00aa55 00aaaa 00aaff 00ff00 00ff55 00ffaa 00ffff 550000 550055 5500aa 5500ff 555500 555555 5555aa 5555ff 55aa00 55aa55 55aaaa 55aaff 55ff00 55ff55 55ffaa 55ffff aa0000 aa0055 aa00aa aa00ff aa5500 aa5555 aa55aa aa55ff aaaa00 aaaa55 aaaaaa aaaaff aaff00 aaff55 aaffaa aaffff ff0000 ff0055 ff00aa ff00ff ff5500 ff5555 ff55aa ff55ff ffaa00 ffaa55 ffaaaa ffaaff ffff00 ffff55 ffffaa ffffff 000000 0 #00 000055 0.038 #0a 0000aa 0.076 #13 0000ff 0.114 #1d 005500 0.195666666666667 #32 005555 0.233666666666667 #3c 0055aa 0.271666666666667 #45 0055ff 0.309666666666667 #4f 00aa00 0.391333333333333 #64 00aa55 0.429333333333333 #6d 00aaaa 0.467333333333333 #77 00aaff 0.505333333333333 #81 00ff00 0.587 #96 00ff55 0.625 #9f 00ffaa 0.663 #a9 00ffff 0.701 #b3 550000 0.0996666666666667 #19 550055 0.137666666666667 #23 5500aa 0.175666666666667 #2d 5500ff 0.213666666666667 #36 555500 0.295333333333333 #4b 555555 0.333333333333333 #55 5555aa 0.371333333333333 #5f 5555ff 0.409333333333333 #68 55aa00 0.491 #7d 55aa55 0.529 #87 55aaaa 0.567 #91 55aaff 0.605 #9a 55ff00 0.686666666666667 #af 55ff55 0.724666666666667 #b9 55ffaa 0.762666666666667 #c2 55ffff 0.800666666666667 #cc aa0000 0.199333333333333 #33 aa0055 0.237333333333333 #3d aa00aa 0.275333333333333 #46 aa00ff 0.313333333333333 #50 aa5500 0.395 #65 aa5555 0.433 #6e aa55aa 0.471 #78 aa55ff 0.509 #82 aaaa00 0.590666666666667 #97 aaaa55 0.628666666666667 #a0 aaaaaa 0.666666666666667 #aa aaaaff 0.704666666666667 #b4 aaff00 0.786333333333333 #c9 aaff55 0.824333333333333 #d2 aaffaa 0.862333333333333 #dc aaffff 0.900333333333333 #e6 ff0000 0.299 #4c ff0055 0.337 #56 ff00aa 0.375 #60 ff00ff 0.413 #69 ff5500 0.494666666666667 #7e ff5555 0.532666666666667 #88 ff55aa 0.570666666666667 #92 ff55ff 0.608666666666667 #9b ffaa00 0.690333333333333 #b0 ffaa55 0.728333333333333 #ba ffaaaa 0.766333333333333 #c3 ffaaff 0.804333333333333 #cd ffff00 0.886 #e2 ffff55 0.924 #ec ffffaa 0.962 #f5 ffffff 1 #ff Building the palette for Paletted image -> PSLC colorimage """""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""" { Buf3 0 0 currentfile Bufx readstring pop % /i 0 def % Stack: Buf3 0 0 Bufx { % Stack: Buf3 <0-1-2> exch { { % Stack: Buf3 dup -2 bitshift Pal exch get % Stack: Buf3 exch 4 bitshift /Carry exch def % Stack: Buf3 3 copy put pop 1 add 1 % Stack: Buf3 1 }{dup -4 bitshift Carry add Pal exch get exch 15 and 2 bitshift /Carry exch def 3 copy put pop 1 add 2 }{dup -6 bitshift Carry add Pal exch get % Stack: Buf3 exch 4 copy % Stack: Buf3 Buf3 pop put % Stack: Buf3 63 and Pal exch get pop % Stack: Buf3 exch 1 add exch 3 copy put pop 1 add 0 % Stack: Buf3 0 } } exch % Stack: Buf3 {code3} <0-1-2> get exec % Stack: Buf3 <1-2-0> } forall % Stack: Buf3 pop pop Bufr } Color space conversion: (unfinished) """""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""" -- Ripped from jccolor.c from libjpeg: * YCbCr is defined per CCIR 601-1, except that Cb and Cr are * normalized to the range 0..MAXJSAMPLE rather than -0.5 .. 0.5. * The conversion equations to be implemented are therefore * Y = 0.29900 * R + 0.58700 * G + 0.11400 * B * Cb = -0.16874 * R - 0.33126 * G + 0.50000 * B + CENTERJSAMPLE * Cr = 0.50000 * R - 0.41869 * G - 0.08131 * B + CENTERJSAMPLE * (These numbers are derived from TIFF 6.0 section 21, dated 3-June-92.) -- RGB -> YCbCr: Y = 0.29900 * R + 0.58700 * G + 0.11400 * B Cb = -0.16874 * R - 0.33126 * G + 0.50000 * B + CENTERJSAMPLE Cr = 0.50000 * R - 0.41869 * G - 0.08131 * B + CENTERJSAMPLE -- CMYK -> YCCK: R=1-C, G=1-M, B=1-Y, K=K, RGB -> YCbCr -- YCbCr -> RGB: (Cb < CENTERJSAMPLE, Cr < CENTERJSAMPLE) R = Y + 1.40200 * Cr G = Y - 0.34414 * Cb - 0.71414 * Cr B = Y + 1.77200 * Cb -- YCCK -> CMYK: YCbCr -> RGB, C=1-R, M=1-G, Y=1-B, K=K. -- (YCbCrK == YCCK) -- Gray -> RGB: red = gray, green = gray, blue = gray -- RGB -> Gray: gray = 0.299*red + 0.587*green + 0.114*blue (NTSC video std) : gray = (306.176*red + 601.088*green + 116.736*blue) >> 10 : gray = (19595.264*red + 38469.632*green + 7471.104*blue) >> 16 -- Obsolete: RGB -> YCbCr: (YCbCr == YUV) y:luminance = 0.299*red + 0.587*green + 0.114*blue (0..1) cb:chrominance-b = blue - y = - 0.299*red - 0.587*green + 0.886*blue (-0.886 .. 0.886) cr:chrominance-r = red - y = 0.701*red - 0.587*green - 0.114*blue (-0.701 .. 0.701) Chrominance components can be represented less accurately since the human eye is around twice as sensitive to luminance as to chrominance. -- RGB <-> HSB: quite obfuscated. See gshsb.c in Aladdin Ghostscript's source. Word frequency counting in PostScript source """""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""" perl -e '$C=0; $X=join"",; for (split" ",$X) { print "$_.\n"; $C+=length($_)-1 if /[0-9]/ }; print STDERR "C=$C\n"' ; $X=~s@([{}])@ $1 @g; $X=~s@/@ /@g; for (split" ",$X) { print "$_.\n" if length>=2; $C++ if length($_)>=2 }; print STDERR "C=$C\n"' | sort | uniq ; $X=~s@([{}])@ $1 @g; $X=~s@/@ /@g; $Y=""; for (split" ",$X) { $_=" $_ " if length($_)>=2; $Y.=$_ }; $Y=~s@ /@/@g; print $Y' >t How tiff2ps displays a gray version of a PSLC Rgb8 image on PSL1 """""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""" gsave 100 dict begin 1495.000000 935.000000 scale /bwproc { rgbproc dup length 3 idiv string 0 3 0 5 -1 roll { add 2 1 roll 1 sub dup 0 eq { pop 3 idiv 3 -1 roll dup 4 -1 roll dup 3 1 roll 5 -1 roll put 1 add 3 0 } { 2 1 roll } ifelse } forall pop pop pop } def /colorimage where {pop} { /colorimage {pop pop /rgbproc exch def {bwproc} image} bind def } ifelse %ImageData: 1495 935 8 3 0 1 2 "false 3 colorimage" /line 4485 string def 1495 935 8 [1495 0 0 -935 0 935] {currentfile line readhexstring pop} bind false 3 colorimage pts_defl.c which function calls which function """""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""" send_bits rengeteg flush_outbuf send_bits flush_block 2* build_tree flush_block 3* flush_block deflate2 5* ct_tally deflate2 sok* longest_match deflate2 2* fill_window deflate2 4* gen_codes 2, reentrant deflate2 1.. pts_deflate_init 1 Answers from Taco """"""""""""""""" Are the problems I'm concerned about already solved? -- Is there a pixel image converter that can create small and compatible EPS documents with all the RunLength, CCITTFax, LZW and Flate compression types? -- Is there a PDF version of psfrag.sty? Is there a utility for splitting and assebling PDF files? Is there a utility for changing text labels inside a PDF file? -- Is there a utility for creating (semi-)transparent EPS or PDF files from pixel images? Compilation problems """""""""""""""""""" -- Mĺrten Svantesson wrote: > Another problem was that the configure script didn't realise that it > couldn't use the forte CC-compiler. This lead to several errors. For > example it doesn't accept the option -ansi, so several tests fail for > this reason. I don't have access to the a forte CC-compiler. The configure script has been designed for use with GCC and G++. -- Peter Dyballa wrote (unquoted): > > leads to PTS_lstat being #define'd as lstat -- while stat would be correct. > > Why do you think that stat would be correct? Because /usr/include/sys/stat.h contains this: __BEGIN_DECLS int chmod __P((const char *, mode_t)); int fstat __P((int, struct stat *)); int mkdir __P((const char *, mode_t)); int mkfifo __P((const char *, mode_t)); int stat __P((const char *, struct stat *)); mode_t umask __P((mode_t)); #ifndef _POSIX_SOURCE int chflags __P((const char *, u_long)); int fchflags __P((int, u_long)); int fchmod __P((int, mode_t)); int lstat __P((const char *, struct stat *)); #endif __END_DECLS and gensio.cpp #define's _POSIX_SOURCE. > I think that that PTS_lstat is defined as it should, but configure should generate the poper condition for #if. Please submit a patch to configure. > This makes it compile in Mac OS X 10.3.9 (Panther): diff -Naur gensio.cpp~ gensio.cpp --- gensio.cpp~ Thu Mar 3 23:00:06 2005 +++ gensio.cpp Mon Oct 31 15:07:53 2005 @@ -16,7 +16,9 @@ #else #undef __STRICT_ANSI__ /* for __MINGW32__ */ #define _BSD_SOURCE 1 /* vsnprintf(); may be emulated with fixup_vsnprintf() */ +#ifndef __APPLE__ #define _POSIX_SOURCE 1 /* also popen() */ +#endif #define _POSIX_C_SOURCE 2 /* also popen() */ #define _XOPEN_SOURCE_EXTENDED 1 /* Digital UNIX lstat */ #ifndef _XPG4_2 --- I've integrated his #ifndef __APPLE__ patch. There should be a better way to handle this situation, though. -- How to compile with i386-uclibc-gcc on Debian Etch: by pts@fazekas.hu at Sun Apr 5 00:28:53 CEST 2009 $ i386-uclibc-gcc -v Invoked as i386-uclibc-gcc arg[ 0] = gcc arg[ 1] = -v Using built-in specs. Target: i486-linux-gnu Configured with: ../src/configure -v --enable-languages=c,c++,fortran,objc,obj-c++,treelang --prefix=/usr --enable-shared --with-system-zlib --libexecdir=/usr/lib --without-included-gettext --enable-threads=posix --enable-nls --program-suffix=-4.1 --enable-__cxa_atexit --enable-clocale=gnu --enable-libstdcxx-debug --enable-mpfr --with-tune=i686 --enable-checking=release i486-linux-gnu Thread model: posix gcc version 4.1.2 20061115 (prerelease) (Debian 4.1.1-21) $ CXX='i386-uclibc-gcc -static' CC=i386-uclibc-gcc ./configure --enable-gif --enable-lzw # change LDXX=... to LDXX=$(CXX) in Makehelp $ make # (Unfortunately, the executable is large, 410KB) Revision history, changes ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ See in the file debian/changelog. Missing feature list ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ !! make mkdist-noautoconf creates .tar.gz w/o leading directory part !! cannot read t.pnm "P4 1 1 1" doesn't end with \S !! ./sam2p ../pts.ppm t.gif -> sam2p: out_gif.cpp:260: void out_gif_write(GenBuffer::Writable&, Image::Indexed*): Assertion `bits_per_pixel<=8' failed. !! why so large PNG? sam2p examples/chessboard_ascii.pnm t.png !! easy seek back to 0 in in_*.cpp !! rxvt_bug.png -> useful Win98 .bmp ?? (expected) !! --invert option, for tif22pnm users complete turbo tutorial, MIFF input, _output_ full BMP output compressed, faster GIF input??, make install, .deb (debhelper?), .rpm, normal `image' instead of `colorimage' CUPS raster input and output, /Background option (-bg) to change transparent pixels -> bg color LZW and ZIP compressed for indexed etc. /* OK : PS and PDF input */ /* Imp: parse bts2.ttt just after generating (balance of [ << ... >> ]) /* Imp: command line option for /Transparent */ /* Imp: avoid 3 warnings in: ./sam2p examples/pts2.pbm t.ppm */ /* OK : margins for all PS, EPS and PDF (Sat Sep 7 16:17:58 CEST 2002 */ /* Imp: howto in pts_defl.h */ /* Imp: check for fixed bugs new zlib */ /* OK : built-in CCITTFaxEncode */ /* Imp: one-liner eliminate automatically invalid BMP SampleFormats with compression */ /* OK : more transferencodings for l1fa85g.tte */ /* Imp: eliminate long line (>120) from l1fa85g.tte */ /* Imp: one-liner -s gray|indexed|rgb|transparent */ /* OK : read bad.txt, and move it to section {Fixed bugs} */ /* OK : verify /Compression/Fax /K 1|2 with gs 5.50|7.04 */ /* Imp: in-memory dump when scanf_dict Error */ /* Imp: optimal, non-mem-hungry RLE compression filter (hardly possible...) */ /* Imp: possibility to write RGB (non-YCbCr) JPEG with /Compression/IJG etc. */ /* Imp: ability to load .gz and .zip compressed input files. Example: * .pbm.gz */ /* Imp: no return DONT_KNOW from *_work() */ /* Imp: Meta output */ /* Imp: PSL1 auto fallback to grayscale `image' in absence of `colorimage' */ /* Imp: full support for ZIP compression in PSL1 (similar to RLE) */ /* OK: TIFF output */ /* Imp: implement as a library (throw/catch exceptions, memory management, reentrance) */ /* Imp: check for proper inner dict usage in l1fa85g.tte */ /* Imp: add /Transparent2, /Transparent4, /Transparent8 for PDF */ /* Imp: add all #warning REQUIRES: */ /* OK : ccdep.pl, --enable-debug (Sat Jun 1 16:27:58 CEST 2002) */ /* Imp: show binary/ASCII in PDF and PS header comments */ /* Imp: `available loaders: (TIFF)' if tifftopnm not found (run-time) */ /* Imp: make LZW-unsupported not an Error, but a Warning */ /* Imp: create output profile */ /* OK: a real string hashing lib */ /* Imp: GIF reader is too slow (maybe LZW reading? ?). Change to xvgif.c?? */ /* OK : XPM reader (>=256 colors) is too slow */ /* OK : specify transparent color in the Job file */ /* Imp: run-time detect the absence of external progs */ /* Imp: make install */ /* Imp: make .deb, .rpm */ /* No : NDEBUG by default */ /* Imp: substitute char (1) for bool (8) on Digital UNIX */ /* OK : real replacement of vsnprintf() (Digital UNIX, Solaris) -- Tue Jun 11 15:20:22 CEST 2002 */ /* OK : close both filters in l23.tte, but _never_ close currentfile */ /* Imp: run-time choice from FlateEncode filter implemenetations etc. */ /* Imp: convert bilevel indexed image to grayscale more quickly */ /* OK : add quick and effective command line interface (one-liner mode) */ /* No : read external .tte files (runtime) instead of built-in .tth */ /* Imp: possibility to store several profiles in the same .jib file */ /* Imp: real, PDF-style dates into Created, Produced */ /* OK : real hashing in MiniPS::Dict */ /* Imp: enforce magic numbers for .job and .jib files */ /* OK : /TransferEncoding: * -> ascii if ... */ /* Imp: (early check, special handler) make everything work when wd==0 || ht==0; especially encoding filters */ /* Imp: better Job option for specifying and removing transparent color (better than /Transparent) */ /* Imp: log date(now) */ /* OK : DCT options in Output Rule */ /* OK : implement JAI */ /* Imp: support LargeBBox */ /* Imp: support Comment */ /* Imp: support PDF metadata: Title Subject Author Creator Producer */ /* Imp: support PDF dates: Created Produced */ /* Imp: support Comment */ /* Imp: add PAM file format support from NetPBM */ /* OK : verify ADSC EPSF-3.0 compatibility */ /* Imp: pre-transformation: making grayscale */ /* Imp: pre-transformation: down-bit-sampling */ /* Imp: pre-transformation: down-palette-sampling (``generate optimal palette'') */ /* Imp: tif22pnm warning - non-square pixels; to fix do a 'pnmscale -yscale nan'P6 2840 2138 255 */ ==6750== ==6750== ERROR SUMMARY: 0 errors from 0 contexts (suppressed: 0 from 0) ==6750== malloc/free: in use at exit: 3741 bytes in 102 blocks. ==6750== malloc/free: 2296 allocs, 2194 frees, 170451 bytes allocated. ==6750== For counts of detected errors, rerun with: -v ==6750== searching for pointers to 102 not-freed blocks. ==6750== checked 4227304 bytes. ==6750== ==6750== 12 bytes in 1 blocks are definitely lost in loss record 3 of 15 ==6750== at 0x400254FF: __builtin_new (vg_replace_malloc.c:172) ==6750== by 0x806ABC3: MiniPS::Parser::parse1(int, int) (minips.cpp:789) ==6750== by 0x806B378: MiniPS::Parser::parse1(int, int) (minips.cpp:856) ==6750== by 0x804DBD5: run_sam2p_engine(Files::FILEW &, Files::FILEW &, char const *const *, bool) (sam2p_main.cpp:923) ==6750== ==6750== ==6750== 808 bytes in 81 blocks are possibly lost in loss record 14 of 15 ==6750== at 0x400255E9: __builtin_vec_new (vg_replace_malloc.c:197) ==6750== by 0x8060C94: Mapping::DoubleHash::set(char const *, unsigned int, char const *) (mapping.cpp:43) ==6750== by 0x806A18B: MiniPS::Dict::put(char const *, unsigned int, int) (minips.cpp:461) ==6750== by 0x8069FF1: MiniPS::Dict::put(char const *, int) (minips.cpp:431) ==6750== ==6750== LEAK SUMMARY: ==6750== definitely lost: 12 bytes in 1 blocks. ==6750== possibly lost: 808 bytes in 81 blocks. ==6750== still reachable: 2921 bytes in 20 blocks. ==6750== suppressed: 0 bytes in 0 blocks. Known bugs ~~~~~~~~~~ (reported by Stefan Fritsch) > I got a bug report [1] about sam2p 0.44-10 not including a length > after the %%BeginData: line. As I understand it, the length is not > optional (see [2] p.44 (and gsview output?)). Sam2p 0.44-11 adds a > ";" after to this line. What does this ";" do? Is this supposed to be > conforming to the postscript standard? If not, are you planning to > write a real fix? > > [1] http://bugs.debian.org/cgi-bin/bugreport.cgi?bug=315046 > [2] http://partners.adobe.com/public/developer/en/ps/5001.DSC_Spec.pdf Fixing it would require a major rewrite. However, I don't have free time for that right now. If you really care about standards, remove the %%BeginData...%%EndData pair from the PostScript file or remove it altogether from the sam2p sources. The `;' is there so GSView won't complain. !! compiling on Debian SID with uclibc-toolchain i386-uclibc-linux-g++, the statically linked sam2p executable becomes quite biiiig: 668268 bytes. for configure: export CXX='i386-uclibc-linux-gcc -x c++ -static' Also, Makehelp has to be modified after running configure: LDXX=i386-uclibc-linux-g++ -static !! .eps import bad shift of BBX (LLX,LLY) with never Ghostscript Fixed bugs ~~~~~~~~~~ (this section was formerly bad.txt) ./sam2p -j examples/ptsbanner2.jpg test.pdf discover at Sun Sep 22 14:38:39 CEST 2002 BUGFIX at Sun Sep 22 15:03:33 CEST 2002 ./sam2p -1 -s:rgb1 -c:none examples/pts2.pbm test.eps discover at Sun Sep 22 14:29:59 CEST 2002 BUGFIX (add -s:...:stopq) at Sun Sep 22 16:20:41 CEST 2002 (behaviour correct, specifying -s:rgb1:stop gives more error messages) ./sam2p -c:fax:2 examples/shot.gif y.pdf BUGFIX /EndOfLine true is forced old gs: /ioerror in --%image_file_continue-- old acroread: `read less image data' (PDFB1.0: `expected EI') ./sam2p -c:fax:1 examples/shot.gif y.pdf BUGFIX /EndOfLine true is forced gs: OK old acroread: `read less image data' (PDFB1.0: `problem 115') ./sam2p -c:fax:0 examples/shot.gif y.pdf gs, acroread: OK ./sam2p -c:fax:-1 examples/shot.gif y.pdf gs, acroread: OK ./sam2p -c:fax examples/pts2.pbm y.tiff BUGFIX black-white inversion ./sam2p -c:fax examples/shot.gif y.tiff BUGFIX black-white inversion ./sam2p -j -c jpeg examples/pts2.pbm y.tiff seems to be OK now ./sam2p -j -c jpeg examples/pts2.pbm y.tiff seems to be OK now ./sam2p -j -c fax examples/ptsbanner.gif y.eps BUGFIX guard against applying /Compression/Fax to non-1-bit data ./sam2p -j -c fax -s:Indexed8 examples/ptsbanner.gif y.eps OK, no guard ./sam2p -j -c fax -c none examples/ptsbanner.gif y.eps OK, no guard ./sam2p -j -c fax examples/ptsbanner.gif y.tiff BUGFIX forbidden applying /Compression/Fax to non-1-bit data ./sam2p -c fax csanyi_torok_old.png csanyi_torok.eps ./sam2p -c fax examples/ptsbanner.gif csanyi_torok.eps error: Impossible combination OK, the user should specify `-s Indexed8' for unexpected use of `-c fax' __END__