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Pngtopam User Manual(0)				       Pngtopam User Manual(0)

NAME
       pngtopam - convert a PNG image into a Netpbm image

SYNOPSIS
       pngtopam	 [-verbose]  [-alphapam	 |  -alpha | -mix] [-background=color]
       [-gamma=value] [-text=filename] [-time] [-byrow] [pngfile]

       Minimum unique abbreviation of option is acceptable.  You may use  dou‐
       ble  hyphens  instead  of single hyphen to denote options.  You may use
       white space in place of the equals sign to separate an option name from
       its value.

DESCRIPTION
       This program is part of Netpbm(1)

       pngtopam	 reads	a  PNG	image (Portable Network Graphics) as input and
       produces a Netpbm image as output.  The type of the output file depends
       on the input file - if it's black & white, pngtopam creates a PBM file.
       If it's grayscale, pngtopam creates a PGM file.	Otherwise, it  creates
       a PPM file.  Except that with the -alphapam option, it always creates a
       PAM file.  That	file  has  tuple  type	GRAYSCALE_ALPHA	 or  RGB_ALPHA
       depending on whether the input has color or not.

       To  convert  in the other direction, use pnmtopng or pamrgbatopng.  The
       former is more powerful in almost every way, except that only the  lat‐
       ter  can recognize transparency information in a PAM file, as you might
       generate with pngtopam -alphapam.  To use pnmtopng with a PAM file with
       transparency,  you  can separate out the transparency channel with pam‐
       channel and feed it to pnmtopng separately.  But you may	 want  to  use
       pngtopam	 -alpha	 instead  of  pngtopam -alphapam if you're going to be
       converting back.

OPTIONS
       -verbose
	      Display various information about the input PNG  image  and  the
	      conversion process.

	      If  you  want  even  more	 information  about the PNG image, use
	      pngcheck (not part of Netpbm).

       -alphapam
	      Produce a single output image containing the main	 image	(fore‐
	      ground)  and the alpha channel or transparency mask.  This image
	      is in the PAM format with tuple type of  either  GRAYSCALE_ALPHA
	      (which  has  a  depth  of	 2 channels) or RGB_ALPHA (which has a
	      depth of 4 channels).

	      You can specify only one of -alphapam, -alpha, and  -mix.	  With
	      none  of	them,  pngtopam produces an image of the foreground of
	      the input image and discards transparency information.

	      Note that converting in the other direction, the	pamtopng  con‐
	      verter won't recognize the transparency information you generate
	      with -alphapam, but pamrgbatopng will.

	      This option was new in Netpbm 10.44 (September 2008).

       -alpha Output the alpha channel or transparency mask of the image.  The
	      result  is either a PBM file or a PGM file, depending on whether
	      different levels of transparency appear.

	      pngtopam discards the main image (the foreground).

	      You can specify only one of -alphapam, -alpha, and  -mix.	  With
	      none  of	them,  pngtopam produces an image of the foreground of
	      the input image and discards transparency information.

       -mix   Compose the image with the transparency or alpha mask against  a
	      background.   The	 background  color  is	determined by the bKGD
	      chunk in the PNG, except that you can override  it  with	-back‐
	      ground.	If  the	 PNG  has  no bKGD chunk and you don't specify
	      -background, the background color is white.

	      You can specify only one of -alphapam, -alpha, and  -mix.	  With
	      none  of	them,  pngtopam produces an image of the foreground of
	      the input image and discards transparency information.

       -background=color
	      This option specifies the background color with which to mix the
	      image when you specify -mix.

	      color  is	 as described for the argument of the ppm_parsecolor()
	      library routine ⟨libppm.html#colorname⟩ .

	      Examples:

       ·      -background=rgb:01/ff/80

       ·      -background=rgbi:1/255/128

	      If you don't specify -background, the background color  is  what
	      is  specified  in	 the PNG image, and if the PNG doesn't specify
	      anything, white.

	      You cannot specify -background unless  you  also	specify	 -mix.
	      Before  Netpbm 10.27 (March 2005), you could specify -background
	      without -mix and it was just ignored.  (This caused a  usability
	      problem).

       -gamma=value
	      Converts	the  image  to	a  new display-gamma value.  If a gAMA
	      chunk is present in the png-file, pngtopam  uses	the  specified
	      image-gamma  value.   If not, pngtopam considers the image-gamma
	      to be 1.0.  Based on the image-gamma and the display-gamma given
	      with  this  option,  pngtopam  adjusts the colors written to the
	      pnm-file.

	      Because the gammas of uncompensated  monitors  are  around  2.6,
	      which results in an image-gamma of 0.45, some typical situations
	      are: when the image-gamma is 0.45 (use -verbose  to  check)  and
	      the  picture  is	too  light, your system is gamma-corrected, so
	      convert with '-gamma 1.0'.  When no gAMA chunk is present or the
	      image-gamma is 1.0, use 2.2 to make the picture lighter and 0.45
	      to make the picture darker.

	      One oddity to be aware of when using -gamma  on  an  image  with
	      transparency:  The  PNG  image specifies that a certain color is
	      transparent, i.e. every pixel in the  image  of  that  color  is
	      transparent.   But  pngtopam  interprets this as applying to the
	      gamma-corrected space, and there may be less precision  in  that
	      space  than  in  the  original, which means multiple uncorrected
	      colors map to the same corrected color.	So  imagine  that  the
	      image  contains 3 shades of white and specifies that one of them
	      is transparent.  After gamma correction, those three shades  are
	      indistinguishable,  so  pngtopam	considers  pixels of all three
	      shades to be transparent.

	      If this is not what you want, don't  use	gamma.	 Instead,  use
	      pnmgamma on the output.

       -text=file
	      Writes  the  tEXt	 and  zTXt  chunks  to	a file, in a format as
	      described in the pnmtopng user  manual.	These  chunks  contain
	      text comments or annotations.

       -time  Prints the tIME chunk to stderr.

       -byrow This  option  can	 make  pngtopam	 run faster or in environments
	      where it would otherwise fail.

	      pngtopam has two ways to do the  conversion  from	 PNG  to  PAM,
	      using respectively two facilities of the PNG library:

       Whole Image
	      Decode   the   entire   image   into   memory   at  once,	 using
	      png_read_image(), then convert to PAM and output row by row.

       Row By Row
	      Read,  convert,  and  output   one   row	 at   a	  time	 using
	      png_read_row().

	      Whole Image is generally preferable because the PNG library does
	      more of the work, which means it understands  more  of  the  PNG
	      format possibilities now and in the future.  Also, if the PNG is
	      interlaced, pngtopam does not know how to assemble the  rows  in
	      the right order.

	      Row  By Row uses far less memory, which means with large images,
	      it can run in environments where Whole Image cannot and may also
	      run faster.  And because Netpbm code does more of the work, it's
	      possible that it can be more flexible or at  least  give	better
	      diagnostic information if there's something wrong with the PNG.

	      The  Netpbm  native code may do something correctly that the PNG
	      library does incorrectly, or vice versa.

	      In Netpbm, we stress function over performance,  so  by  default
	      pngtopam	uses  Whole  Image.   You  can	select Row By Row with
	      -byrow if you want the speed or  resource	 requirement  improve‐
	      ment.

	      -byrow was new in Netpbm 10.54 (March 2010).

       -orientraw
	      A	 TIFF stream contains raster data which can be arranged in the
	      stream various ways.  Most commonly, it  is  arranged  by	 rows,
	      with the top row first, and the pixels left to right within each
	      row, but many other orientations are possible.

	      The common orientation is the same on the Netpbm formats use, so
	      tifftopnm can do its jobs quite efficiently when the TIFF raster
	      is oriented that way.

	      But if the TIFF raster is oriented any other way, it can take  a
	      considerable amount of processing for tifftopnm to convert it to
	      Netpbm format.

SEE ALSO
       pnmtopng(1) , pnmtopng(1) , ptot, pnmgamma(1) , pnm(1)

       For  information	 on  the   PNG	 format,   see	 http://schaik.com/png
       ⟨http://schaik.com/png⟩ .

NOTE
       A  PNG image contains a lot of information that can't be represented in
       Netpbm formats.	Therefore, you lose information when  you  convert  to
       another	format	with "pngtopam | pnmtoxxx".  If there is a specialized
       converter that converts directly to the other format, e.g. ptot to con‐
       vert from PNG to TIFF, you'll get better results using that.

LIMITATIONS
       There  could  be	 an option to include PNG comment chunks in the output
       image as PNM comments instead of putting them in a separate file.

       The program could be much faster, with a bit of	code  optimizing.   As
       with  any  Netpbm  program,  speed  always  takes  a back seat to quick
       present and future development.

HISTORY
       pngtopam was new in Netpbm 10.44, as a replacement for  pngtopnm.   The
       main  improvement  over pngtopnm was that it could generate a PAM image
       with a transparency channel, whereas with pngtopnm, you would  have  to
       extract the transparency channel as a separate file, in a separate run.

       pngtopnm	 was  new  in Netpbm 8.1 (March 2000), the first big change to
       the package in Netpbm's	renaissance.   It  and	pnmtopng  were	simply
       copied from the	pnmtopng package (1)
	by  Greg  Roelofs.  Those were based on simpler reference applications
       by Alexander Lehmann <alex@hal.rhein-main.de>  and  Willem  van	Schaik
       <willem@schaik.com> and distributed with their PNG library.

       Nearly  all  of	the code has changed since it was copied from the pnm‐
       topng package, most of it just to improve maintainability.

AUTHORS
       Copyright (C) 1995-1997 by Alexander Lehmann and Willem van Schaik.

netpbm documentation		 22 July 2008	       Pngtopam User Manual(0)
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