convert(1)

convert(1)

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NAME
       convert - converts an input file using one image format to
       an output file with the same or differing image format.

SYNOPSIS
       convert [ options ... ] file [ file... ] file

DESCRIPTION
       convert converts an input file using one image  format  to
       an output file with the same or differing image format.

       convert recognizes the following image formats:

       Tag    Description
              -------------------------------------------------------------------------------

       AVS    AVS X image file.

       BIE+   Joint Bi-level Image experts Group file interchange
              format.

       BMP+   Microsoft Windows bitmap image file.

       BMP24+ Microsoft Windows 24-bit bitmap image file.

       CGM    Computer Graphics Metafile.

       CMYK   Raw cyan, magenta, yellow, and black bytes.

       DCX+   ZSoft IBM PC multi-page Paintbrush file.

       DIB    Microsoft Windows bitmap image file.

       EPS    Adobe Encapsulated PostScript file.

       EPS2   Adobe Level II Encapsulated PostScript file.

       EPSF   Adobe Encapsulated PostScript file.

       EPSI   Adobe Encapsulated PostScript Interchange format.

       FAX+   Group 3.

       FIG    TransFig image format.

       FITS   Flexible Image Transport System.

       FPX    FlashPix Format.

       GIF+   CompuServe   graphics   interchange  format;  8-bit
              color.

       GIF87+ CompuServe graphics interchange format; 8-bit color
              (version 87a).

       GRAY   Raw gray bytes.

       GRADATION
              gradual  passing from one shade to another. Specify
              the desired shading as the  filename  (e.g.  grada-
              tion:red-blue).

       GRANITE
              granite texture.

       HDF+   Hierarchical Data Format.

       HTML   Hypertext  Markup Language with a client-side image
              map.

       HISTOGRAM

       JBIG+  Joint Bi-level Image experts Group file interchange
              format.

       JPEG   Joint  Photographic Experts Group JFIF format; com-
              pressed 24-bit color.

       ICO    Microsoft icon.

       LABEL  text image.

       MAP    Red, green, and blue colormap bytes followed by the
              image colormap indexes.

       MIFF+  Magick  image file format.  MNG Multiple-image Net-
              work Graphics.

       MONO   Bi-level  bitmap  in  least-significant-byte  (LSB)
              first order.

       MPEG+  Motion  Picture Experts Group file interchange for-
              mat.

       MTV+   MTV Raytracing image format.

       NETSCPAPE
              Netscape 216 color cube.

       NULL   NULL image.

       PBM+   Portable bitmap format (black and white).

       PCD    Photo  CD.   The  maximum  resolution  written   is
              512x768 pixels.

       PCL    Page Control Language.

       PCX    ZSoft IBM PC Paintbrush file.

       PDF+   Portable Document Format.

       PGM+   Portable graymap format (gray scale).

       PICT   Apple Macintosh QuickDraw/PICT file.

       PLASMA plasma  fractal  image.   Specify the base color as
              the filename (e.g. plasma:gray).   Use  fractal  to
              initialize to a random value (e.g. plasma:fractal).

       PNG    Portable Network Graphics.

       PNM+   Portable anymap.

       PPM+   Portable pixmap format (color).

       PS+    Adobe PostScript file.

       PS2+   Adobe Level II PostScript file.

       P7     Xv's visual schnauzer format.

       RAD    Radiance image format.

       RGB    Raw red, green, and blue bytes.

       RGBA   Raw red, green, blue and matte bytes.

       RLA    Alias/Wavefront image file; read only

       RLE    Utah Run length encoded image file; read only.

       SGI+   Irix RGB image file.

       SHTML  Hypertext Markup Language with a client-side  image
              map.

       SUN+   SUN Rasterfile.

       TEXT   raw text file; read only.

       TGA+   Truevision Targa image file.

       TIFF+  Tagged Image File Format.

       TIFF24+
              24-bit Tagged Image File Format.

       TILE   tile image with a texture.

       UIL    X-Motif UIL table.

       UYVY   16bit/pixel   interleaved   YUV   (e.g.   used   by
              AccomWSD).

       VICAR  read only.

       VID    Visual Image Directory.

       VIFF+  Khoros Visualization image file.

       X      select image from X server screen.

       XC     constant image of  X  server  color.   Specify  the
              desired color as the filename (e.g. xc:yellow).

       XBM    X11 bitmap file.

       XPM    X Windows system pixmap file (color).

       XWD    X Windows system window dump file (color).

       YUV+   CCIR 601 4:1:1 file.
              Note, a format delineated with + means that if more
              than one image is specified, it is combined into  a
              single multi-image file.  Use +adjoin if you want a
              single image produced for each frame.
              Raw images are expected to have one byte per  pixel
              unless  ImageMagick  is  compiled  in  16-bit mode.
              Here, the raw data is expected  to  be  stored  two
              bytes   per  pixel  in  most-significant-byte-first
              order.

EXAMPLES
       To convert a MIFF image of a  cockatoo  to  a  SUN  raster
       image, use:

            convert cockatoo.miff sun:cockatoo.ras

       To  convert a multi-page Postscript document to individual
       FAX pages, use:

            convert -monochrome document.ps fax:page

       To convert a TIFF image to a Postscript A4 page  with  the
       image in the lower left-hand corner, use:

            convert -page A4+0+0 image.tiff document.ps

       To  convert  a  raw GRAY image with a 128 byte header to a
       portable graymap, use:

            convert -size 768x512+128 gray:raw image.pgm

       To convert a Photo CD image to a TIFF image, use:

            convert -size 1536x1024 img0009.pcd image.tiff
            convert img0009.pcd[4] image.tiff

       To create a  visual  image  directory  of  all  your  JPEG
       images, use:

            convert 'vid:*.jpg' directory.miff

       To  annotate  an  image with blue text using font 12x24 at
       position (100,100), use:

            convert -font helvetica -pen blue -draw "text 100,100 Cockatoo" bird.jpg bird.miff

       To tile a 640x480 image with a  JPEG  texture  with  bumps
       use:

            convert -size 640x480 tile:bumps.jpg tiled.png

       To  surround an icon with an ornamental border to use with
       Mosaic(1), use:

            convert -mattecolor #ccc -frame 6x6 bird.jpg icon.png

       To create a  GIF  animation  image  from  a  DNA  molecule
       sequence, use:

            convert -delay 20 dna.* dna.gif

OPTIONS
       -adjoin
              join images into a single multi-image file.
              By  default,  all  images  of an image sequence are
              stored in the same  file.   However,  some  formats
              (e.g.  JPEG) do not support more than one image and
              are saved to separate files.  Use +adjoin to  force
              this behavior.

       -align type
              the type of text alignment: Left, Center, or Right.
              The default is Center.  See -draw  or  for  further
              details.

       -average
              averages a set of images.

       -blur factor
              blurs  an  image.   Specify  factor  as the percent
              enhancement (0.0 - 99.9%).

       -border <width>x<height>
              surround the image with a  border  of  color.   See
              X(1)  for details about the geometry specification.
              The color of the border is specified with the -bor-
              dercolor command line option.

       -box color
              set  the color of the annotation bounding box.  See
              -draw or for further details.
              See X(1) for details about the color specification.

       -charcoal factor
              simulate a charcoal drawing.

       -colorize value
              colorize the image with the pen color.
              Specify the amount of colorization as a percentage.
              You can apply separate colorization values  to  the
              red,  green,  and blue channels of the image with a
              colorization value  list  delineated  with  slashes
              (e.g. 0/0/50).

       -colors value
              preferred number of colors in the image.
              The  actual  number  of  colors in the image may be
              less than your request, but never more.  Note, this
              is  a  color  reduction  option.   Images with less
              unique colors than specified with this option  will
              have any duplicate or unused colors removed.  Refer
              to quantize(9) for more details.
              Note, options -dither, -colorspace, and  -treedepth
              affect the color reduction algorithm.

       -colorspace value
              the  type of colorspace: GRAY, OHTA, RGB, Transpar-
              ent, XYZ, YCbCr, YIQ, YPbPr, YUV, or CMYK.
              Color reduction, by default, takes place in the RGB
              color space.  Empirical evidence suggests that dis-
              tances in color spaces such as YUV  or  YIQ  corre-
              spond  to perceptual color differences more closely
              than do distances in RGB space.  These color spaces
              may  give  better  results  when  color reducing an
              image.  Refer to quantize(9) for more details.
              The Transparent color  space  behaves  uniquely  in
              that it preserves the matte channel of the image if
              it exists.
              The -colors or -monochrome option is  required  for
              this option to take effect.

       -comment string
              annotate an image with a comment.
              By  default,  each image is commented with its file
              name.  Use this option to assign a specific comment
              to the image.  Optionally you can include the image
              filename, type, width, height, or scene  number  by
              embedding  special format characters.  Embed %f for
              filename, %d for directory, %e for filename  exten-
              tion, %t for top of filename, %m for magick, %w for
              width, %h for height, %s for scene number,  %b  for
              file size, or \n for newline.  For example,
                   -comment "%m:%f %wx%h"
              produces an image comment of MIFF:bird.miff 512x480
              for an image titled bird.miff and  whose  width  is
              512 and height is 480.
              If  the  first  character of string is @, the image
              comment is read from a file titled by the remaining
              characters in the string.

       -compress type
              the  type  of  image  compression: None, JPEG, LZW,
              RunlengthEncoded, or Zip.
              Specify +compress to store the binary image  in  an
              uncompressed  format.   The default is the compres-
              sion type of the specified image file.

       -contrast
              enhance or reduce the image contrast.
              This  option  enhances  the  intensity  differences
              between  the  lighter  and  darker  elements of the
              image.  Use -contrast to enhance the image or +con-
              trast to reduce the image contrast.

       -crop <width>{%}x<height>{%}{+-}<x offset>{+-}<y offset>
              preferred  size  and location of the cropped image.
              See X(1) for details about the geometry  specifica-
              tion.
              To  specify  a  percentage width or height instead,
              append %.  For example to crop  the  image  by  ten
              percent on all sides of the image, use -crop 10%.
              Use cropping to crop a particular area of an image.
              Use -crop 0x0 to remove edges that  are  the  back-
              ground  color.  Omit the x and y offset to generate
              one or more subimages of a uniform size.

       -cycle amount
              displace image colormap by amount.
              Amount defines the number of  positions  each  col-
              ormap entry is shifted.

       -delay <1/100ths of a second>
              display the next image after pausing.
              This  option is useful for regulating the animation
              of  a  sequence  of  GIF  images  within  Netscape.
              1/100ths  of a second must expire before the redis-
              play of the image  sequence.   The  default  is  no
              delay  between  each showing of the image sequence.
              The maximum delay is 65535.

       -density <width>x<height>
              vertical and horizontal resolution in pixels of the
              image.
              This  option specifies an image density when decod-
              ing a Postscript or Portable  Document  page.   The
              default is 72 pixels per inch in the horizontal and
              vertical direction.  This option is used in concert
              with -page.

       -despeckle
              reduce the speckles within an image.

       -display host:display[.screen]
              specifies the X server to contact; see X(1).

       -dispose method
              GIF disposal method.
              Here are the valid methods:
                   0    No disposal specified.
                   1    Do not dispose.
                   2    Restore to background color.
                   3    Restore to previous.

       -dither
              apply Floyd/Steinberg error diffusion to the image.
              The basic strategy of dithering is to trade  inten-
              sity resolution for spatial resolution by averaging
              the  intensities  of  several  neighboring  pixels.
              Images  which  suffer  from  severe contouring when
              reducing colors can be improved with this option.
              The -colors option is  required  for  dithering  to
              take effect.

       -draw string
              annotate  an  image with one or more graphic primi-
              tives.
              Use this option to annotate an image  with  one  or
              more graphic primitives.  The primitives include
                   point
                   line
                   rectangle
                   fillRectangle
                   circle
                   fillCircle
                   polygon
                   fillPolygon
                   color
                   matte
                   text
                   image
              Point,  line,  color,  matte,  text, and image each
              require a single coordinate.  Line requires a start
              and  end  coordinate,  while  rectangle  expects an
              upper left and lower right coordinate.  Circle  has
              a  center  coordinate and a coordinate on the outer
              edge.  Finally,  polygon  requires  three  or  more
              coordinates  defining  its boundaries.  Coordinates
              are integers separated by an optional  comma.   For
              example,  to  define  a  circle centered at 100,100
              that extends to 150,150 use:
                   -draw 'circle 100,100 150,150'
              Use color to change the color of a  pixel.   Follow
              the pixel coordinate with a method:
                   point
                   replace
                   floodfill
                   reset
              Consider the target pixel as that specified by your
              coordinate.  The point method recolors  the  target
              pixel.   The replace method recolors any pixel that
              matches the color of the target  pixel.   Floodfill
              recolors  any  pixel  that matches the color of the
              target pixel and is  a  neighbor.   Finally,  reset
              recolors all pixels.
              Use  matte  to  the change the pixel matte value to
              transparent.  Follow the pixel  coordinate  with  a
              method  (see  the color primitive for a description
              of methods).  The point method  changes  the  matte
              value  of  the  target  pixel.   The replace method
              changes the matte value of any pixel  that  matches
              the  color  of the target pixel.  Floodfill changes
              the matte value of any pixel that matches the color
              of  the  target  pixel  and  is a neighbor. Finally
              reset changes the matte value of all pixels.
              Use text to annotate an image  with  text.   Follow
              the  text coordinates with a string.  If the string
              has embedded spaces, enclose it in  double  quotes.
              Optionally  you  can  include  the  image filename,
              type, width, height, or scene number  by  embedding
              special  format characters.  Embed %f for filename,
              %d for directory, %e for filename extention, %t for
              top  of  filename,  %m for magick, %w for width, %h
              for height, %s for scene number, %b for file  size,
              or \n for newline.  For example,
                   -draw 'text 100,100 "%m:%f %wx%h"'
              annotates the image with MIFF:bird.miff 512x480 for
              an image titled bird.miff and whose  width  is  512
              and height is 480.
              Use image to composite an image with another image.
              Follow the image coordinates with the  filename  of
              an image.
              If  the first character of string is @, the text is
              read from a file titled by the remaining characters
              in the string.
              You  can  set  the primitive color, font color, and
              font bounding box color with -pen, -font, and  -box
              respectively.   Options  are  processed  in command
              line order so be sure to use -pen before the  -draw
              option.

       -edge factor
              detect  edges with an image.  Specify factor as the
              percent enhancement (0.0 - 99.9%).

       -emboss
              emboss the image.

       -enhance
              apply a digital filter to enhance a noisy image.

       -equalize
              perform histogram equalization to the image.

       -flip  create a "mirror image"  by  reflecting  the  image
              scanlines in the vertical direction.

       -flop  create  a  "mirror  image"  by reflecting the image
              scanlines in the horizontal direction.

       -font name
              use this font when annotating the image with  text.
              If  the  font  is  a  fully qualified X server font
              name, the font is obtained from an X  server  (e.g.
              -*-helvetica-medium-r-*-*-12-*-*-*-*-*-iso8859-*).
              To use a TrueType font, precede the TrueType  file-
              name with a @ e.g.  @times.ttf.  Otherwise, spec-
              ify a Postscript font (e.g. helvetica).

       -frame <width>x<height>+<outer bevel width>+<inner bevel
              width>
              surround  the image with an ornamental border.  See
              X(1) for details about the geometry  specification.
              The color of the border is specified with the -mat-
              tecolor command line option.

       -gamma value
              level of gamma correction.
              The same color image  displayed  on  two  different
              workstations  may look different due to differences
              in the display monitor.  Use  gamma  correction  to
              adjust  for this color difference.  Reasonable val-
              ues extend from 0.8 to 2.3.
              You can apply separate gamma  values  to  the  red,
              green,  and blue channels of the image with a gamma
              value   list   delineated   with   slashes    (e.g.
              1.7/2.3/1.2).
              Use  +gamma  to  set  the image gamma level without
              actually adjusting the image pixels.   This  option
              is  useful if the image is of a known gamma but not
              set as an image attribute (e.g. PNG images).

       -geometry   <width>{%}x<height>{%}{+-}<x    offset>{+-}<y
              off- set>{!}{<}{>}
              preferred size or location of the image when encod-
              ing.
              By  default,  the width and height are maximum val-
              ues.  That is, the image is expanded or  contracted
              to fit the width and height value while maintaining
              the aspect ratio of the image.  Append an  exclama-
              tion  point to the geometry to force the image size
              to exactly the size you specify.  For  example,  if
              you  specify 640x480! the image width is set to 640
              pixels and height to 480.  If only  one  factor  is
              specified,  both  the  width  and height assume the
              value.
              To specify a percentage width  or  height  instead,
              append  %.   The  image  size  is multiplied by the
              width and height percentages to  obtain  the  final
              image  dimensions.   To  increase  the  size  of an
              image, use a value greater than  100  (e.g.  125%).
              To  decrease an image's size, use a percentage less
              than 100.
              Use >> to change the dimensions of the image only if
              its  size  exceeds  the  geometry specification.  <<
              resizes the image only if its  dimensions  is  less
              than  the  geometry specification.  For example, if
              you specify 640x480>> and the image size is 512x512,
              the  image  size  does not change.  However, if the
              image is 1024x1024, it is resized to 640x480.
              There are 72 pixels per inch in Postscript  coordi-
              nates.

       -implode factor
              implode  image  pixels  about  the center.  Specify
              factor as the percent  implosion  (0  -  99.9%)  or
              explosion (-99.9 - 0%).

       -interlace type
              the  type of interlacing scheme: None, Line, Plane,
              or Partition.  The default is None.
              This option is used to specify the type  of  inter-
              lacing  scheme for raw image formats such as RGB or
              YUV.  No means do  not  interlace  (RGBRGBRGBRGBRG-
              BRGB...),    Line    uses    scanline   interlacing
              (RRR...GGG...BBB...RRR...GGG...BBB...),  and  Plane
              uses                plane               interlacing
              (RRRRRR...GGGGGG...BBBBBB...).  Partition  is  like
              plane  except  the  different  planes  are saved to
              individual  files  (e.g.   image.R,  image.G,   and
              image.B).
              Use  Line,  or Plane to create an interlaced GIF or
              progressive JPEG image.

       -label name
              assign a label to an image.
              Use this option to assign a specific label  to  the
              image.   Optionally you can include the image file-
              name, type, width, height, or scene number  in  the
              label   by  embedding  special  format  characters.
              Embed %f for filename, %d  for  directory,  %e  for
              filename  extention, %t for top of filename, %m for
              magick, %w for width, %h for height, %s  for  scene
              number,  %b  for  file size in kilobytes, or \n for
              newline.  For example,
                   -label "%m:%f %wx%h"
              produces an image label of  MIFF:bird.miff  512x480
              for  an  image  titled bird.miff and whose width is
              512 and height is 480.
              If the first character of string is  @,  the  image
              label  is  read from a file titled by the remaining
              characters in the string.
              When converting to Postscript, use this  option  to
              specify  a  header string to print above the image.
              Specify the label font with -font.

       -layer type
              the type of layer: Red, Green, Blue, or Matte.
              Use this option to extract a particular layer  from
              the  image.   Matte,  for  example,  is  useful for
              extracting the opacity values from an image.

       -linewidth value
              set the width of a line.   See  -draw  for  further
              details.

       -loop iterations
              add  Netscape loop extension to your GIF animation.
              A value other than zero  forces  the  animation  to
              repeat itself up to iterations times.

       -map filename
              choose  a particular set of colors from this image.
              By default, color reduction chooses an optimal  set
              of  colors  that best represent the original image.
              Alternatively, you can choose a particular  set  of
              colors  from  an  image file with this option.  Use
              +map to reduce all images provided on  the  command
              line  to  a  single optimal set of colors that best
              represent all the images.

       -matte store matte channel if the image has one.

       -modulate value
              vary the brightness,  saturation,  and  hue  of  an
              image.
              Specify the percent change in brightness, the color
              saturation, and the color hue separated by  commas.
              For  example,  to  increase the color brightness by
              20% and decrease the color saturation  by  10%  and
              leave the hue unchanged, use: -modulate 20/-10.

       -monochrome
              transform the image to black and white.

       -negate
              apply color inversion to image.
              The  red,  green,  and blue intensities of an image
              are  negated.   Use  +negate  to  only  negate  the
              grayscale pixels of the image.

       -noise add or reduce the noise in an image.
              The  principal  function  of noise peak elimination
              filter is to smooth the  objects  within  an  image
              without  losing edge information and without creat-
              ing undesired structures.  The central idea of  the
              algorithm  is  to  replace  a  pixel  with its next
              neighbor in value within a 3 x 3  window,  if  this
              pixel  has  been  found  to  be  noise.  A pixel is
              defined as noise if and only if  this  pixel  is  a
              maximum or minimum within the 3 x 3 window.
              Use +noise followed by a noise type to add noise to
              an image.  Choose from these noise types:
                  uniform
                  gaussian
                  multiplicative
                  impulse
                  laplacian
                  poisson

       -normalize
              transform image to span the  full  range  of  color
              values.
              This is a contrast enhancement technique.

       -opaque color
              change  this  color  to  the  pen  color within the
              image.  See -pen for more details.

       -page &lt;width>{%}x&lt;height>{%}{+-}&lt;x offset>{+-}&lt;y off-
              set&gt;{!}{&lt;}{>}
              preferred size and location of an image canvas.
              Use this option to specify the  dimensions  of  the
              Postscript  page in dots per inch or a TEXT page in
              pixels.  The choices for a Postscript page are:
                  Letter      612x 792
                  Tabloid     792x1224
                  Ledger     1224x 792
                  Legal       612x1008
                  Statement   396x 612
                  Executive   540x 720
                  A3          842x1190
                  A4          595x 842
                  A5          420x 595
                  B4          729x1032
                  B5          516x 729
                  Folio       612x 936
                  Quarto      610x 780
                  10x14       720x1008
              For convenience you can specify the  page  size  by
              media  (e.g.   A4, Ledger, etc.).  Otherwise, -page
              behaves  much  like  -geometry  (e.g.  -page   let-
              ter+43+43>).
              To  position  a  GIF  image,  use -page {+-}&lt;x off-
              set&gt;{+-}&lt;y offset> (e.g. -page  +100+200).   For  a
              Postscript page, the image is sized as in -geometry
              and positioned relative to the lower left hand cor-
              ner  of  the  page by {+-}&lt;x offset>{+-}&lt;y offset>.
              The default is to center the image within the page.
              If  the  image size exceeds the Postscript page, it
              is reduced to fit the page.
              The default page dimensions for  a  TEXT  image  is
              612x792.
              This option is used in concert with -density.

       -paint radius
              simulate an oil painting.
              Each  pixel  is replaced by the most frequent color
              in a circular neighborhood whose width is specified
              with radius.

       -pen color
              set  the  color  of  the font or opaque color.  See
              -draw for further details.
              See X(1) for details about the color specification.

       -pointsize value
              pointsize of the Postscript font.

       -quality value
              JPEG/MIFF/PNG compression level.
              For  the JPEG image format, quality is 0 (worst) to
              100 (best).  The default quality is 75.
              Quality for the MIFF and PNG image format sets  the
              amount of image compression (quality / 10) and fil-
              ter-type (quality % 10).  Compression quality  val-
              ues range from 0 (worst) to 100 (best).  If filter-
              type is 4 or less,  the  specified  filter-type  is
              used for all scanlines:
                  0: none
                  1: sub
                  2: up
                  3: average
                  4: Paeth
              If  filter-type  is  5,  adaptive filtering is used
              when quality is greater than 50 and the image  does
              not  have  a  color  map, otherwise no filtering is
              used.
              If filter-type is 6  or  more,  adaptive  filtering
              with minimum-sum-of-absolute-values is used.
              The  default  is quality is 75.  Which means nearly
              the best compression with adaptive filtering.
              For further information, see the PNG  specification
              (RFC 2083), <http://www.w3.org/pub/WWW/TR>.

       -raise &lt;width>x&lt;height>
              lighten  or  darken  image  edges  to  create a 3-D
              effect.    See X(1) for details about the  geometry
              specification.
              Use -raise to create a raised effect, otherwise use
              +raise.

       -region &lt;width>x&lt;height>{+-}&lt;x offset>{+-}&lt;y offset>
              apply options to a portion of the image.
              By default, any command line options are applied to
              the  entire  image.  Use -region to restrict opera-
              tions to a particular area of the image.

       -roll {+-}&lt;x offset>{+-}&lt;y offset>
              roll an image vertically or horizontally.  See X(1)
              for details about the geometry specification.
              A  negative x offset rolls the image left-to-right.
              A negative y offset rolls the image  top-to-bottom.

       -rotate degrees{&lt;}{>}
              apply Paeth image rotation to the image.
              Use >> to rotate the image only if its width exceeds
              the height.  << rotates the image only if its  width
              is less than the height.  For example, if you spec-
              ify -90>> and the image size is 480x640,  the  image
              is not rotated by the specified angle.  However, if
              the image is 640x480, it is rotated by -90 degrees.
              Empty  triangles  left over from rotating the image
              are filled with the color  defined  as  bordercolor
              (class borderColor).  See X(1) for details.

       -sample geometry
              scale image with pixel sampling.

       -scene value
              image scene number.

       -seed value
              pseudo-random number generator seed value.

       -segment &lt;cluster threshold>x&lt;smoothing threshold>
              segment an image by analyzing the histograms of the
              color components and  identifying  units  that  are
              homogeneous with the fuzzy c-means technique.
              Specify  cluster  threshold as the number of pixels
              in each cluster must exceed the the cluster thresh-
              old  to  be  considered valid.  Smoothing threshold
              eliminates noise in the second  derivative  of  the
              histogram.   As  the  value  is  increased, you can
              expect a smoother second derivative.   The  default
              is 1.5.  See IMAGE SEGMENTATION for details.

       -shade &lt;azimuth>x&lt;elevation>
              shade the image using a distant light source.
              Specify  azimuth  and  elevation as the position of
              the light source.  Use +shade to return the shading
              results as a grayscale image.

       -sharpen factor
              sharpen  an  image.   Specify factor as the percent
              enhancement (0.0 - 99.9%).

       -shear &lt;x degrees>x&lt;y degrees>
              shear the image along the X or Y axis by a positive
              or negative shear angle.
              Shearing slides one edge of an image along the X or
              Y axis, creating a parallelogram.  An  X  direction
              shear  slides  an  edge along the X axis, while a Y
              direction shear slides an edge along  the  Y  axis.
              The  amount  of  the shear is controlled by a shear
              angle.  For X direction shears, x degrees  is  mea-
              sured  relative to the Y axis, and similarly, for Y
              direction shears y degrees is measured relative  to
              the X axis.
              Empty  triangles  left over from shearing the image
              are filled with the color  defined  as  bordercolor
              (class borderColor).  See X(1) for details.

       -size &lt;width>{%}x&lt;height>{%}+&lt;offset>
              width and height of the image.
              Use  this option to specify the width and height of
              raw images whose dimensions  are  unknown  such  as
              GRAY,  RGB,  or  CMYK.   In  addition  to width and
              height, use -size to skip any header information in
              the  image  or  tell  the number of colors in a MAP
              image file, (e.g. -size 640x512+256).
              For Photo CD images, choose from these sizes:
                    192x128
                    384x256
                    768x512
                   1536x1024
                   3072x2048
              Finally, use this option  to  choose  a  particular
              resolution  layer  of  a  JBIG  or JPEG image (e.g.
              -size 1024x768).

       -solarize factor
              negate all pixels above the threshold level.  Spec-
              ify  factor  as the percent threshold of the inten-
              sity (0 - 99.9%).
              This option produces  a  solarization  effect  seen
              when  exposing  a photographic film to light during
              the development process.

       -spread amount
              displace image pixels by a random amount.
              Amount defines the size of the neighborhood  around
              each pixel to choose a candidate pixel to swap.

       -swirl degrees
              swirl image pixels about the center.
              Degrees defines the tightness of the swirl.

       -texture filename
              name  of texture to tile onto the image background.

       -threshold value
              threshold the image.
              Create a bi-level image such that any pixel  inten-
              sity  that  is  equal  or  exceeds the threshold is
              reassigned the maximum intensity otherwise the min-
              imum intensity.

       -transparency color
              make this color transparent within the image.

       -treedepth value
              Normally,  this  integer  value  is zero or one.  A
              zero or one tells convert to choose a optimal  tree
              depth for the color reduction algorithm.
              An  optimal  depth generally allows the best repre-
              sentation of the source image with the fastest com-
              putational  speed  and  the least amount of memory.
              However, the default  depth  is  inappropriate  for
              some  images.   To  assure the best representation,
              try values between 2  and  8  for  this  parameter.
              Refer to quantize(9) for more details.
              The  -colors  option is required for this option to
              take effect.

       -undercolor &lt;undercolor factor>x&lt;black-generation factor>
              control undercolor removal and black generation  on
              CMYK images.
              This  option  enables  you  to  perform  undercolor
              removal  and  black  generation  on  CMYK  images--
              images  to be printed on a four-color printing sys-
              tem. You can control how much  cyan,  magenta,  and
              yellow to remove from your image and how much black
              to add to it.  The standard undercolor  removal  is
              1.0x1.0.   You'll  frequently  get  better results,
              though, if the percentage of black you add to  your
              image  is slightly higher than the percentage of C,
              M, and Y you remove from it.  For example you might
              try 0.5x0.7.

       -verbose
              print detailed information about the image.
              This  information  is  printed: image scene number;
              image name;  converted  image  name;   image  size;
              the  image class (DirectClass or PseudoClass);  the
              total number of unique colors;  and the  number  of
              seconds to read and transform the image.

       -view string
              FlashPix viewing parameters.

       -wave &lt;amplitude>x&lt;wavelength>
              alter an image along a sine wave.
              Specify  amplitude  and  wavelength  to  effect the
              characteristics of the wave.

       Options are processed in command line order.   Any  option
       you specify on the command line remains in effect until it
       is explicitly changed by specifying the option again  with
       a different effect.  Some options only effect the decoding
       of images and others only the encoding.

       By default, the image format is determined  by  its  magic
       number.  To specify a particular image format, precede the
       filename with an image  format  name  and  a  colon  (i.e.
       ps:image) or specify the image type as the filename suffix
       (i.e. image.ps).  See DESCRIPTION for a list of valid for-
       mats.

       When  you  specify  X as your image type, the filename has
       special meaning.  It specifies an X window by id, name, or
       root.  If no filename is specified, the window is selected
       by clicking the mouse in the desired window.

       Specify input_file as - for standard input, output_file as
       - for standard output.  If input_file has the extension .Z
       or .gz, the file is uncompressed with uncompress or gunzip
       respectively.  If output_file has the extension .Z or .gz,
       the file size is compressed using with  compress  or  gzip
       respectively.  Finally, precede the image file name with |
       to pipe to or from a system command.

       Use an optional index enclosed in brackets  after  a  file
       name  to  specify a desired subimage of a multi-resolution
       image format like Photo  CD  (e.g.  img0001.pcd[4])  or  a
       range for MPEG images (e.g. video.mpg[50-75]).  A subimage
       specification can be  disjoint  (e.g.  image.tiff[2,7,4]).
       For  raw  images, specify a subimage with a geometry (e.g.
       -size 640x512 image.rgb[320x256+50+50]).

       Single images are written with the filename  you  specify.
       However,  multi-part  images (e.g. a multi-page Postscript
       document with +adjoin  specified)  are  written  with  the
       filename  followed  by  a period (.) and the scene number.
       You can change this behavior by embedding a printf  format
       specification in the file name.  For example,

            image%02d.miff

       converts files image00.miff, image01.miff, etc.

       The % character is always interpreted in output filenames.
       To get a % character in the filename, use %%.

IMAGE SEGMENTATION
       Use -segment to segment an image  by  analyzing  the  his-
       tograms of the color components and identifying units that

       are homogeneous with the  fuzzy  c-means  technique.   The
       scale-space  filter  analyzes  the histograms of the three
       color components of the image  and  identifies  a  set  of
       classes.   The  extents  of each class is used to coarsely
       segment the image with thresholding.  The color associated
       with  each  class  is  determined by the mean color of all
       pixels within the extents of a particular class.  Finally,
       any  unclassified pixels are assigned to the closest class
       with the fuzzy c-means technique.

       The fuzzy c-Means algorithm can be summarized as follows:
              o Build a histogram, one for each  color  component
              of the image.
              o For each histogram, successively apply the scale-
              space filter and build an  interval  tree  of  zero
              crossings  in  the second derivative at each scale.
              Analyze this scale-space ``fingerprint'' to  deter-
              mine  which  peaks  or valleys in the histogram are
              most predominant.
              o The fingerprint defines intervals on the axis  of
              the  histogram.   Each  interval  contains either a
              minima or a maxima in the original signal.  If each
              color  component  lies  within the maxima interval,
              that pixel  is  considered  ``classified''  and  is
              assigned an unique class number.
              o  Any  pixel  that  fails  to be classified in the
              above thresholding pass  is  classified  using  the
              fuzzy  c-Means technique.  It is assigned to one of
              the classes discovered in  the  histogram  analysis
              phase.

       The fuzzy c-Means technique attempts to cluster a pixel by
       finding the local minima of the generalized  within  group
       sum  of  squared  error  objective  function.   A pixel is
       assigned to the closest class of which the  fuzzy  member-
       ship has a maximum value.

       For additional information see
              Young  Won  Lim,  Sang  Uk Lee, "On The Color Image
              Segmentation Algorithm Based  on  the  Thresholding
              and the Fuzzy c-Means Techniques", Pattern Recogni-
              tion, Volume 23, Number 9, pages 935-952, 1990.

ENVIRONMENT
       DISPLAY
              To  get  the  default  host,  display  number,  and
              screen.

SEE ALSO
       display(1) animate(1) import(1) montage(1) mogrify(1) 
       combine(1) xtp(1) 

COPYRIGHT
       Copyright 1998 E. I. du Pont de Nemours and Company

       Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any  per-
       son obtaining a copy of this software and associated docu-
       mentation files ("ImageMagick"), to  deal  in  ImageMagick
       without  restriction,  including  without  limitation  the
       rights to use, copy, modify, merge,  publish,  distribute,
       sublicense, and/or sell copies of ImageMagick, and to per-
       mit persons to whom the ImageMagick is furnished to do so,
       subject to the following conditions:

       The  above  copyright  notice  and  this permission notice
       shall be included in all copies or substantial portions of
       ImageMagick.

       The  software is provided "as is", without warranty of any
       kind, express or implied, including but not limited to the
       warranties  of  merchantability,  fitness for a particular
       purpose and noninfringement.  In no event shall E.  I.  du
       Pont  de Nemours and Company be liable for any claim, dam-
       ages or other liability, whether in an action of contract,
       tort  or  otherwise, arising from, out of or in connection
       with ImageMagick or the use or other dealings in ImageMag-
       ick.

       Except  as contained in this notice, the name of the E. I.
       du Pont de Nemours and Company shall not be used in adver-
       tising  or  otherwise  to  promote  the sale, use or other
       dealings in ImageMagick without prior  written  authoriza-
       tion from the E. I. du Pont de Nemours and Company.

AUTHORS
       John  Cristy, E.I. du Pont De Nemours and Company Incorpo-
       rated

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