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postmd(1)			 User Commands			     postmd(1)

NAME
       postmd - matrix display program for PostScript printers

SYNOPSIS
       postmd	[-b num]  [-c num]  [-d dimen]	[-g list]  [-i list]  [-m num]
       [-n num] [-o list] [-p mode] [-w	 window] [-x num] [-y num] [file...]

       /usr/lib/lp/postscript/postmd

DESCRIPTION
       The postmd filter reads a series of floating point numbers from	files,
       translates  them	 into  a  PostScript  gray scale image, and writes the
       results on the standard output. In a typical application,  the  numbers
       might  be  the  elements of a large matrix, written in row major order,
       while the printed image could help locate patterns in the matrix. If no
       files  are  specified,  or if - is one of the input files, the standard
       input is read.

OPTIONS
       The following options are supported:

       -b num	       Packs the bitmap in the output file using num byte pat‐
		       terns. A value of 0 turns off all packing of the output
		       file. By default, num is	 6.

       -c num	       Prints num copies of each page. By  default,  only  one
		       copy is printed.

       -d dimen	       Sets  the default matrix dimensions for all input files
		       to dimen. The dimen string can  be  given  as  rows  or
		       rowsx  columns. If columns is omitted it will be set to
		       rows. By default, postmd assumes each matrix is	square
		       and  sets  the number of rows and columns to the square
		       root of the number of elements in each input file.

       -g list	       list is a comma- or space-separated string of integers,
		       each  lying  between  0 and 255 inclusive, that assigns
		       PostScript gray scales to the regions of the real  line
		       selected	 by  the  -i option. 255 corresponds to white,
		       and 0, to black. The postmd filter  assigns  a  default
		       gray  scale  that  omits white (that is, 255)  and gets
		       darker as the regions move from left to right along the
		       real line.

       -i list	       list  is a comma-, space-, or slash(/)-separated string
		       of  N floating point numbers that  partition  the  real
		       line  into  2N+1	 regions.  The	list  must be given in
		       increasing numerical order. The partitions are used  to
		       map  floating  point  numbers read from the input files
		       into gray scale integers that are either assigned auto‐
		       matically  by  postmd or arbitrarily selected using the
		       -g option. The default interval list is	-1,0,1,	 which
		       partions the real line into seven regions.

       -m num	       Magnifies  each	logical	 page by the factor num. Pages
		       are  scaled  uniformly  about  the  origin  which,   by
		       default,	 is  located  at  the center of each page. The
		       default magnification is 1.0.

       -n num	       Prints num logical pages on each piece of paper,	 where
		       num can be any positive integer. By default, num is set
		       to  1.

       -o list	       Prints pages whose numbers are given in the comma sepa‐
		       rated  list.  The  list	contains  single numbers N and
		       ranges N1 - N2. A missing N1 means the lowest  numbered
		       page, a missing N2 means the highest. The page range is
		       an expression of logical	 pages	rather	than  physical
		       sheets  of  paper. For example, if you are printing two
		       logical pages to a sheet, and you specified a range  of
		       4,  then	 two  sheets  of paper would print, containing
		       four page layouts. If you specified  a  page  range  of
		       3-4, when requesting two logical pages to a sheet; then
		       only page 3 and page 4 layouts would  print,  and  they
		       would appear on one physical sheet of paper.

       -p mode	       Prints files in either portrait or landscape mode. Only
		       the first character of mode is significant. The default
		       mode is portrait.

       -w window       window is a comma- or space-separated list of four pos‐
		       itive integers that select the  upper  left  and	 lower
		       right  corners  of  a  submatrix from each of the input
		       files. Row and column indices start at 1 in  the	 upper
		       left  corner  and  the  numbers	in the input files are
		       assumed to be written in row major order.  By  default,
		       the entire matrix is displayed.

       -x num	       Translates  the	origin num inches along the positive x
		       axis. The default  coordinate  system  has  the	origin
		       fixed at the center of the page, with positive x to the
		       right and positive y up the page.  Positive  num	 moves
		       everything right. The default offset is	0 inches.

       -y  num	       Translates  the	origin num inches along the positive y
		       axis. Positive num moves everything up  the  page.  The
		       default offset is  0.

       Only  one  matrix  is  displayed	 on each logical page, and each of the
       input files must contain complete descriptions of exactly  one  matrix.
       Matrix elements are floating point numbers  arranged in row major order
       in each input file. White space, including newlines,  is	 not  used  to
       determine  matrix dimensions. By default, postmd assumes each matrix is
       square and sets the number of rows and columns to the  square  root  of
       the  number of elements in the input file. Supplying default dimensions
       on the command line with the -d option overrides this default behavior,
       and in that case the dimensions apply to all input files.

       An  optional header can be supplied with each input file and is used to
       set the matrix dimensions,  the partition of the real line,   the  gray
       scale  map,  and	 a window into the matrix. The header consists of key‐
       word/value pairs, each on a separate line. It begins on the first  line
       of  each	 input file and ends with the first unrecognized string, which
       should be the first matrix element.  Values  set	 in  the  header  take
       precedence,   but  apply	 only  to  the	current input file. Recognized
       header keywords are dimension, interval,	 grayscale,  and  window.  The
       syntax of the value string that follows each keyword  parallels what is
       accepted by the -d, -i, -g, and -w options.

EXAMPLES
       Example 1: Generating an interval list

       For example, suppose file initially contains  the  1000	numbers	 in  a
       20x50  matrix. Then you can produce exactly the same output by complet‐
       ing three steps.

       1.  First, issue the following command line:

	   example% postmd -d20x50 -i"-100 100" -g0,128,254,128,0 file

       2.  Second, prepend the following header to file:

	   example% postmd -d20x50 -i"−100 100" -g0,128,254,128,0 file

       3.  Third, issue the following command line:

	   example% postmd file

       The interval list partitions the real line into five  regions  and  the
       gray  scale list maps numbers less than -100 or greater than 100 into 0
       (that is, black),  numbers equal to -100 or 100 into 128 (that  is,  50
       percent	black),	 and  numbers  between -100 and 100 into 254 (that is,
       almost white).

FILES
       /usr/lib/lp/postscript/forms.ps

       /usr/lib/lp/postscript/ps.requests

EXIT STATUS
       The following exit values are returned:

       0	       Successful completion.

       non-zero	       An error occurred.

ATTRIBUTES
       See attributes(5) for descriptions of the following attributes:

       ┌─────────────────────────────┬─────────────────────────────┐
       │      ATTRIBUTE TYPE	     │	    ATTRIBUTE VALUE	   │
       ├─────────────────────────────┼─────────────────────────────┤
       │Availability		     │SUNWpsf			   │
       └─────────────────────────────┴─────────────────────────────┘

SEE ALSO
       dpost(1), postdaisy(1), postdmd(1),  postio(1),	postprint(1),  postre‐
       verse(1), posttek(1), attributes(5)

NOTES
       The  largest  matrix  that can be adequately displayed is a function of
       the interval and gray scale lists,  the	printer	 resolution,  and  the
       paper  size. A 600 by 600 matrix is an optimistic upper bound for a two
       element interval list (that is, five regions)  using  8.5  by  11  inch
       paper on a 300 dpi printer.

       Using white (that is, 255) in a gray scale list	is not recommended and
       won't show up in	 the legend and bar graph that postmd  displays	 below
       each image.

SunOS 5.10			  9 Sep 1996			     postmd(1)
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