table of contents
NIP2(1) | General Commands Manual | NIP2(1) |
NAME¶
nip2 - image processing with the VIPS librarySYNOPSIS¶
nip2 [filename1 ...]DESCRIPTION¶
nip2 (for New Image Processing) is a tool for manipulating images using the VIPS image processing library. There are three principal modes: nip2 [filename1 ...]start in GUI mode, loading the named files nip2 -e expression [arg1 ...]
start in no-GUI mode; set main = expression, set list argv to
["filename", "arg1", "arg2", ...], set argc to length of list; print
the value of symbol "main" to stdout; exit nip2 -s filename [arg1 ...]
start in no-GUI mode; read in filename as a set of definitions,
set list argv to ["filename", "arg1", "arg2", ...], set argc to
length of list; print the value of symbol "main" to stdout; exit;
useful for running nip2 as an interpreter on unix You can use -o to direct output to a file rather than stdout. -o filename
the value of main is written to the named file. If main is a
list, the filename is incremented between objects. You can use
the suffix to specify the format and options to write in Other options provide finer control over startup and shutdown. If you need to do something strange, don't use -e/-s, use these in combination. -b
batch (ie. non-GUI) mode -m
don't load menus, for faster startup -a
don't load extra command-line arguments -w
load stdin as a workspace -d
load stdin as a set of definitions -p
print the value of main on exit. nip2 will check for a top-level
symbol called main, and also check each workspace for a main Finally some other options are useful for debugging, timing and for generating strings for internationalisation. -V
produce verbose error messages: handy for debugging in batch mode -i
output strings from .def files for internationalisation -v
print version information -c
benchmark: no GUI, just start up and shut down -t
time saves: after every image save a popup tells you the time the
save took in seconds -T
test: start up (including any arg processing), test for any errors,
and exit with an error code if any occured. Useful for running
automated tests. -x PREFIX
set install prefix: start up as if nip2 had been installed to PREFIX.
Useful for running automated tests without installing the thing.
EXAMPLES¶
nip2 fred.jpg Start nip2, loading fred.jpg.
nip2 -e "2 + 2" Prints 4 to stdout.
nip2 -e "99 + Image_file argv?1" -o result.png fred.jpg Load argv1 (fred.jpg), add 99, output to result.png.
nip2 -e "Matrix [[1,2],[4,5]] ** -1" -o poop.mat Invert the 2x2 matrix and write the result to poop.mat.
COPYRIGHT¶
2008 (c) Imperial College, LondonOct 4 2004 |