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XLITO(1) General Commands Manual XLITO(1) NAME xlito (XLoadImageTrailingOptions) - Append/Delete/Show a Trailing Op- tion string in a file. SYNOPSIS xlito [option] [string] files ... DESCRIPTION xlito (XLoadImageTrailingOptions) is a utility that provides a file format independent way of marking image files with the appropriate op- tions to display correctly. It does this by appending to a file, a string specified by the user. The string is marked with some magic num- bers so that it can be extracted by a program that knows what to look for. Since almost all image files have some sort of image dimension in- formation in the file, the programs that load or manipulate these files generally do not look beyond the point at which they have read the com- plete image, so trailing information is safely be hidden. If appending this information causes trouble with other utilities, it can simply be deleted. Appropriate version of xloadimage (ie. xli 1.00) will recognise these trailing options at the end of the image files, and will treat the em- bedded string as if it were a sequence of command line Image Options. Any Global Options will be ignored, and unlike command line image Op- tions, Trailing Options are never propagated to other images. Old versions of xloadimage (3.01 or less) can be made forward compati- ble by using the -x option to pull the trailing options out of the im- age files, and put them on the command line where xloadimage can see them. OPTIONS The default behavior is to display the trailing option strings (if any) of the files on the argument line. The following options change the behavior of xlito: -c option_string file_name ... This adds or changes the embedded string to option_string. The string will have to be quoted if it is composed of more than one word. -d file_name ... Delete any embedded trailing option strings in the given files. -x file_name ... Process the files and create a command line string suitable for use by xloadimage. Arguments starting with - are echoed, argu- ments not starting with - are treated as files and any trailing options strings are echoed followed by the file name. The xloadimage option -name is treated correctly. EXAMPLES If fred.gif has the wrong aspect ratio, then it might need viewing with the xloadimage options: xloadimage -yzoom 130 fred.gif This option can then be appended to the file by: xlito -c "-yzoom 130" fred.gif and from then on some new versions of xloadimage will get the appropri- ate options from the image file itself. Old versions of xloadimage can be made to work by using: xloadimage `xlito -x fred.gif` This can be made transparent by using a script containing something like: xloadimage `xlito -x $*` The script could be called xli for instance. The options can be deleted with: xlito -d fred.gif AUTHOR Graeme Gill Labtam Australia graeme@labtam.oz.au MAINTAINER smar@reptiles.org COMPATIBILITY WITH IMAGE FILES Some image files are actually ascii files that are used in other con- texts. X Bitmap files are an example. They are formatted as 'C' style #defines and an initialised array of characters, so that they can be included in 'C' source code. Adding trailing options would therefore render the file unusable with a compiler, since it will get a syntax error on the railing option string and the magic numbers. The solution to this is that xlito will ignore a certain amount (a few hundred bytes) after the trailing options, and uses a padding of 20 bytes be- fore the trailing options. These two areas will be maintained when changing an existing trailing option. In the case of an X bitmap then, the solution is to edit the file and place the embedded string in some 'C' comments: eg: say the file starts as: #define tt_width 4 #define tt_height 4 static char tt_bits[] = { 0x08, 0x02, 0x04, 0x01}; and you add a trailing options: #define tt_width 4 #define tt_height 4 static char tt_bits[] = { 0x08, 0x02, 0x04, 0x01}; 01234567890123456789XXX xloadimage trailing options XXX0007"-smooth"0007XXX xloadimage trailing options XXX Then the trailing options can be commented out: #define tt_width 4 #define tt_height 4 static char tt_bits[] = { 0x08, 0x02, 0x04, 0x01}; /*234567890123456789XXX xloadimage trailing options XXX0007"-smooth"0007XXX xloadimage trailing options XXX */ BUGS xlito doesn't cope with compressed files. A files will need uncompress- ing, the options added, and then compressing again. 7 Jul 1993 XLITO(1)
NAME | SYNOPSIS | DESCRIPTION | OPTIONS | EXAMPLES | AUTHOR | MAINTAINER | COMPATIBILITY WITH IMAGE FILES | BUGS
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