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tifftopnm(1)                                                                         tifftopnm(1)



NAME
       tifftopnm - convert a TIFF file into a portable anymap


SYNOPSIS
       tifftopnm [-alphaout={alpha-filename,-}] [-headerdump] [-respectfillorder] [tiff-filename]

       You may abbreviate any option to its shortest unique prefix.   You  may  use  two  hyphens
       instead  of  one in options.  You may separate an option and its value either by an equals
       sign or white space.


DESCRIPTION
       Reads a TIFF file as input.  Produces a portable anymap as output.  The type of the output
       file  depends  on  the  input  file - if it's black & white, generates a pbm file; if it's
       grayscale, generates a pgm file; otherwise, a ppm file.  The program tells you which  type
       it is writing.

       This  program  cannot  read every possible TIFF file -- there are myriad variations of the
       TIFF  format.   However,  it  does  understand  monochrome  and  gray  scale,  RGB,   RGBA
       (red/green/blue  with  alpha  channel),  CMYK (Cyan-Magenta-Yellow-Black ink color separa-
       tion), and color palette TIFF files.  An RGB file can have  either  single  plane  (inter-
       leaved)  color  or  multiple  plane  format.   The program reads 1-8 and 16 bit-per-sample
       input, the latter in either bigendian or littlendian encoding.  Tiff directory information
       may also be either bigendian or littendian.

       One  reason  this  program isn't as general as TIFF programs often are is that it does not
       use the TIFFRGBAImageGet() function of the TIFF library to read TIFF  files.   Rather,  it
       uses the more primitive TIFFReadScanLine() function and decodes it itself.

       There is no fundamental reason that this program could not read other kinds of TIFF files;
       the existing limitations are mainly because no one has asked for more.

       The PNM output has the same maxval as the Tiff input, except that if  the  Tiff  input  is
       colormapped  (which implies a maxval of 65535) the PNM output has a maxval of 255.  Though
       this may result in lost information, such input images  hardly  ever  actually  have  more
       color resolution than a maxval of 255 provides and people often cannot deal with PNM files
       that have maxval > 255.  By contrast, a non-colormapped Tiff image  that  doesn't  need  a
       maxval  >  255 doesn't have a maxval > 255, so when we see a non-colormapped maxval > 255,
       we take it seriously and produce a matching output maxval.

       The tiff-filename argument names the regular file that contains the Tiff  image.   If  you
       specify  "-" or don't specify this argument, tfftopnm uses Standard Input. In either case,
       the file must be seekable.  That means no pipe, but any regular file is fine.


OPTIONS
       -alphaout=alpha-filename
              tifftopnm creates a PGM (portable graymap) file containing the alpha channel values
              in  the  input  image.   If  the  input image doesn't contain an alpha channel, the
              alpha-filename file contains all zero (transparent) alpha  values.   If  you  don't
              specify  -alphaout,  tifftopnm  does  not  generate an alpha file, and if the input
              image has an alpha channel, tifftopnm simply discards it.

              If you specify - as the filename, tifftopnm writes the  alpha  output  to  Standard
              Output and discards the image.

              See pnmcomp(1) for one way to use the alpha output file.

       -respectfillorder
              By default, tifftopnm ignores the "fillorder" tag in the TIFF input, which means it
              may incorrectly interpret the image.  To make it follow the spec, use this  option.
              For  a  lengthy  but engaging discussion of why tifftopnm works this way and how to
              use the -respectfillorder option, see the note on fillorder below.


       -headerdump
              Dump TIFF file information to stderr.  This information may be useful in  debugging
              TIFF file conversion problems.

       All options can be abbreviated to their shortest unique prefix.


NOTES
   Fillorder
       There  is  a  piece  of information in the header of a TIFF image called "fillorder."  The
       TIFF specification quite clearly states that this value tells the order in which bits  are
       arranged  in  a  byte  in  the  description of the image's pixels.  There are two options,
       assuming that the image has a format where more than one pixel can  be  represented  by  a
       single  byte: 1) the byte is filled from most signficant bit to least signficant bit going
       left to right in the image; and 2) the opposite.

       However, there is confusion in the world as to the meaning of fillorder.   Evidence  shows
       that  some  people believe it has to do with byte order when a single value is represented
       by two bytes.

       These people cause TIFF images to be created that, while they use a MSB-to-LSB  fillorder,
       have a fillorder tag that says they used LSB-to-MSB.  A program that properly interprets a
       TIFF image will not end up with the image that the author intended in this case.

       For a long time, tifftopnm did not understand fillorder itself and assumed  the  fillorder
       was  MSB-to-LSB regardless of the fillorder tag in the TIFF header.  And as far as I know,
       there is no legitimate reason to use a fillorder  other  than  MSB-to-LSB.   So  users  of
       tifftopnm were happily using those TIFF images that had incorrect fillorder tags.

       So that those users can continue to be happy, tifftopnm today continues to ignore the fil-
       lorder tag unless you tell it not to.  (It does, however, warn you when the fillorder  tag
       does not say MSB-to-LSB that the tag is being ignored).

       If  for  some reason you have a TIFF image that actually has LSB-to-MSB fillorder, and its
       fillorder tag correctly indicates that, you  must  use  the  -respectfillorder  option  on
       tifftopnm to get proper results.

       Examples of incorrect TIFF images are at ftp://weather.noaa.gov.  They are apparently cre-
       ated by a program called faxtotiff.

       This note was written on January 1, 2002.



SEE ALSO
       pnmtotiff(1), pnmtotiffcmyk(1), pnmcomp(1), pnm(5)

AUTHOR
       Derived by Jef Poskanzer from tif2ras.c, which is Copyright (c) 1990 by Sun  Microsystems,
       Inc.  Author: Patrick J. Naughton (naughton AT wind.com).



                                          02 April 2000                              tifftopnm(1)

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