ppmtoacad - convert portable pixmap to AutoCAD database or
slide
ppmtoacad
[-dxb] [-poly] [-background colour]
[-white] [-aspect ratio] [-8] [ppmfile]
Reads a portable pixmap as input. Produces an AutoCAD®
slide file or binary database import (.dxb) file as output. If no
ppmfile is specified, input is read from standard input.
- -dxb
- An AutoCAD binary database import (.dxb) file is written. This file is
read with the DXBIN command and, once loaded, becomes part of the AutoCAD
geometrical database and can be viewed and edited like any other object.
Each sequence of identical pixels becomes a separate object in the
database; this can result in very large AutoCAD drawing files. However, if
you want to trace over a bitmap, it lets you zoom and pan around the
bitmap as you wish.
- -poly
- If the -dxb option is not specified, the output of ppmtoacad
is an AutoCAD slide file. Normally each row of pixels is represented by an
AutoCAD line entity. If -poly is selected, the pixels are rendered
as filled polygons. If the slide is viewed on a display with higher
resolution than the source pixmap, this will cause the pixels to expand
instead of appearing as discrete lines against the screen background
colour. Regrettably, this representation yields slide files which occupy
more disc space and take longer to display.
- -background
colour
- Most AutoCAD display drivers can be configured to use any available colour
as the screen background. Some users perfer a black screen background,
others white, while splinter groups advocate burnt ocher, tawny puce, and
shocking grey. Discarding pixels whose closest AutoCAD colour
representation is equal to the background colour can substantially reduce
the size of the AutoCAD database or slide file needed to represent a
bitmap. If no -background colour is specified, the screen
background colour is assumed to be black. Any AutoCAD colour number may be
specified as the screen background; colour numbers are assumed to specify
the hues defined in the standard AutoCAD 256 colour palette.
- -white
- Since many AutoCAD users choose a white screen background, this option is
provided as a short-cut. Specifying -white is identical in effect
to -background 7.
- -aspect
ratio
- If the source pixmap had non-square pixels, the ratio of the pixel width
to pixel height should be specified as ratio. The resulting slide
or .dxb file will be corrected so that pixels on the AutoCAD screen will
be square. For example, to correct an image made for a 320x200 VGA/MCGA
screen, specify -aspect 0.8333.
- -8
- Restricts the colours in the output file to the 8 RGB shades.
All flags can be abbreviated to their shortest unique prefix.
AutoCAD has a fixed palette of 256 colours, distributed along the
hue, lightness, and saturation axes. Pixmaps which contain many
nearly-identical colours, or colours not closely approximated by AutoCAD's
palette, may be poorly rendered.
ppmtoacad works best if the system displaying its output
supports the full 256 colour AutoCAD palette. Monochrome, 8 colour, and 16
colour configurations will produce less than optimal results.
When creating a .dxb file or a slide file with the -poly
option, ppmtoacad finds both vertical and horizontal runs of
identical pixels and consolidates them into rectangular regions to reduce
the size of the output file. This is effective for images with large areas
of constant colour but it's no substitute for true raster to vector
conversion. In particular, thin diagonal lines are not optimised at all by
this process.
Output files can be huge.
AutoCAD Reference Manual: Slide File Format and Binary
Drawing Interchange (DXB) Files, ppm(5)
John Walker
Autodesk SA
Avenue des Champs-Montants 14b
CH-2074 MARIN
Suisse/Schweiz/Svizzera/Svizra/Switzerland
- Usenet:
-
kelvin@Autodesk.com
- Fax:
-
038/33 88 15
- Voice:
-
038/33 76 33
Permission to use, copy, modify, and distribute this software and
its documentation for any purpose and without fee is hereby granted, without
any conditions or restrictions. This software is provided ``as is'' without
express or implied warranty.
AutoCAD and Autodesk are registered trademarks of Autodesk,
Inc.