vtkxform - Apply coordinate transformation to point coordinates in
VTK file.
An ASCII-format VTK file is read from standard input and a
user-provided coordinate transformation (optionally inverted) is applied to
the vertex coordinates. A VTK file with transformed points is then written
to standard output.
- --help
- Write list of basic command line options to standard output.
- --help-all
- Write complete list of basic and advanced command line options to standard
output.
- --wiki
- Write list of command line options to standard output in MediaWiki
markup.
- --man
- Write man page source in 'nroff' markup to standard output.
- --version
- Write toolkit version to standard output.
- --echo
- Write the current command line to standard output.
- --verbose-level
<integer>
- Set verbosity level.
- --verbose,
-v
- Increment verbosity level by 1 (deprecated; supported for backward
compatibility).
- --threads
<integer>
- Set maximum number of parallel threads (for POSIX threads and
OpenMP).
- --inversion-tolerance
<double>
- Numerical tolerance of B-spline inversion in mm. Smaller values will lead
to more accurate inversion, but may increase failure rate. [Default:
0.001]
- --source-image
<string>
- Set source image of the transformation (i.e., the image that the
transformation maps points FROM) to correct for differences in orientation
and coordinate space. [Default: NONE]
- --target-image
<string>
- Set target image of the transformation (i.e., the image that the
transformation maps points TO) to correct for differences in orientation
and coordinate space. [Default: NONE]
Torsten Rohlfing, with contributions from Michael P. Hasak, Greg
Jefferis, Calvin R. Maurer, Daniel B. Russakoff, and Yaroslav Halchenko
http://www.fsf.org/licensing/licenses/gpl.html
Report bugs at http://nitrc.org/projects/cmtk/
CMTK is developed with support from the NIAAA under Grant
AA021697, National Consortium on Alcohol and Neurodevelopment in Adolescence
(N-CANDA): Data Integration Component. From April 2009 through September
2011, CMTK development and maintenance was supported by the NIBIB under
Grant EB008381.