Pamslice User Manual(0) Pamslice User Manual(0)

pamslice - extract one line of values out of a Netpbm image

pamslice {-row=rownumber | -column=columnnumber} [-plane=planenumber] [imagefile]

All options can be abbreviated to their shortest unique prefix. You may use two hyphens instead of one. You may separate an option name and its value with white space instead of an equals sign.

This program is part of Netpbm(1)

pamslice extracts one line of tuples (pixels) out of a Netpbm image and prints their values in a table. A line means a row or column. It shows you a one-dimensional cross section of a two-dimensional image. (With the -plane option, it can be thought of as a one-dimensional cross-section of a three-dimensional image).

The table has one line per tuple, consisting of blank-separated ASCII decimal numbers. The first number is the column number if you specified a row slice or the row number if you specified a column slice. The rest of the numbers are the sample values in plane number order. For a PBM or PGM input, there is only one plane. For a PPM input, Plane 0 is red, Plane 1 is green, and Plane 2 is blue. See the specifications of the image formats for details on exactly what these numbers mean.

If you want to see all the pixels in a PPM, PGM, or PBM image in ASCII decimal, pnmtopnm -plain is a good way to do that.


This indicates that the slice is to be horizontal -- i.e. one row of the
image -- and indicates which row. Rows are numbered from the top
starting with 0.

You cannot specify both -row and -column.


This indicates that the slice is to be vertical -- i.e. one column of the
image -- and indicates which column. Columns are numbered from the left
starting with 0.

You cannot specify both -row and -column.


This specifies that you are interested in only one plane of the image
and which one. Planes are numbered from 0 and have meanings that vary
on the type of image. In a PPM image, Plane 0 is red, Plane 1 is
green, and Plane 2 is blue.

If you don't specify -plane, you get all the planes -- each
line of output has multiple numbers in addition to the sequence number.
If you do specify -plane, each line of output contains one
number in addition to the sequence number.


This option causes pamslice to format the output as input for a
xmgr so you can plot it. The only difference this option makes
is that it adds header information to the beginning of the output.

pamcut(1)

pnmtopnm(1)

pnmtoplainpnm(1)

pnm(5)

pamslice replaced pgmslice in Netpbm 10.3 (June 2002). It was backward compatible, but worked on Netpbm images other than PGM and PBM and added the -plane and -xmgr options.

Jos Dingjan <jos@tuatha.org> wrote pgmslice after being unable to find the source code to Marco Beijersbergen's program with the same name. Bryan Henderson converted it to pamslice.

8 February 2010 netpbm documentation