Provided by: giflib-tools_5.1.4-2ubuntu0.1_amd64 bug

NAME

       gifecho - generate a GIF from ASCII text

SYNOPSIS

       gifecho [-v] [-s colormap-size] [-f foreground] [-c R G B] [-t text] [-h] [gif-file]

DESCRIPTION

       A program to generate GIF images out of regular text. Text can be one line or multi-line,
       and is converted using 8 by 8 fixed font.

       This program reads stdin if no text is provided on the command line (-t), and will dump
       the created GIF file to stdout.

OPTIONS

       -v
           Verbose mode (show progress). Enables printout of running scan lines.

       -s colormap-size
           Explicitly defines the size of the color map of the resulting gif image. Usually the
           image will be bicolor with fg as color 1, unless [-f] is explicitly given in case the
           color map size will be big enough to hold it. However it is sometimes convenient to
           set the color map size to certain size while the fg color is small mainly so this
           image may be merged with another (images must match color map size).

       -f foreground
           Select foreground index (background is always 0). By default it is one and therefore
           the image result is bicolored. if FG is set to n then color map will be created with
           2^k entries where 2^k > n for minimum k, assuming k <= 8. This color map will be all
           zeros except this foreground index. This option is useful if this text image should be
           integrated into other image colormap using their colors.

       -c R G B
           The color to use as the foreground color. White by default.

       -t text
           One line of text can be provided on the command line. Note you must encapsulate the
           Text within quotes if it has spaces (The quotes themselves are not treated as part of
           the text). If no -t option is provided, stdin is read until end of file.

       -h
           Print one line command line help, similar to Usage above.

NOTES

       There is a hardcoded limit of 100 the number of lines.

AUTHOR

       Gershon Elber.