jammy (1) unihexrotate.1.gz

Provided by: unifont-bin_14.0.01-1_amd64 bug

NAME

       unihexrotate - rotate Unifont hex glyphs in quarter turn increments

SYNOPSIS

       unihexrotate [-n quarter-turns] [input-font.hex] > output-font.hex

DESCRIPTION

       unihexrotate reads a GNU Unifont .hex format file named on the command line, or from stdin if no filename
       is given.  If a number of quarter turns is specified, it rotates each glyph clockwise by that  number  of
       quarter  turns,  or  counterclockwise  if  the  number  is negative.  The resulting modified .hex file is
       written to stdout.  The format of a .hex file is described in the unifont(5) man page.

       If the number of quarter turns is not specified, unihexrotate will rotate each glyph by a  default  value
       of one quarter turn (i.e., 90 degrees) clockwise.

       unihexrotate  only supports Unifont .hex files with glyphs that are 8 columns and 16 columns wide.  If an
       8-column glyph is rotated, it is first centered  within  a  16-column  glyph  so  the  rotation  will  be
       performed on a 16-by-16 pixel glyph.  One additional use of this program is that a glyph can be converted
       from 8 columns wide to 16 columns wide by specifying a rotation of 0 quarter turns.

OPTIONS

       -n    Specify an integer number of quarter turn clockwise rotations  to  perform,  typically  as  "-n  0"
             through  "-n  3"  (alternatively  as  "-n=0"  through  "-n=3")  for rotations of 0, 90, 180, or 270
             degrees, respectively.  Negative values will perform counterclockwise rotations  by  the  specified
             number of quarter turns.

EXAMPLES

       This  example extracts the Mongolian glyphs in the "unifont-base.hex" file (located in the "font/plane00"
       directory) and pipes them to unihexrotate to rotate by the default amount of one quarter  turn  clockwise
       (i.e.,  by  90 degrees).  The basic Mongolian glyphs are in the Unicode range U+1800 through U+18AF.  The
       original glyphs in "unifont-base.hex" are drawn for horizontal rendering (as per the  Unicode  Standard).
       The output rotated glyphs are suitable for rendering Mongolian in its traditional vertical form.  Because
       no filename is specified to unihexrotate in this example, its input is taken from stdin.

              grep "^18[0-A]" unifont-base.hex | unihexrotate > vertical.hex

       The next example reverses the rotation performed above, by one quarter turn  counterclockwise.   In  this
       example, the input filename "vertical.hex" is specified.

              unihexrotate -n -1 vertical.hex > horizontal.hex

FILES

       Unifont .hex format input and output files.

SEE ALSO

       bdfimplode(1),    hex2bdf(1),    hex2sfd(1),   hexbraille(1),   hexdraw(1),   hexkinya(1),   hexmerge(1),
       johab2ucs2(1),  unibdf2hex(1),  unibmp2hex(1),  unibmpbump(1),  unicoverage(1),  unidup(1),   unifont(5),
       unifont-viewer(1),  unifont1per(1),  unifontchojung(1),  unifontksx(1),  unifontpic(1), unigencircles(1),
       unigenwidth(1), unihex2bmp(1), unihex2png(1), unihexfill(1), unihexgen(1), unipagecount(1), unipng2hex(1)

AUTHOR

       unihexrotate was written by David Corbett.

LICENSE

       unihexrotate is Copyright © 2019 David Corbett.

       This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify  it  under  the  terms  of  the  GNU
       General  Public License as published by the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of the License, or
       (at your option) any later version.

BUGS

       No known bugs exist.

                                                   2019 Feb 23                                   UNIHEXROTATE(1)