Provided by: netpbm_10.97.00-2_amd64 bug

NAME

       ppmtoascii - convert a PPM image to ASCII graphics with ANSI terminal color

SYNOPSIS

       ppmtoascii

       [-1x2|-2x4]

       [ppmfile]

DESCRIPTION

       This program is part of Netpbm(1).

       ppmtoascii reads a PPM image as input and produces a somewhat crude ASCII graphic image as
       output, with ANSI terminal control characters so it has crude color when sent to  a  color
       text terminal.

       There is no converter for the other direction.

       ppmtoterm does a similar thing, but displays each character of the image as a single pixel
       (using the same dense character for every pixel),  whereas  ppmtoascii  combines  2  or  8
       pixels into one character, where the character roughly represents those particular pixels.

       Note that ANSI provides for only eight colors (including black and white).

       Note that an ANSI terminal can't display a single character in multiple colors, so where a
       character represents 8 pixels of differing colors, the color of the character is one  that
       is the average of the colors of those pixels.

       pbmtoascii  does  the  same  thing  for  PBM  images,  with no terminal control characters
       (because none are needed for a strictly black and white image).

OPTIONS

       In addition to the options common to all programs based on libnetpbm (most notably -quiet,
       see
        Common  Options ⟨index.html#commonoptions⟩ ), ppmtoascii recognizes the following command
       line options:

       The -1x2 and -2x4 options give you two alternate ways for the  pixels  to  get  mapped  to
       characters.  With 1x2, the default, each character represents a group of 1 pixel across by
       2 pixels down.  With -2x4, each character represents 2 pixels across by 4 pixels down.

SEE ALSO

       pbmtoascii(1) ppmtoterm(1) ppm(1)

HISTORY

       ppmtoascii was new in Netpbm  10.51  (June  2010).   Frank  Ch.  Eigler  derived  it  from
       pbmtoascii.

AUTHOR

       Copyright (C) 2010 by Frank Ch. Eigler.

DOCUMENT SOURCE

       This  manual page was generated by the Netpbm tool 'makeman' from HTML source.  The master
       documentation is at

              http://netpbm.sourceforge.net/doc/ppmtoascii.html