Provided by: netpbm_11.07.00-2_amd64 bug

NAME

       pnmquant - quantize the colors in a Netpbm image to a smaller set

SYNOPSIS

       pnmquant             [-center|-meancolor|-meanpixel]             [-floyd|-fs]            [-nofloyd|-nofs]
       [-spreadbrightness|-spreadluminosity] {[-norandom]|[-randomseed=n]} ncolors [pnmfile]

       All options can be abbreviated to their shortest unique prefix.  You may use two hyphens instead  of  one
       to  designate  an  option.  You may use either white space or equals signs between an option name and its
       value.

DESCRIPTION

       This program is part of Netpbm(1).

       pnmquant reads a PNM image as input.  It chooses ncolors colors to best represent  the  image,  maps  the
       existing colors to the new ones, and writes a PNM image as output.

       This  program  is  simply  a  combination  of pnmcolormap and pnmremap, where the colors of the input are
       remapped using a color map which is generated from the colors in that same input.  The options  have  the
       same meaning as in those programs.  See their documentation to understand pnmquant.

       You may actually get fewer than ncolors colors in the output because
         the method pnmcolormap uses to choose the best set of colors for the
         image is not the same as the method pnmremap uses to determine the
         best color from the set to represent an individual color.  For example,
         pnmcolormap may include salmon in the color map as the best
         representative of a pink pixel in the input and include coral in the color
         map as the best representative of an actual coral pixel in the input.  But
         pnmremap is free to use any color in the color map to represent that
         pink pixel and would find coral is a closer match for pink than salmon and
         therefore use coral for pink.  pnmremap might not use salmon
         for any pixel.

       This waste of a slot in the color map is a consequence of the approximate
         method pnmcolormap uses in order to compute the color map with a
         practical amount of computation.

   Running pnmcolormap and pnmremap Separately
       It  is much faster to call pnmcolormap and pnmremap directly than to run pnmquant.  You save the overhead
       of the Perl interpreter and creating two extra processes.  pnmquant is just a convenience.

       Here is an example of the relationship between the programs:

       This:

           $ pnmquant 256 myimage.pnm >/tmp/colormap.pnm >myimage256.pnm

       does essentially this:

           $ pnmcolormap 256 myimage.pnm >/tmp/colormap.pnm
           $ pnmremap -mapfile=/tmp/colormap.pnm myimage.pnm >myimage256.pnm

OPTIONS

       In addition to the options common to all programs based on libnetpbm (most notably  -quiet,  see   Common
       Options ), pnmquant recognizes the following command line options:

   Options Passed to pnmcolormap
       These options control the selection of the palette.  They are options to pnmcolormap(1).

       -center

       -meancolor

       -meanpixel

       -spreadbrightness

       -spreadluminosity

   Options Passed to pnmremap
       These options control which color from the palette the program uses to
         replace a pixel of a certain color from the input.  They are options to pnmremap(1).

       -floyd

       -fs

       -nofloyd

       -nofs

       -norandom

       -randomseed

       -norandom

HISTORY

       pnmquant  did not exist before Netpbm 9.21 (January 2001).  Before that, ppmquant did the same thing, but
       only on PPM images.  ppmquant continues to exist, but is only a front end  (for  name  compatibility)  to
       pnmquant.

       -version did not exist before Netpbm 10.75 (June 2016).

       -norandom did not exist before Netpbm 10.82 (March 2018).

SEE ALSO

       pnmcolormap(1), pnmremap(1), pnmquantall(1), pamdepth(1), ppmdither(1), ppmquant(1), pnm(1)

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/pnmquant.html

netpbm documentation                            09 February 2019                         Pnmquant User Manual(1)