DragonFly On-Line Manual Pages
GIFBUILD(1) GIFLIB Documentation GIFBUILD(1)
NAME
gifbuild - dump GIF data in a textual format, or undump it to a GIF
SYNOPSIS
gifbuild [-v] [-a] [-d] [-t translation-table] [-h] [gif-file]
OPTIONS
A program to convert a series of editable text GIF icon specifications
and named GIF files into a multi-image GIF, usable as a graphic
resource file. It can also dump existing GIFs in this format. When
dumping a GIF, certain sanity checks are performed which may result in
a warning emitted to standard error.
If no GIF file is given, gifbuild will try to read a text input from
stdin.
SPECIFICATION SYNTAX
Here is a syntax summary in informal BNF. The token `NL' represents a
required newline.
<gif-spec> ::= <header-block> <image-block>...
<header-block> ::= <header-declaration>...
<header-declaration ::=
| screen width <digits> NL
| screen height <digits> NL
| screen colors <digits> NL
| screen background <digits> NL
| pixel aspect byte <digits> NL
| screen map <color-table> NL
<color-table> ::= <color-declaration>... end NL
<color-declaration> ::= rgb <digits> <digits> <digits> [ is <key>] NL
| sort flag {on|off} NL
<image-block> ::= include <file-name> NL
| image NL
<image-declaration>...
<raster-picture>
[ <extension> ]
<image-declarations> ::= image top <digits> NL
| image left <digits> NL
| image interlaced NL
| image map <color-table> NL
| image bits <digits> by <digits> [hex|ascii] NL <raster-block>
<extension> := <comment> NL <extension-block> NL end NL
| <plaintext> NL <extension-block> NL end NL
| graphics control NL <GCB-part> NL end NL
| netscape loop <digits> NL
| extension <hex-digits> NL <extension-block> NL end NL
<GCB-part> ::= disposal mode <digits> NL
| user input flag {on|off} NL
| delay <digits> NL
| transparent index <digits> NL
If the data types of the "screen height", "screen width", "screen
background", "image top", and "image left" declarations aren't obvious
to you, what are you doing with this software?
The "pixel aspect byte" declaration sets an integer denominator for a
fraction expressing the puxel aspect ratio. See the GIF standard for
details; this field is actually long obsolete.
A color table declares color indices (in ascending order from 0) and
may associate them with key characters (these associations are absent
when the map is more than 94 colors lang and raster blocks using it
must use hex pairs). These characters can later be used in raster
blocks. As these must be printable and non-whitespace, you can only
specify 94 colors per icon. Life is like that sometimes.
A color table declaration can also set the table's sort flag with "sort
flag on" or "sort flag off" on any line before the end.
An "ascii" raster block is just a block of key characters (used for a
color map of 94 or fewer colors). A "hex" raster block uses hex digit
pairs instead (used for a color map with more than 94 colors). The
default is ASCII. It should be sized correctly for the "image bits"
declaration that leads it. Raster blocks from interlaced GIFs are
dumped with the lines in non-interlaced order.
The "comment", "plaintext" or "ggraphics control" keywords lead defined
GIF89 extension record data. The final GIF89 type, graphics control and
application block, are not yet supported, but the code does recognize a
Netscape loop block. You can also say "extension" followed by a
hexadecimal record type. All of these extension declarations must be
followed by an extension block, which is terminated by the keyword
"end" on its own line.
An extension block is a series of text lines, each interpreted as a
string of bytes to fill an extension block (the terminating newline is
stripped). Text may include standard C-style octal and hex escapes
preceded by a backslash.
A graphics control block declaration creates a graphics control
extension block; for the field semantics see the GIF89 standard, part
23.
A netscape loop declaration creates an application extension block
containing a NETSCAPE 2.0 animation loop control with a specified
repeat count (repeat count 0 means loop forever). This must be
immediately after the header declaration. These loop blocks are
interpreted by the Netscape/Mozilla/Firefox line of browsers.
All <digits> tokens are interpreted as decimal numerals; <hex-digits>
tokens are interpreted as two hex digits (a byte). All coordinates are
zero-origin with the top left corner (0,0). Range checking is weak and
signedness checking nonexistent; caveat hacker!
In general, the amount of whitespace and order of declarations within a
header or image block is not significant, except that a raster picture
must immediately follow its "image bits" bits declaration.
The "include" declaration includes a named GIF as the next image. The
global color maps of included GIFs are merged with the base table
defined by any "screen color" declaration. All images of an included
multi-image GIF will be included in order.
Comments (preceded with "#") will be ignored.
OPTIONS
-v
Verbose mode (show progress). Enables printout of running scan
lines.
-d
Dump the input GIF file(s) into the text form described above.
-t
Specify name characters to use when dumping raster blocks. Only
valid with -d option.
-h
Print one line of command line help, similar to Usage above.
BUGS
Error checking is rudimentary.
EXAMPLE:
A sample icon file called sample.ico is included in the pic directory
of the GIFLIB source distribution.
AUTHOR
Eric S. Raymond <esr@thyrsus.com>
GIFLIB 2 May 2012 GIFBUILD(1)