tek2plot
command-line options
The tek2plot
program translates the Tektronix graphics files
produced by many older applications to other formats. The output format
or display type is specified with the `-T' option. The possible
output formats are the same ten formats that are supported by the GNU
graph
, plot
, and pic2plot
programs.
Input file names may be specified anywhere on the command line. That is, the relative order of file names and command-line options does not matter. If no file names are specified, or the file name `-' is specified, the standard input is read. The output file is written to standard output, unless the `-T X' option is specified. In that case the output is displayed in one or more windows on an X Window System display, and there is no output file.
The full set of command-line options is listed below. There are three sorts of option:
tek2plot
, i.e., relevant only if no
display type or output format is specified with the `-T' option.
Each option that takes an argument is followed, in parentheses, by the type and default value of the argument.
The following are general options.
idraw
-editable Postscript, the format used by the xfig
drawing editor, the Hewlett--Packard PCL 5 printer language, the
Hewlett--Packard Graphics Language (by default, HP-GL/2), Tektronix
format, and device-independent GNU graphics metafile format.
tek2plot -T X
displays each page in its own X window. If the `-T pnm'
option, the `-T gif' option, the `-T ai' option, or the
`-T fig' option is used, the default behavior is to display only
the first page, since files in PNM, pseudo-GIF, AI, or Fig format may
contain only a single page of graphics.
Most Tektronix files consist of either one page (page #0) or
two pages (an empty page #0, and page #1). Tektronix files
produced by the GNU plotting utilities (e.g., by graph -T tek
)
are normally of the latter sort.
tek2plot -T pnm
,
tek2plot -T gif
, tek2plot -T pcl
, tek2plot -T hpgl
,
and raw tek2plot
, for all of which "HersheySerif" is the
default.) Set the font used for text to font_name. Font names
are case-insensitive. If a font outside the Courier family is
chosen, the `--position-chars' option (see below) should probably
be used. For a list of all fonts, see section Available text fonts. If the
specified font is not available, the default font will be used.
libplot
graphics library should be used. This is
usually 1/850 times the size of the display, although if `-T X',
`-T pnm', or -T gif
is specified, it is zero. By
convention, a zero-thickness line is the thinnest line that can be
drawn. This is the case in all output formats. Note, however, that the
drawing editors idraw
and xfig
treat zero-thickness lines
as invisible.
tek2plot -T hpgl
does not support drawing lines with other than a
default thickness if the environment variable HPGL_VERSION
is set
to a value less than "2" (the default).
tek2plot -T X
,
tek2plot -T pnm
, and tek2plot -T gif
. An unrecognized
name sets the color to the default. For information on what names are
recognized, see section Specifying Colors by Name. The environment variable
BG_COLOR
can equally well be used to specify the background
color.
If the `-T gif' option is used, a transparent pseudo-GIF may be
produced by setting the TRANSPARENT_COLOR
environment variable to
the name of the background color. See section Environment variables.
tek2plot -T X
,
tek2plot -T pnm
, and tek2plot -T gif
, for which the
graphics display size can be expressed in terms of pixels. The
environment variable BITMAPSIZE
can equally well be used to
specify the size.
The graphics display used by tek2plot -T X
is an X window.
If you choose a rectangular (non-square) window size, the fonts in the
plot will be scaled anisotropically, i.e., by different factors in the
horizontal and vertical direction. This requires an X11R6 display. Any
font that cannot be scaled in this way will be replaced by a default
scalable font, such as the Hershey vector font "HersheySerif".
For backward compatibility, the X resource Xplot.geometry
,
which can be set by the user, may be used to set the window size,
instead of `--bitmap-size' or BITMAPSIZE
.
MAX_LINE_LENGTH
can also be used to specify the maximum line length. This option has no
effect on raw tek2plot
, since it draws polylines in real time and
has no buffer limitations.
tek2plot -T ai
,
tek2plot -T ps
, tek2plot -T fig
, tek2plot -T pcl
,
and tek2plot -T hpgl
. "letter" means an 8.5in by
11in page. Any ISO page size in the range "a0"..."a4" or ANSI
page size in the range "a"..."e" may be specified ("letter" is an
alias for "a" and "tabloid" is an alias for "b"). "legal",
"ledger", and "b5" are recognized page sizes also. The environment
variable PAGESIZE
can equally well be used to specify the page
size.
For tek2plot -T ai
and tek2plot -T ps
, the graphics
display within which the plot is drawn will be a square region centered
on the specified page, occupying its full width (with allowance being
made for margins). For tek2plot -T fig
, it will be a square
region of the same size, located in the upper left corner of an
xfig
display. For tek2plot -T pcl
and tek2plot -T
hpgl
, the graphics display will be a square region of the same size,
but may be positioned differently. Fine control its positioning on the
page can be accomplished by setting certain environment variables
(see section Environment variables).
xfig
or
idraw
.
tek2plot -T X
.
The four relevant bitmap fonts are distributed with most versions of the
plotting utilities package, under the names
tekfont0
...tekfont3
. They may easily be installed on
any modern X Window System display. For this option to work
properly, you must also select a window size of 1024x1024 pixels, either
by using the --bitmap-size 1024x1024
option or by setting the
value of the Xplot.geometry
resource. The reason for this
restriction is that bitmap fonts, unlike the scalable fonts that the
plotting utilities normally use, cannot be rescaled.
This option is useful only if you have a file in Tektronix format that
draws text using native Tektronix fonts. Tektronix files produced by
the GNU plotting utilities (e.g., by graph -T tek
) do not use
native Tektronix fonts to draw text.
The following option is relevant only to raw tek2plot
, i.e.,
relevant only if no display type or output format is specified with the
`-T' option. In this case tek2plot
outputs a graphics
metafile, which may be translated to other formats by invoking
plot
.
META_PORTABLE
to "yes".
The following options request information.
tek2plot -T X
, tek2plot -T ai
, tek2plot
-T ps
, and tek2plot -T fig
each support the 35 standard
Postscript fonts. tek2plot -T ai
, tek2plot -T pcl
, and
tek2plot -T hpgl
support the 45 standard PCL 5 fonts, and
tek2plot -T pcl
and tek2plot -T hpgl
support a number of
Hewlett--Packard vector fonts. All of the preceding, together with
tek2plot -T pnm
, tek2plot -T gif
, and tek2plot
-T tek
, support a set of 22 Hershey vector fonts. Raw tek2plot
in principle supports any of these fonts, since its output must be
translated to other formats with plot
. The plotfont
utility will produce a character map of any available font.
See section The plotfont
Utility.
tek2plot
and the plotting utilities
package, and exit.
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