NAME
figlet.pl - FIGlet in perl, akin to banner
SYNOPSIS
figlet.pl [ -A ] [ -D ] [ -E ] [ -L ] [ -R ] [ -X ] [ -c ] [ -d=fontdirectory ] [ -demo ] [ -f=fontfile ] [ -help ] [ -l ] [ -r ] [ -w=outputwidth ] [ -x ]
DESCRIPTION
- -A
-
All Words. Once the - arguments are read, all words remaining on the command line are used instead of standard input to print letters. Allows shell scripts to generate large letters without having to dummy up standard input files.
An empty character, obtained by two sequential and empty quotes, results in a line break.
To include text begining with - that might otherwise appear to be an invalid argument, use the argument --
- -D -E
-
-D switches to the German (ISO 646-DE) character set. Turns `[', `\' and `]' into umlauted A, O and U, respectively. `{', `|' and `}' turn into the respective lower case versions of these. `~' turns into s-z. -E turns off -D processing. These options are deprecated, which means they probably will not appear in the next version of FIGlet.
- -Iinfocode
-
These options print various information about FIGlet, then exit.
1 Version (integer).
This will print the version of your copy of FIGlet as a decimal integer. The main version number is multiplied by 10000, the sub- version number is multiplied by 100, and the sub-sub-version number is multiplied by 1. These are added together, and the result is printed out. For example, FIGlet 2.1.2 will print ``20102''. If there is ever a version 2.1.3, it will print ``20103''. Similarly, version 3.7.2 would print ``30702''. These numbers are guaranteed to be ascending, with later versions having higher numbers.
2 Default font directory.
This will print the default font directory. It is affected by the -d option.
3 Font.
This will print the name of the font FIGlet would use. It is affected by the B<-f> option. This is not a filename; the ``.flf'' suffix is not printed.
- -L -R -X
-
These options control whether FIGlet prints left-to-right or right-to-left. -L selects left-to-right printing. -R selects right-to-left printing. -X (default) makes FIGlet use whichever is specified in the font file.
- -c -l -r -x
-
These options handle the justification of FIGlet output. -c centers the output horizontally. -l makes the output flush-left. -r makes it flush- right. -x (default) sets the justification according to whether left-to-right or right-to-left text is selected. Left-to-right text will be flush- left, while right-to-left text will be flush-right. (Left-to-rigt versus right-to-left text is controlled by -L, -R and -X.)
- -d=fontdirectory
-
Change the default font directory. FIGlet looks for fonts first in the default directory and then in the current directory. If the -d option is not specified, FIGlet uses the directory that was specified when it was compiled. To find out which directory this is, use the -I2 option.
- -demo
-
Outputs the ASCII codepage in the specified font.
- -f=fontfile
-
Select the font. The .flf suffix may be left off of fontfile, in which case FIGlet automatically appends it. FIGlet looks for the file first in the default font directory and then in the current directory, or, if fontfile was given as a full pathname, in the given directory. If the -f option is not specified, FIGlet uses the font that was specified when it was compiled. To find out which font this is, use the -I3 option.
- -msmushmode
-
Specifies how FIGlet should ``smush'' and kern consecutive characters together. On the command line, -m0 can be useful, as it tells FIGlet to kern characters without smushing them together. Otherwise, this option is rarely needed, as a FIGlet font file specifies the best smushmode to use with the font. -m is, therefore, most useful to font designers testing the various
-2 Get mode from font file (default).
Every FIGlet font file specifies the best smushmode to use with the font. This will be one of the smushmodes (-1 through 63) described in the following paragraphs. S<-1> No smushing or kerning. Characters are simply concatenated together.
-0 Fixed width.
This will pad each character in the font such that they are all a consistent width. The padding is done such that the character is centered in it's "cell", and any odd padding is the trailing edge.
0 Kern only.
Characters are pushed together until they touch.
- -w=outputwidth
-
These options control the outputwidth, or the screen width FIGlet assumes when formatting its output. FIGlet uses the outputwidth to determine when to break lines and how to center the output. Normally, FIGlet assumes 80 columns so that people with wide terminals won't annoy the people they e-mail FIGlet output to. -w sets the outputwidth to the given integer. An outputwidth of 1 is a special value that tells FIGlet to print each non- space character, in its entirety, on a separate line, no matter how wide it is. Another special outputwidth is -1, it means to not warp.
EXAMPLES
figlet.pl -A Hello "" World
figlet.pl -m=-0 -demo
ENVIRONMENT
figlet.pl will make use of these environment variables if present
- FIGFONT
-
The default font to load. It should reside in the directory specified by FIGLIB.
- FIGLIB
-
The default location of fonts.
FILES
FIGlet home page
http://st-www.cs.uiuc.edu/users/chai/figlet.html
http://mov.to/figlet/
FIGlet font files, these can be found at
http://www.internexus.net/pub/figlet/
ftp://wuarchive.wustl.edu/graphics/graphics/misc/figlet/
ftp://ftp.plig.org/pub/figlet/
SEE ALSO
AUTHOR
Jerrad Pierce <jpierce@cpan.org>/<webmaster@pthbb.rg>