NAME

Image::Info::XPM - XPM support for Image::Info

SYNOPSIS

use Image::Info qw(image_info dim);

my $info = image_info("image.xpm");
if (my $error = $info->{error}) {
    die "Can't parse image info: $error\n";
}
my $color = $info->{color_type};

my($w, $h) = dim($info);

DESCRIPTION

This modules supplies the standard key names except for Compression, Gamma, Interlace, LastModificationTime, as well as:

ColorPalette

Reference to an array of all colors used. This key is only present if image_info is invoked as image_info({ColorPalette>=1}).

ColorTableSize

The number of colors the image uses.

HotSpotX

The x-coord of the image's hotspot. Set to -1 if there is no hotspot.

HotSpotY

The y-coord of the image's hotspot. Set to -1 if there is no hotspot.

L1D_Histogram

Reference to an array representing a one dimensioanl luminance histogram. This key is only present if image_info is invoked as image_info($file, L1D_Histogram=>1). The range is from 0 to 255, however auto-vivification is used so a null field is also 0, and the array may not actually contain 255 fields.

XPM_CharactersPerPixel

This is typically 1 or 2. See Image::Xpm.

XPM_Extension-.*

XPM Extensions (the most common is XPMEXT) if present.

METHODS

process_file()

$info->process_file($source, $options);

Processes one file and sets the found info fields in the $info object.

AUTHOR

FILES

This module requires Image::Xpm

$Image::Info::XPM::RGBLIB is set to /usr/X11R6/lib/X11/rgb.txt by default, this is used to resolve textual color names to their RGB counterparts.

SEE ALSO

Image::Info, Image::Xpm

NOTES

For more information about XPM see:

ftp://ftp.x.org/contrib/libraries/xpm-README.html

CAVEATS

While the module attempts to be as robust as possible, it may not recognize older XBMs (Versions 1-3), if this is the case try inserting /* XPM */ as the first line.

AUTHOR

Jerrad Pierce <belg4mit@mit.edu>/<webmaster@pthbb.org>

Now maintained by Tels - (c) 2006.

This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself.