libnetpbm is a C programming library for reading, writing, and manipulating Netpbm images. It also contains a few general graphics manipulation tools, but it is not intended to be a graphics tools library. For graphics tools, Netpbm expects you to run the Netpbm programs. From a C program, the libnetpbm function pm_system() makes this easy. However, since it creates a process and execs a program, this may be too heavyweight for some applications.
To use libnetpbm services in your C program, #include the pam.h interface header file. For historical reasons, you can also get by in some cases with pbm.h, pgm.h, ppm.h, or pnm.h, but there's really no point to that anymore.
The libnetpbm functions are divided into these categories:
For new programming, you rarely need to concern yourself with the PBM, PGM, PPM, and PNM functions, because the newer PAM functions do the same thing and are easier to use. For certain processing of bi-level images, the PBM functions are significantly more efficient, though.
libnetpbm has a backward compatibility feature that means a function designed to read one format can read some others too, converting on the fly. In particular, a function that reads a PGM image will also read a PBM image, but converts it as it reads it so that for programming purposes, it is a PGM image. Similarly, a function that reads PPM can read PBM and PGM as well. And a function that reads PBM, PGM, or PPM can read a PAM that has an equivalent tuple type.
For each of the five classes of libnetpbm image processing functions, libnetpbm has in in-memory representation for a pixel, a row, and a whole image. Do not confuse this format with the actual image format, as you would see in a file. The libnetpbm in-memory format is designed to make programming very easy. It is sometimes extremely inefficient, even more than the actual image format. For example, a pixel that a PPM image represents with 3 bytes, libnetpbm's PAM functions represent with 16 bytes. A pixel in a PBM image is represented by a single bit, but the PNM functions represent that pixel in memory with 96 bits.
See
LibnetpbmUser'sManual(3)
for the
basics on using libnetpbm in a program.
You can look up the reference information for a particular function in ThelibnetpbmDirectory(1)
Before Netpbm release 10 (June 2002), this library was split into four: libpbm, libpgm, libppm, and libpnm. That's largely the reason for the multiple sets of functions and scattered documentation.