--- ray/doc/man/man1/rad.1 2007/09/04 17:36:40 1.5 +++ ray/doc/man/man1/rad.1 2008/03/11 02:21:45 1.6 @@ -1,4 +1,4 @@ -.\" RCSid "$Id: rad.1,v 1.5 2007/09/04 17:36:40 greg Exp $" +.\" RCSid "$Id: rad.1,v 1.6 2008/03/11 02:21:45 greg Exp $" .TH RAD 1 2/1/99 RADIANCE .SH NAME rad - render a RADIANCE scene @@ -295,7 +295,7 @@ command line option. Also, there are several standard view identifiers defined by .I rad. These standard views are specified by strings of the form -"[Xx]?[Yy]?[Zz]?[vlcah]?". +"[Xx]?[Yy]?[Zz]?[vlcahs]?". (That is, an optional upper or lower case X followed by an optional upper or lower case Y followed by an optional upper or lower case Z followed by an optional lower case V, L, C, A or H.)\0 @@ -303,7 +303,8 @@ The letters indicate the desired view position, where means maximum X, lower case means minimum and so on. The final letter is the view type, where 'v' is perspective (the default), 'l' is parallel, 'c' is a cylindrical panorama, -'a' is angular fisheye, and 'h' is hemispherical fisheye. +'a' is angular fisheye, 'h' is hemispherical fisheye, and 's' +is a planisphere (stereographic) fisheye. A perspective view from maximum X, minimum Y would be "Xy" or "Xyv". A parallel view from maximum Z would be "Zl". If "ZONE" is an interior zone, the standard views will