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Revision: 1.36
Committed: Fri Apr 4 18:06:48 2025 UTC (4 weeks, 2 days ago) by greg
Branch: MAIN
CVS Tags: HEAD
Changes since 1.35: +9 -3 lines
Log Message:
perf(rmtxop,rcomb): Switched default internal data type from double to float

File Contents

# Content
1 .\" RCSid "$Id: rmtxop.1,v 1.35 2025/03/27 01:26:55 greg Exp $"
2 .TH RMTXOP 1 5/31/2014 RADIANCE
3 .SH NAME
4 rmtxop - concatenate, add, multiply, divide, transpose, scale, and convert matrices
5 .SH SYNOPSIS
6 .B rmtxop
7 [
8 .B \-v
9 ][
10 .B \-f[afdc]
11 ][
12 .B "\-C {symbols|file}"
13 ][
14 .B "\-c ce .."
15 ][
16 .B "\-s sf .."
17 ][
18 .B \-t
19 ][
20 .B "\-rf|\-rb"
21 ]
22 .B m1
23 [
24 .B ".+*/"
25 ]
26 .B ".."
27 .SH DESCRIPTION
28 .I Rmtxop
29 loads and concatenates or adds/multiplies/divides
30 together component matrix files given on the command line.
31 Each file must have a header containing the following metadata:
32 .sp
33 .nf
34 NROWS={number of rows}
35 NCOLS={number of columns}
36 NCOMP={number of components}
37 FORMAT={ascii|float|double|32-bit_rle_rgbe|32-bit_rle_xyze|Radiance_spectra}
38 .fi
39 .sp
40 The number of components indicates that each matrix element is actually
41 composed of multiple channels, most commonly an RGB triple.
42 This is essentially dividing the matrix into planes, where each component
43 participates in a separate calculation.
44 If an appropriate header is not present, it may be added with a call to
45 .I rcollate(1).
46 A matrix may be read from the standard input using a hyphen by itself ('-')
47 in the appropriate place on the command line.
48 Similarly, any of the inputs may be read from a command
49 instead of a file by
50 using quotes and a beginning exclamation point ('!').
51 .PP
52 Two special cases are handled for component matrices that are either
53 XML files containing BSDF data, or Radiance picture files.
54 In the first case, the BSDF library loads and interprets the
55 transmission matrix by default.
56 Alternatively, the front (normal-side) reflectance is selected if the
57 .I \-rf
58 option precedes the file name, or the backside reflectance if
59 .I \-rb
60 is specified.
61 (XML files cannot be read from the standard input or from a command.)\0
62 In the second case, the RGBE or XYZE values are loaded in a 3-component
63 matrix where the number of columns match the X-dimension of the picture, and
64 the number of rows match the Y-dimension.
65 The picture must be in standard pixel ordering, and the first row
66 is at the top with the first column on the left.
67 Any exposure changes that were applied to the pictures before
68 .I rmtxop
69 will be undone, similar to the
70 .I pcomb(1)
71 .I \-o
72 option.
73 Radiance spectral pictures with more than 3 components are also supported.
74 These are typically produced by
75 .I rtrace(1)
76 or
77 .I rfluxmtx(1).
78 .PP
79 Before each input, the
80 .I \-t
81 and
82 .I \-c
83 and/or
84 .I \-s
85 options may be used to modify the matrix.
86 The
87 .I \-t
88 option transposes the matrix, swapping rows and columns.
89 The
90 .I \-c
91 option can "transform" the element values, possibly changing
92 the number of components in the matrix.
93 For example, a 3-component matrix can be transformed into a single-component
94 matrix by using
95 .I \-c
96 with three coefficients.
97 A four-component matrix can be turned into a two-component matrix using 8
98 coefficients, where the first four coefficients will be used to compute
99 the first new component, and the second four coefficients
100 yield the second new component.
101 Note that the number of coefficients must be an even multiple of the number
102 of original components.
103 .PP
104 Alternatively, a set of symbolic output components may be given to the
105 .I \-c
106 option, with the following definitions:
107 .sp
108 .nf
109 R - red channel
110 G - green channel
111 B - blue channel
112 X - CIE X channel
113 Y - CIE Y channel (aka., luminance or illuminance)
114 Z - CIE Z channel
115 S - scotopic luminance or illuminance
116 M - melanopic luminance or illuminance
117 A - average component value
118 .fi
119 .sp
120 These letters may be given in any order as a single string, and if
121 .I "-c RGB"
122 or
123 .I "-c XYZ"
124 is specified for an input picture or the
125 .I "-fc"
126 option is given, the output will be written as a RGBE or XYZE picture.
127 Note that conversion from a float or RGBE color space applies a conversion
128 of 179 lumens/watt (for CIE or melanopic output) or 412 (for scotopic output),
129 and the reverse happens for conversion from XYZE input to RGB or RGBE output.
130 Lower case versions of all these components are also supported, the only
131 difference is that the aforementioned efficacy factors
132 will be left out of the conversion.
133 .PP
134 If a matrix or picture file path is given to the
135 .I \-c
136 option, then the color space of that file will be used, instead.
137 .PP
138 The
139 .I \-C
140 option takes either a symbolic color space or an input file, and will be
141 applied to all subsequent matrices that do not have their own associated
142 .I \-c
143 option.
144 .PP
145 Additionally, the
146 .I \-s
147 option applies the given scalar factor(s) to the elements of the matrix.
148 If only one factor is provided,
149 it will be used for all components.
150 If multiple factors are given, their number must match the number of matrix
151 components
152 .I after
153 application of any
154 .I \-c
155 option for this input matrix or picture, even if the
156 .I \-s
157 option appears first.
158 .PP
159 If present, the second and subsequent matrices on the command
160 line are concatenated together, unless separated by a plus ('+'),
161 asterisk ('*'), or forward slash ('/') symbol,
162 in which case the individual matrix elements are added,
163 multiplied, or divided, respectively.
164 The concatenation operator ('.') is the default and need not be specified.
165 Note also that the asterisk must be quoted or escaped in most shells.
166 In the case of addition, the two matrices involved must have the same number
167 of components.
168 If subtraction is desired, use addition ('+') with a scaling parameter of -1
169 for the second matrix (the
170 .I \-s
171 option).
172 For element-wise multiplication and division, the second matrix is
173 permitted to have a single component per element, which will be
174 applied equally to all components of the first matrix.
175 If element-wise division is specified, any zero elements in the second
176 matrix will result in a warning and the corresponding component(s) in the
177 first matrix will be set to zero.
178 .PP
179 Evaluation proceeds from left to right, and all operations have
180 the same precedence.
181 If a different evaluation order is desired, pipe the result of one
182 .I rmtxop
183 command into another, as shown in one of the examples below.
184 .PP
185 The number of components in the next matrix after applying any
186 .I -c
187 transform must agree with the prior result.
188 For concatenation (matrix multiplication), the number of columns
189 in the prior result must equal the number of rows in the next matrix, and
190 the result will have the number of rows of the previous and the number
191 of columns of the next matrix.
192 In the case of addition, multiplication, and division,
193 the number of rows and columns of the prior result and the
194 next matrix must match, and will not be changed by the operation.
195 .PP
196 A final transpose or transform/scaling operation may be applied to
197 the results by appending the
198 .I \-t
199 and
200 .I \-c
201 and/or
202 .I \-s
203 options after the last matrix on the command line.
204 .PP
205 Results are sent to the standard output.
206 By default, the values will be written in the lowest precision format
207 among the inputs, but the
208 .I \-f[adfc]
209 option may be used to explicitly output components
210 as ASCII (-fa), binary doubles (-fd), floats (-ff), or common-exponent
211 colors/spectra (-fc).
212 In the latter case, the actual matrix dimensions are written in
213 the resolution string rather than the header.
214 Also, matrix results will be written as standard
215 Radiance pictures if they have either one
216 or three components.
217 In the one-component case, the output is written as grayscale.
218 If more than 3 components are in the final matrix and
219 .I -fc
220 is specified, the output will be a Radiance spectral picture.
221 .PP
222 The
223 .I \-v
224 option turns on verbose reporting, which announces each operation.
225 .SH EXAMPLES
226 To concatenate two matrix files with a BTDF between them and write
227 the result as binary float:
228 .IP "" .2i
229 rmtxop -ff view.vmx blinds.xml exterior.dmx > dcoef.dmx
230 .PP
231 To convert a BTDF matrix into a Radiance picture:
232 .IP "" .2i
233 rmtxop -fc blinds.xml > blinds.hdr
234 .PP
235 To extract the luminance values from a picture as an ASCII matrix:
236 .IP "" .2i
237 rmtxop -fa -c .265 .670 .065 image.hdr > image_lum.mtx
238 .PP
239 To render a melanopic illuminance image with
240 .I rtrace\:
241 .IP "" .2i
242 vwrays -ff -x 1024 -y 1024 -vf myview.vf |
243 rtrace -fff -cs 18 -co+ -i+ `vwrays -x 1024 -y 1024 -vf myview.vf -d` scene.oct |
244 rmtxop -fc -c M - > scene_meli.hdr
245 .PP
246 To scale a matrix by 4 and add it to the transpose of another matrix:
247 .IP "" .2i
248 rmtxop -s 4 first.mtx + -t second.mtx > result.mtx
249 .PP
250 To multiply elements of two matrices, then concatenate with a third,
251 applying a final transpose to the result:
252 .IP "" .2i
253 rmtxop first.mtx \\* second.mtx . third.mtx -t > result.mtx
254 .PP
255 To left-multiply the element-wise division of two matrices:
256 .IP "" .2i
257 rmtxop -fd numerator.mtx / denominator.mtx | rmtxop left.mtx - > result.mtx
258 .PP
259 To send the elements of a binary matrix to
260 .I rcalc(1)
261 for further processing:
262 .IP "" .2i
263 rmtxop -fa orig.mtx | rcollate -ho -oc 1 | rcalc [operations]
264 .SH NOTES
265 Matrix concatenation is associative but not commutative, so order
266 matters to the result.
267 .I Rmtxop
268 takes advantage of this associative property to concatenate
269 from right to left when it reduces the number of basic operations.
270 If the rightmost matrix is a column vector for example, it is
271 much faster to concatenate from the right, and the result will
272 be the same.
273 Note that this only applies to concatenation;
274 element-wise addition, multiplication, and division are always
275 evaluated from left to right.
276 .PP
277 All calculations are peformed internally using 32-bit floating-point,
278 so there is little benefit in either reading or writing 64-bit double
279 data.
280 This may be overridden at compile time using the macro
281 "-DDTrmx_native=DTdouble".
282 .SH BUGS
283 The
284 .I rmtxop
285 command currently ignores the "PRIMARIES" setting in input
286 headers, and does not produce any on output, even in
287 circumstances where it would make sense to.
288 .SH AUTHOR
289 Greg Ward
290 .SH "SEE ALSO"
291 cnt(1), dctimestep(1), getinfo(1), pcomb(1), pfilt(1),
292 pvsum(1), ra_xyze(1), rcalc(1),
293 rcollate(1), rcomb(1), rcontrib(1), rcrop(1), rfluxmtx(1),
294 rtpict(1), rtrace(1), vwrays(1), wrapBSDF(1)