This is gimpprint.info, produced by makeinfo version 4.0 from gimpprint.texi. INFO-DIR-SECTION Libraries START-INFO-DIR-ENTRY * GIMP-Print: (gimpprint). print plugin for the GIMP, and printing library END-INFO-DIR-ENTRY This file documents the gimpprint library and associated programs used for high quality printing. Copyright (C) 2001 Michael Sweet (<mike@easysw.com>) and Robert Krawitz (<rlk@alum.mit.edu>) Permission is granted to make and distribute verbatim copies of this manual provided the copyright notice and this permission notice are preserved on all copies. Permission is granted to copy and distribute modified versions of this manual under the conditions for verbatim copying, provided that the entire resulting derived work is distributed under the terms of a permission notice identical to this one. Permission is granted to copy and distribute translations of this manual into another language, under the above conditions for modified versions, except that this permission notice may be stated in a translation approved by the Foundation. File: gimpprint.info, Node: Options functions, Next: Paper functions, Prev: Dither functions, Up: Functions Options functions ================= - Data type: void * stp_option_t This is an opaque data type, whose structure is not visible to the user. - Function: void stp_set_option(stp_vars_t V, const char *NAME, const char *DATA, int BYTES) - Function: void stp_clear_option (stp_vars_t V, const char *NAME) - Function: void stp_clear_all_options (stp_vars_t V) - Function: size_t stp_option_count (const stp_vars_t V) - Function: const stp_option_t stp_get_option_by_index (const stp_vars_t V, size_t IDX) - Function: const stp_option_t stp_get_option_by_name (const stp_vars_t V, const char *NAME) - Function: const char * stp_option_data (const stp_option_t OPTION) *Note*: not null delimited! - Function: const char * stp_option_name (const stp_option_t OPTION) - Function: size_t stp_option_length (const stp_option_t OPTION) File: gimpprint.info, Node: Paper functions, Next: Printer functions, Prev: Options functions, Up: Functions Paper functions =============== - Data type: void * stp_papersize_t This is an opaque data type, whose structure is not visible to the user. - Data type: stp_papersize_unit_t typedef enum papersize_unit { PAPERSIZE_ENGLISH, PAPERSIZE_METRIC } stp_papersize_unit_t; - Function: int stp_known_papersizes (void) - Function: const stp_papersize_t stp_get_papersize_by_name (const char *NAME) - Function: const stp_papersize_t stp_get_papersize_by_size (int L, int W) - Function: const stp_papersize_t stp_get_papersize_by_index (int INDEX) - Function: const char * stp_papersize_get_name (const stp_papersize_t PT) - Function: unsigned stp_papersize_get_width (const stp_papersize_t PT) - Function: unsigned stp_papersize_get_height (const stp_papersize_t PT) - Function: unsigned stp_papersize_get_top (const stp_papersize_t PT) - Function: unsigned stp_papersize_get_left (const stp_papersize_t PT) - Function: unsigned stp_papersize_get_bottom (const stp_papersize_t PT) - Function: unsigned stp_papersize_get_right (const stp_papersize_t PT) - Function: stp_papersize_unit_t stp_papersize_get_unit (const stp_papersize_t PT) File: gimpprint.info, Node: Printer functions, Next: Settings functions, Prev: Paper functions, Up: Functions Printer functions ================= - Data type: void * stp_printer_t This is an opaque data type, whose structure is not visible to the user. - Function: int stp_known_printers (void) - Function: const stp_printer_t stp_get_printer_by_index (int IDX) - Function: const char * stp_printer_get_long_name (const stp_printer_t P) - Function: const stp_printer_t stp_get_printer_by_long_name (const char *LONG_NAME) - Function: const stp_printer_t stp_get_printer_by_driver (const char *DRIVER) - Function: int stp_get_printer_index_by_driver (const char *DRIVER) - Function: const char * stp_printer_get_driver (const stp_printer_t P) - Function: int stp_printer_get_model (const stp_printer_t P) - Function: const stp_printfuncs_t * stp_printer_get_printfuncs (const stp_printer_t P) - Data type: stp_printfuncs_t typedef struct { char **(*parameters)(const stp_printer_t printer, const char *ppd_file, const char *name, int *count); void (*media_size)(const stp_printer_t printer, const stp_vars_t v, int *width, int *height); void (*imageable_area)(const stp_printer_t printer, const stp_vars_t v, int *left, int *right, int *bottom, int *top); void (*limit)(const stp_printer_t printer, const stp_vars_t v, int *width, int *height); void (*print)(const stp_printer_t printer, stp_image_t *image, const stp_vars_t v); const char *(*default_parameters)(const stp_printer_t printer, const char *ppd_file, const char *name); void (*describe_resolution)(const stp_printer_t printer, const char *resolution, int *x, int *y); int (*verify)(const stp_printer_t p, const stp_vars_t v); } stp_printfuncs_t; - Data type: stp_image_t typedef struct stp_image { void (*init)(struct stp_image *image); void (*reset)(struct stp_image *image); void (*transpose)(struct stp_image *image); void (*hflip)(struct stp_image *image); void (*vflip)(struct stp_image *image); void (*crop)(struct stp_image *image, int left, int top, int right, int bottom); void (*rotate_ccw)(struct stp_image *image); void (*rotate_cw)(struct stp_image *image); void (*rotate_180)(struct stp_image *image); int (*bpp)(struct stp_image *image); int (*width)(struct stp_image *image); int (*height)(struct stp_image *image); void (*get_row)(struct stp_image *image, unsigned char *data, int row); const char *(*get_appname)(struct stp_image *image); void (*progress_init)(struct stp_image *image); void (*note_progress)(struct stp_image *image, double current, double total); void (*progress_conclude)(struct stp_image *image); void *rep; } stp_image_t; This is an abstract data type for interfacing with the program which created the image. - Function: const stp_vars_t stp_printer_get_printvars (const stp_printer_t P) File: gimpprint.info, Node: Settings functions, Next: Version functions, Prev: Printer functions, Up: Functions Settings functions ================== - Function: stp_convert_t stp_choose_colorfunc (int OUTPUT_TYPE, int IMAGE_BPP, const unsigned char *CMAP, int *OUT_BPP, const stp_vars_t V) - Function: void stp_compute_page_parameters (int PAGE_RIGHT, int PAGE_LEFT, int PAGE_TOP, int PAGE_BOTTOM, double SCALING, int IMAGE_WIDTH, int IMAGE_HEIGHT, stp_image_t *IMAGE, int *ORIENTATION, int *page_width, int *PAGE_HEIGHT, int *OUT_WIDTH, int *OUT_HEIGHT, int *LEFT, int *TOP) - Function: const stp_vars_t stp_default_settings (void) - Function: const stp_vars_t stp_maximum_settings (void) - Function: const stp_vars_t stp_minimum_settings (void) File: gimpprint.info, Node: Version functions, Prev: Settings functions, Up: Functions Version functions ================= - Function: const char * stp_check_version (unsigned int REQUIRED_MAJOR, unsigned int REQUIRED_MINOR, unsigned int REQUIRED_MICRO) This function checks whether the version of libgimpprint that the program is linked with is equal to the version number passed to it. If the version is the same, the function returns `NULL'. If any of the version numbers do not match (i.e. the library version is too old or too new), a string containing a desription of the difference is returned. The first error found is returned. The function checks in the order major, minor, micro. Version macros -------------- - Macro: GIMPPRINT_CHECK_VERSION (major,minor,micro) This macro returns zero if the version of the libgimpprint headers are greater or equal to the version given as an argument. It returns nonzero if the version of the libgimpprint headers are less than the argument. - Macro: GIMPPRINT_MAJOR_VERSION - Macro: GIMPPRINT_MINOR_VERSION - Macro: GIMPPRINT_MICRO_VERSION - Macro: GIMPPRINT_CURRENT_INTERFACE - Macro: GIMPPRINT_BINARY_AGE - Macro: GIMPPRINT_INTERFACE_AGE These macros are integers holding the version numbers. They should be used for compile-time checking only. To check version numbers at run-time, use the equivalent variables. Note that at present (4.1.x development branch) the library interface version numbers are not used. Version variables ----------------- - Variable: const unsigned int gimpprint_major_version - Variable: const unsigned int gimpprint_minor_version - Variable: const unsigned int gimpprint_micro_version - Variable: const unsigned int gimpprint_current_interface - Variable: const unsigned int gimpprint_binary_age - Variable: const unsigned int gimpprint_interface_age These variables hold the library version numbers. Because the version of the library may change on a system using shared libraries, these should be used instead of the equivalent macros when checking the library version at run-time. Note that library interface version numbers are not used in the development branch, but are in the stable branch. File: gimpprint.info, Node: Programs, Next: Problems, Prev: Functions, Up: Top Programs ******** This chapter of the manual describes the use of some of the programs which use the GIMP-Print library (libgimpprint). Note that there is now a user manual in DocBook/SGML format, currently provided in HTML, PostScript and PDF formats which is distributed with GIMP-Print. This manual currently covers the use of the GIMP Print plugin and CUPS drivers. * Menu: * The GIMP plugin:: The print plugin for the GIMP * Ghostscript:: Printer driver * CUPS:: Printer driver File: gimpprint.info, Node: The GIMP plugin, Next: Ghostscript, Prev: Programs, Up: Programs The GIMP Print plugin ===================== The GIMP Print plugin is the printing facility for the GNU Image Manipulation Program(1). This section examines the features offered by the Print plugin. The main window is divided into five panes: Preview ------- The Preview pane contains a positioning widget that allows interactively positioning the output on the page. It contains an outer border, representing the sheet of paper; an inner border, representing the printable area of the printer; an arrow, pointing to the top of the page (the end that's fed into the printer); and a black rectangle, representing the position of the image on the page. The image can be moved around on the paper. When the first (left) button is used, the image is moved in screen pixels; when any other button is used, the image is moved in points(2). The arrow resizes depending upon the media size chosen; the shaft of the arrow is always equal to one inch on the output. [Figure not available in Info format] Printer Settings ---------------- The Printer Settings pane contains a dropdown menu for selecting a printer to print to. There is a special `printer' named `File' that allows you to choose a file to print to, rather than a printer queue. The Setup box to the right allows specification of a printer type, a PPD file(3), and the command to be used to print. Each distinct printer in the Printer list can have different settings applied to it. Below that is a combo box allowing choice of media size. The choices are constrained to those that the printer supports. Below that are dropdown menus for choosing media type (what kind of paper), media source (what input tray), ink type, and resolution. All of these settings are printer-specific. [Figure not available in Info format] Position -------- The Position pane contains various widgets to place the image on the paper. These widgets work in conjunction with the Preview pane. At the top of the pane is a button to center the image on the paper (not on the printable area), and on either side buttons to center vertically and horizontally. Below these are four boxes that allow entry of the left, top, right, and bottom of the image. These positions are relative to the top left of the paper(4). There are two additional boxes that allow specification of the right margin and bottom margin if you prefer; these are relative to the bottom right corner of the paper. Any of these may have values entered into them; the preview image will be moved appropriately. *Note*: These entries do not resize the image. Finally, there is a pick box for orientation (landscape or portrait). There is an `Auto' mode that picks the orientation that yields the orientation that best matches that of the image to be printed. Scaling ------- The Scaling pane contains a slider that allows scaling of the image. The image can be scaled in either percent of the printable area (*not* the page in this case) or pixels per inch (PPI) via a radio button below the slider. PPI allows matching image resolution to printer resolution. The image may be scaled using either method to between 5 and 100% of the imageable area. It is not possible to crop with the Print plugin. In Percent mode, the image is scaled so that neither axis will be longer than the percent of the printable area specified. For example, if you print an image at 20%, it will be possible to tile the image 5 times on one axis and at least 5 times on the other. To the right of the radio button is a button called Set Image Scale. This sets the scaling to PPI, and sets the resolution as closely as possible to the resolution stored in the image. To the right of the Set Image Scale button are two boxes that allow entry of width and height of the image. These set the scaling mode to PPI. Specifying one automatically sets the other, and the image is repositioned as needed to prevent it from falling off the edge of the page. To its right is a button group that allows choosing English (inch) units or metric (centimeter) units. Image Settings -------------- The Image Settings pane allows choice of Line Art, Solid Colors, or Photograph image type. Line art or Solid Colors should be used for graphics containing mostly solid areas of color. They're very similar to each other. Photograph mode dithers more slowly, but produces more accurate colors. To the right of these three radio buttons is a button called Adjust Color. This pops up a new window that controls various output quality settings. That will be described separately. Finally, there is a choice of Black and White, Color and Monochrome output. Monochrome output can be used to print absolute black and white very quickly. Adjust Output ............. The Adjust Output button button pops up a non-modal dialog that allows adjustment of various parameters related to the print quality. These are independent of the controls within the GIMP itself and only affect the print. [Figure not available in Info format] At the top of the window is a thumbnail of the image that changes to reflect the color settings of the image. This enables you to get an idea of how the image will print out as you adjust settings. Below that there are eight sliders: _Brightness_ (0-2.0, default 1.0) Adjust the brightness of the image. _Contrast_ (0-4.0, default 1.0) Adjust the output contrast. _Cyan, Magenta, Yellow_ (0-4.0, default 1.0) Adjust the cyan, magenta, and yellow in the output. These should not normally need to be adjusted very much; even very small adjustments can go quite a long way to restoring color balance. _Saturation_ (0-9.0, default 1.0) Adjust the color brilliance (saturation) of the output. Saturation of 0 means pure gray scale, with no color. Saturation of 9.0 will make just about anything but pure grays brilliantly colored. _Density_ (0.1-2.0, default 1.0) Adjust the density (amount of ink) in the print. The density is automatically corrected for the particular printer, resolution, and in some cases paper choices. If solid black in the input is not solid in the print, the density needs to be increased; if there is excessive ink bleed-through and muddy dark colors, the density should be decreased. *Note*: the density will not increase beyond a certain amount no matter what the slider is set to. _Gamma_ (0.1-4.0, default 1.0) Adjust the output gamma. The gamma value is automatically corrected for the choice of printer; this is used if you believe the automatic setting is incorrect. Dither Algorithm ................ There is also a selection box for the dither algorithm to be used in the pop-up dialog. There are currently seven choices: _Adaptive Hybrid_ Adaptive Hybrid usually yields the best output quality; it chooses a modified Floyd-Steinberg error diffusion algorithm or ordered dithering depending upon the image characteristics. _Ordered_ Ordered uses a pure ordered dither. It generally yields excellent quality for simple black and white or four color printers without variable drop size or drop modulation; it is not recommended if high quality is desired on six color printers. It is considerably faster than Adaptive Hybrid. _Fast_ Fast also uses a pure ordered dither, but uses a very simple black model and makes no attempt to handle multi-level (6-color, variable drop size, or drop modulation) at all cleanly. It is substantially faster than Ordered dither. The quality tends to be quite poor except on simple four color printers. On three color printers, quality is probably competitive with anything else. _Very Fast_ Very Fast is similar to Fast, except that it uses a very simple dither matrix that can be looked up much more quickly than the matrix used in the Fast dither. For simple pure black and white images dominated by horizontal and vertical lines, this may actually yield the best results; for other types of image, the quality will be poor. _Adaptive Random_ Adaptive Random is similar to Adaptive Hybrid, except that the modifications to the Floyd-Steinberg algorithm are slightly different. This is slower than Adaptive Hybrid on most systems. For some images the quality may be better than Adaptive Hybrid, but generally Adaptive Hybrid should yield slightly superior images. _Hybrid Floyd-Steinberg_ Hybrid Floyd-Steinberg uses the modified Floyd-Steinberg algorithm of Adaptive Hybrid on the entire image. Generally, the results are poor in pale regions. _Random Floyd-Steinberg_ Random Floyd-Steinberg uses the modified Floyd-Steinberg algorithm of Adaptive Random on the entire image. Generally, the results are poor in pale regions. Action Buttons -------------- The last pane contains four action buttons: _Print and Save Settings_ Immediately print the image (or, if the File printer is chosen, display a file selection window to pick the output file), and save all current settings for all printers. _Save Settings_ Immediately save the settings, and continue working in the Print plugin. _Print_ Immediately print the image (or, if the `File' printer is chosen, display a file selection window to pick the output file), but do not save settings. _Cancel_ Immediately quit without saving settings or printing. ---------- Footnotes ---------- (1) `http://www.gimp.org' (2) The output resolution of the plugin. (3) For Postscript printers. (4) Again, that's relative to the paper corner, not the printable area, which is usually smaller. File: gimpprint.info, Node: Ghostscript, Next: CUPS, Prev: The GIMP plugin, Up: Programs Ghostscript driver ================== File: gimpprint.info, Node: CUPS, Prev: Ghostscript, Up: Programs CUPS driver =========== File: gimpprint.info, Node: Problems, Next: Appendices, Prev: Programs, Up: Top Reporting Bugs ************** If you find a bug in GIMP-Print or have any suggestions for modification or improvement, please send electronic mail to the GIMP-Print bug reporting address (1). Include the version number, which you can find by running `gimpprint-config --version'. Also include in your message the output that the program produced and the output you expected, if applicable, otherwise the best description of the problem that you can provide. If you have other questions, comments or suggestions about GIMP-Print, contact the developers via electronic mail to the GIMP-Print mailing list (2). They will try to help you out, although they may not have time to fix your problems. ---------- Footnotes ---------- (1) <gimp-print-devel@lists.sourceforge.net> (2) <gimp-print-devel@lists.sourceforge.net> File: gimpprint.info, Node: Appendices, Next: Data Type and Variable Index, Prev: Problems, Up: Top Appendices ********** * Menu: * Dithering:: Dither algorithms. * Weaving:: Weaving algorithms. * ESC/P2:: Epson ESC/P2 printer control language. * New Printer:: Adding a new printer to libgimpprint. File: gimpprint.info, Node: Dithering, Next: Weaving, Prev: Appendices, Up: Appendices Dithering ********* The dithering code in `print-dither.c' attempts to reproduce various shades of gray (or all colors) from only a few different inks (black, cyan, magenta, yellow, and sometimes light cyan and light magenta). The dots can't vary in darkness or size (except for certain special printers), and so we need to lay down a certain fraction of dots to represent each distinct level. This sounds straightforward; in practice, it isn't. Completely random distribution of dots (simple probabilistic dithering) would create grainy clumps and light spots. The smoothest pattern results from an equidistant spacing of dots. Approximating this requires sophisticated algorithms. We have two dithering algorithms, an ordered dither algorithm that uses a grid (matrix) to decide whether to print, and a modified Floyd-Steinberg error diffusion algorithm that uses a grid in a slightly different way. We currently have three dithering functions: 1. `dither_fastblack' produces pure black or white from a pre-dithered input. This is used for two purposes: for printing pure black and white very quickly (e. g. text), and for printing pre-screened monochrome output that was rasterized externally. 2. `dither_black' produces black from grayscale input. The new dither_black can produce either a single or multiple levels of black, for printers supporting variable dot size. 3. `dither_cmyk' produces 3, 4, 5, 6, or 7 color output (CMY, CMYK, CcMmYK, CcMmYy, CcMmYyK, or any variants). The new routine can handle single or multiple levels of each color. There is a choice of dithering algorithms. Four of them are based on a basic error diffusion, with a few tweaks of my own. The other one is `ordered'. However, they all share the basic operation in common. First, the algorithm picks what kind of dot (if there are multiple dot sizes and/or tones that may be picked) is the candidate to be printed. This decision is made based on the darkness at the point being dithered. Then, it decides whether the dot will be printed at all. What this is based on depends upon which algorithm family we use. This is all described in more detail below. Ordered dithering works by comparing the value at a given point with the value of a tiled matrix. If the value at the point is greater than the value in the matrix, the dot is printed. The matrix should consist of a set of evenly spaced points between 0 and the upper limit. The choice of matrix is very important for print quality. A good dither matrix will emphasize high frequency components, which distributes dots evenly with a minimum of clumping. The matrices used here are all simple matrices that are expanded recursively to create larger matrices with the same kind of even point distribution. This is described below. Note that it is important to use different matrices for the two sub-operations, because otherwise the choice about whether to print and the choice of dot size will be correlated. The usual result is that the print is either too dark or too light, but there can be other problems. Ordered dithering works quite well on single dot size, four color printers. It has not been well tested on four color, variable dot size printers. It should be avoided on six color printers. Error diffusion works by taking the output error at a given pixel and "diffusing" it into surrounding pixels. Output error is the difference between the amount of ink output and the input level at each pixel. For simple printers, with one or four ink colors and only one dot size, the amount of ink output is either 65536 (i. e. full output) or 0 (no output). The difference between this and the input level is the error. Normal error diffusion adds part of this error to the adjoining pixels in the next column and the next row (the algorithm simply scans each row in turn, never backing up). The error adds up until it reaches a threshold (half of the full output level, or 32768), at which point a dot is output, the output is subtracted from the current value, and the (now negative) error is diffused similarly. Error diffusion works quite well in general, but it tends to generate artifacts which usually appear as worm-like lines or areas of anomalous density. I have devised some ways, as described below, of ameliorating these artifacts. There are two sub-classes of error diffusion that we use here, `random' and `hybrid'. One of the techniques that we use to ameliorate the artifacts is to use a fuzzy threshold rather than the hard threshold of half of the output level. Random error diffusion uses a pseudo-random number to perturb the threshold, while hybrid error diffusion uses a matrix. Hybrid error diffusion worked very poorly in 3.1.3, and I couldn't figure out why until I found a bug. It now works very well. There is one additional variant (on both sub-classes), called `adaptive hybrid' and `adaptive random'. The adaptive variant takes advantage of the fact that the patterns that ordered dithering create are less visible at very low densities, while the artifacts created by error diffusion are more objectionable at low densities. At low densities, therefore, it uses ordered dithering; at higher densities it uses error diffusion. Handling multiple output levels makes life a bit more complicated. In principle, it shouldn't be much harder: simply figure out what the ratio between the available output levels is and have multiple thresholds. In practice, getting these right involves a lot of trial and error. The other thing that's important is to maximize the number of dots that have some ink. This will reduce the amount of speckling. More on this later. The next question: how do we handle black when printing in color? Black ink is much darker than colored inks. It's possible to produce black by adding some mixture of cyan, magenta, and yellow--in principle. In practice, the black really isn't very black, and different inks and different papers will produce different color casts. However, by using CMY to produce gray, we can output a lot more dots! This makes for a much smoother image. What's more, one cyan, one magenta, and one yellow dot produce less darkness than one black dot, so we're outputting that many more dots. Better yet, with 6 or 7 color printers, we have to output even more light ink dots. So Epson Stylus Photo printers can produce really smooth grays--if we do everything right. The right idea is to use CMY at lower black levels, and gradually mix in black as the overall amount of ink increases, so the black dots don't really become visible within the ink mass. Variable dot sizes are handled by dividing the range between 0 and 65536 into segments. Each segment can either represent a range in which all of one kind of ink (color and/or dot size) is used, with varying amounts of ink, or a transition region between inks, in which equal numbers of dots are printed but the amount of each ink will be adjusted throughout the range. Each range is represented by four numbers: 1. bottom of the range 2. top of the range 3. value of the lighter ink 4. value of the darker ink In addition, the bit patterns and which type of ink are also represented, but they don't affect the actual algorithm. As mentioned above, the basic algorithm is the same whether we use ordered dither or error diffusion. We perform the following steps on each color of each pixel: 1. Compute the value of the particular color we're printing. This isn't usually the pure CMY value; it's adjusted to improve saturation and to limit the use of black in light toned regions (to avoid speckling). 2. Find the range containing this value. 3. Compute where this value lies within the range. We scale the endpoints between 0 and 65536 for this purpose. So for example, if the bottom of the range is 10,000 and the top of the range is 20,000, and the value is 12,500, we're 1/4 of the way between the bottom and the top of the range, so our scale point is 16384. 4. Compute the "virtual value". The virtual value is the distance between the value of the lighter and the value of the darker ink. So if the value of the light ink is 32768 and the dark ink is 65536, we compute a virtual value scaled appropriately between these two values, which is 40960 in this case. 5. Using either error diffusion or ordered dither, the standard threshold is 1/2 of the value (20480 in this case). Using ordered dither, we want to compute a value between 0 and 40960 that we will compare the input value against to decide whether to print. Using pure error diffusion, we would compare the accumulated error against 20480 to decide whether to print. In practice, we use the same matrix method to decide whether to print. The correct amount of ink will be printed this way, but we minimize the squiggly lines characteristic of error diffusion by dithering the threshold in this fashion. A future enhancement will allow us to control the amount of dithering applied to the threshold. The matrices were generated by Thomas Tonino <<ttonino@bio.vu.nl>> with an algorithm of his devising. The algorithm is designed to maximize the spacing between dots at any given density by searching the matrix for holes and placing a dot in the largest available hole. It requires careful selection of initial points to achieve good results, and is very time consuming. For best results, a different matrix must be used for modes with 2:1 aspect ratio (e.g. 1440x720) than for 1:1 (e. g. 720x720). It is essential with any of these matrices that every point be used. Skipping points generates low-frequency noise. It's essential to use different matrices for deciding whether to print and for deciding what color (dark or light) to print. This should be obvious; the decision about whether to print at all should be as independent as possible from the decision about what color to print, because any bias will result in excess light or dark ink being printed, shifting the tonal balance. We actually use the same matrices, but we shift them vertically and horizontally. Assuming that the matrices are not self-correlated, this will yield good results. The ranges are computed from a list of ink values (between 0 and 1 for each possible combination of dot size and ink tone, where the value represents the darkness of the ink) and the desired maximum density of the ink. This is done in dither_set_ranges, and needs more documentation. I stated earlier that I've tweaked the basic error diffusion algorithm. Here's what I've done to improve it: 1. We use a variable threshold to decide when to print, as discussed above. This does two things for us: it reduces the slightly squiggly diagonal lines that are the mark of error diffusion; and it allows us to lay down some ink even in very light areas near the edge of the image. The squiggly lines that error diffusion algorithms tend to generate are caused by the gradual accumulation of error. This error is partially added horizontally and partially vertically. The horizontal accumulation results in a dot eventually being printed. The vertical accumulation results in a dot getting laid down in roughly the same horizontal position in the next row. The diagonal squigglies result from the error being added to pixels one forward and one below the current pixel; these lines slope from the top right to the bottom left of the image. Error diffusion also results in pale areas being completely white near the top left of the image (the origin of the printing coordinates). This is because enough error has to accumulate for anything at all to get printed. In very pale areas it takes quite a long time to build up anything printable at all; this results in the bare spots. Randomizing the threshold somewhat breaks up the diagonals to some degree by randomizing the exact location that the accumulated output crosses the threshold. It reduces the false white areas by allowing some dots to be printed even when the accumulated output level is very low. It doesn't result in excess ink because the full output level is still subtracted and diffused. Excessive randomization leads to blobs at high densities. Therefore, as the density increases, the degree of randomization decreases. 2. Alternating scan direction between rows (first row is scanned left to right, second is scanned right to left, and so on). This also helps break up white areas, and it also seems to break up squigglies a bit. Furthermore, it eliminates directional biases in the horizontal direction. This isn't necessary for ordered dither, but it doesn't hurt either. 3. Diffusing the error into more pixels. Instead of diffusing the entire error into (X+1, Y) and (X, Y+1), we diffuse it into (X+1, Y), (X+K, Y+1), (X, Y+1), (X-K, Y+1) where K depends upon the output level (it never exceeds about 10 dots, and is greater at higher output levels). This really reduces squigglies and graininess. The amount of this spread can be controlled; for line art, it should be less than for photographs (of course, line art doesn't usually contain much light color, but the *error* value can be small in places!) In addition to requiring more computation, a wide ink spread results in patterning at high dot densities (note that the dot density can be high even in fairly pale regions if multiple dot sizes are in use). 4. Don't lay down any colored ink if we're laying down black ink. There's no point; the colored ink won't show. We still pretend that we did for purposes of error diffusion (otherwise excessive error will build up, and will take a long time to clear, resulting in heavy bleeding of ink into surrounding areas, which is very ugly indeed), but we don't bother wasting the ink. How well this will do with variable dot size remains to be seen. 5. Oversampling. This is how to print 1440x720 with Epson Stylus printers. Printing full density at 1440x720 will result in excess ink being laid down. The trick is to print only every other dot. We still compute the error as though we printed every dot. It turns out that randomizing which dots are printed results in very speckled output. This can be taken too far; oversampling at 1440x1440 or 1440x2880 virtual resolution results in other problems. However, at present 1440x1440 (which is more accurately called "1440x720 enhanced", as the Epson printers cannot print 1440 rows per inch) does quite well, although it's slow. What about multiple output levels? For 6 and 7 color printers, simply using different threshold levels has a problem: the pale inks have trouble being seen when a lot of darker ink is being printed. So rather than just using the output level of the particular color to decide which ink to print, we look at the total density (sum of all output levels). If the density's high enough, we prefer to use the dark ink. Speckling is less visible when there's a lot of ink, anyway. I haven't yet figured out what to do for multiple levels of one color. You'll note that I haven't quoted a single source on color or printing theory. I simply did all of this empirically. There are various other tricks to reduce speckling. One that I've seen is to reduce the amount of ink printed in regions where one color (particularly cyan, which is perceived as the darkest) is very pale. This does reduce speckling all right, but it also results in strange tonal curves and weird (to my eye) colors. Before any dither routine is used, `init_dither()' must be called. This takes three arguments: the input width (number of pixels in the input), the output width (number of pixels in the output), and a `vars_t' structure containing the parameters for the print job. `init_dither()' returns a pointer to an opaque object representing the dither. This object is passed as the first argument to all of the dither-related routines. After a page is fully dithered, `free_dither()' must be called to free the dither object and perform any cleanup. In the future, this may do more (such as flush output). This arrangement permits using these routines with programs that create multiple output pages, such as GhostScript. The dithering routines themselves have a number of control knobs that control internal aspects of the dithering process. These knobs are accessible via a number of functions that can be called after `init_dither()'. * `dither_set_density()' takes a double between 0 and 1 representing the desired ink density for printing solid colors. This is used in a number of places in the dithering routine to make decisions. * `dither_set_black_density()' takes a double between 0 and 1 representing the desired ink density for printing black ink in color printing. This is used to balance black against color ink. By default, this is equal to the density set by `dither_set_density()'. By setting it higher, more black ink will be printed. For example, if the base density is .4 and the black density is .8, twice as much black ink will be printed as would otherwise be called for. This is not used when printing in monochrome. When printing monochrome, the base density (`dither_set_density') should be adjusted appropriately. * `dither_set_ink_budget()' takes an unsigned number representing the most ink that may be deposited at a given point. This number is arbitrary; the limit is computed by summing the size of each ink dot, which is supplied as a parameter in `dither_set_X_ranges'. By default, there is no limit. * `dither_set_black_lower()' takes a double that should be between 0 and 1 that represents the lowest density level at which black ink will start to mix in with colored ink to generate grays. The lower this is, the less density is required to use black ink. Setting this too low will result in speckling from black dots, particularly on 6 and 7 color printers. Setting this too high will make it hard to get satisfactory black or may result in sharp transition between blended colors and black. Default: 0.0468. It is important to note that since the density scale is never linear (and since this value is adjusted via other things happening during the dithering process) that this does not mean that 95% gray will use any black ink. At this setting, there will be no black ink used until about 50% gray. This only applies to color mode. This value should be set lower for printers capable of variable dot size, since more dots can be laid down close to each other. * `dither_set_black_upper()' takes a double that should be between 0 and 1 that represents the highest density level at which colored inks will be mixed to create gray. Setting this too low will result in speckly dark grays because there is not enough ink to fill all the holes, or sharp transition between blended colors and black if it is too close to the value of dither_set_black_upper(). Setting this too high will result in poor black and dark tone quality. Default: 0.5. This results in 10% and darker grays being printed with essentially all black. This only applies to color mode. * `dither_set_black_levels()' takes three doubles that represent the amount of cyan, magenta, and yellow respectively that are blended to create gray. The defaults are 1.0 for each, which is probably too low for most printers. These values are adjusted to create a good gray balance. Setting these too low will result in pale light and midtone grays, with a sharp transition to darker tones as black mixes in. Setting them too high will result in overly dark grays and use of too much ink, possibly creating bleed-through. This only applies to color mode. * `dither_set_randomizers()' takes four integer values representing the degree of randomness used for cyan, magenta, yellow, and black. This is used to allow some printing to take place in pale areas. Zero is the most random; greater than 8 or so gives very little randomness at all. Defaults are 0 for cyan, magenta, and yellow, and 4 for black. Setting the value for black too low will result in black speckling in pale areas. Setting values too high will result in pale areas getting no ink at all. This currently only applies to single dot size in color and black. It should be extended to operate in variable dot size mode, although actually applying it correctly will be tricky. * `dither_set_ink_darkness()' takes three doubles representing the contribution to perceived darkness of cyan, magenta, and yellow. This is used to help decide when to switch between light and dark inks in 6 and 7 color printers (with light cyan, light magenta, and possibly light yellow). Setting these too low will result in too much light ink being laid down, creating flat spots in the darkness curves and bleed-through. Setting them too high will result in dark ink being used in pale areas, creating speckle. The defaults are .4 for cyan, .3 for magenta, and .2 for yellow. Dark cyan will show against yellow much more than dark magenta will show against cyan, since the cyan appears much darker than the yellow. * `dither_set_light_inks()' takes three doubles between 0 and 1 representing the ratio in darkness between the light and dark versions of the inks. Setting these too low will result in too much dark ink being used in pale areas, creating speckling, while setting them too high will result in very smooth texture but too much use of light ink, resulting in flat spots in the density curves and ink bleed-through. There are no defaults. Any light ink specified as zero indicates that there is no light ink for that color. This only applies to 6 and 7 color printers in single dot size color mode, and only to those inks which have light versions (usually cyan and magenta). * `dither_set_ink_spread()' takes a small integer representing the amount of ink spread in the dither. Larger numbers mean less spread. Larger values are appropriate for line art and solid tones; they will yield sharper transitions but more dither artifacts. Smaller values are more appropriate for photos. They will reduce resolution and sharpness but reduce dither artifacts up to a point. A value of 16 or higher implies minimum ink spread at any resolution no matter what the overdensity. A value of 14 is typical for photos on single dot size, 6 color printers. For 4 color printers, subtract 1 (more spread; the dots are farther apart). For variable dot size printers, add 1 (more small dots are printed; less spread is desirable). * `dither_set_adaptive_divisor()' takes a float representing the transition point between error diffusion and ordered dither if adaptive dithering is used. The float is a fraction of the printing density. For example, if you wish the transition to be at 1/4 of the maximum density (which works well on simple 4-color printers), you would pass .25 here. With six colors and/or with multiple dot sizes, the values should be set lower. * `dither_set_transition()' takes a float representing the exponent of the transition curve between light and dark inks/dot sizes. A value less than 1 (typical when using error diffusion) mixes in less dark ink/small dots at lower ends of the range, to reduce speckling. When using ordered dithering, this must be set to 1. * `dither_set_X_ranges_simple' (X=`c', `m', `y', or `k') describes the ink choices available for each color. This is useful in typical cases where a four color printer with variable dot sizes is in use. It is passed an array of doubles between (0, 1] representing the relative darkness of each dot size. The dot sizes are assigned bit patterns (and ink quantities, see `dither_set_ink_budget()' above) from 1 to the number of levels. This also requires a density, which is the desired density for this color. This density need not equal the density specified in `dither_set_density()'. Setting it lower will tend to print more dark ink (because the curves are calculated for this color assuming a lower density than is actually supplied). * `dither_set_X_ranges' (X=`c', `m', `y', or `k') describes in a more general way the ink choices available for each color. For each possible ink choice, a bit pattern, dot size, value (i. e. relative darkness), and whether the ink is the dark or light variant ink is specified. --Robert Krawitz <<rlk@alum.mit.edu>> May 8, 2000 File: gimpprint.info, Node: Weaving, Next: ESC/P2, Prev: Dithering, Up: Appendices Weaving for inkjet printers *************************** by Charles Briscoe-Smith and Robert Krawitz. * Menu: * Weaving introduction:: Just what is weaving? * Weaving algorithms:: How to weave.