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If an iteration count and/or a byte count is specified, a single slash must be placed after the iteration count and/or before the byte count to disambiguate them. Any whitespace before or after the slash is ignored.

The format is required and must be surrounded by double quote (" ") marks. It is interpreted as an fprintf-style format string (see fprintf(3)) with the following exceptions:

NUL \0
Alert character \a
Backspace \b
Form-feed \f
Newline \n
Carriage return \r
Tab \t
Vertical tab \v

hexdump also supports the following additional conversion strings:

a[dox] Display the input offset, cumulative across input FILES, of the next byte to be displayed. The appended characters d, o, and x specify the display base as decimal, octal, or hexadecimal respectively.
A[dox] Identical to the a conversion string except that it is only performed once, when all of the input data has been processed.
c Output characters in the default character set. Nonprinting characters are displayed in three-character, zero-padded octal, except for those representable by standard escape notation (see preceding list), which are displayed as two-character strings.
p Output characters in the default character set. Nonprinting characters are displayed as a single period.
u Output U.S. ASCII characters, with the exception that control characters are displayed using the lowercase names in the following mini-table. Characters greater than 0xff, hexadecimal, are displayed as hexadecimal strings.

   000 nul     001 soh     002 stx     003 etx     004 eot     005 enq

   006 ack     007 bel     008 bs      009 ht      00A lf      00B vt

   00C ff      00D cr      00E so      00F si      010 dle     011 dc1

   012 dc2     013 dc3     014 dc4     015 nak     016 syn     017 etb

   018 can     019 em      01A sub     01B esc     01C fs      01D gs

   01E rs      01F us      0FF del

The default and supported byte counts for the conversion characters are as follows:

%_c, %_p, %_u, %c One-byte counts only.
%d, %i, %o, %u, %X, %x Four-byte default; one-, two-, and four-byte counts supported.
%E, %e, %f, %G, %g Eight-byte default, four-byte counts supported.

The amount of data interpreted by each format string is the sum of the data required by each format unit, which is the iteration count times the byte count, or the iteration count times the number of bytes required by the format if the byte count is not specified.

The input is manipulated in blocks; a block is defined as the largest amount of data specified by any format string. Format strings interpreting less than an input block's worth of data, whose last format unit both interprets some number of bytes and does not have a specified iteration count, have the iteration count incremented until the entire input block has been processed or there is not enough data remaining in the block to satisfy the format string.

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If, either as a result of user specification or hexdump modifying the iteration count as described, an iteration count is greater than one, no trailing whitespace characters are output during the last iteration.

It is an error to specify a byte count as well as multiple conversion characters or strings unless all but one of the conversion characters or strings is a or A. If, as a result of the specification of the -n option or end-of-file being reached, input data only partially satisfies a format string, the input block is zero-padded sufficiently to display all available data (that is, any format units overlapping the end of data will display some number of the zero bytes).

Further output by such format strings is replaced by an equivalent number of spaces. An equivalent number of spaces is defined as the number of spaces output by an s conversion character with the same field width and precision as the original conversion character or conversion string but with any +, " ", # conversion flag characters removed, and referencing a NULL string.

If no format strings are specified, the default display is equivalent to specifying the -x option.

hexdump exits 0 on success and >0 if an error occurred.

EXAMPLES

Display the input in perusal format:


"%06.6_ao " 12/1 "%3_u "

"\t\t" "%_p "

"\n"

Implement the _x option:


"%07.7_Ax\n"

"%07.7_ax " 8/2 "%04x " "\n"

SEE ALSO

adb(1)

18 April 1994

hipstopgm

hipstopgm—Convert a HIPS file into a portable graymap

SYNOPSIS


hipstopgm [hipsfile]

DESCRIPTION

Hipstopgm reads a HIPS file as input and produces a portable graymap as output.

If the HIPS file contains more than one frame in sequence, hipstopgm will concatenate all the frames vertically.

HIPS is a format developed at the Human Information Processing Laboratory, NYU.

SEE ALSO

pgm(5)

AUTHOR

Copyright " 1989 by Jef Poskanzer

24 August 1989

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