1 BLITSPIN Rotate a bitmap in an interesting way SYNOPSIS $ blitspin [-display host:display.screen] [-foreground color] [-background color] [-window] [-root] [-mono] [-bitmap filename] [-delay usecs] [-delay2 usecs] 2 DESCRIPTION The blitspin program repeatedly rotates a bitmap by 90 degrees by using logical operations: the bitmap is divided into quadrants, and the quadrants are shifted clockwise. Then the same thing is done again with progressively smaller quadrants, except that all sub-quadrants of a given size are rotated in parallel. So this takes aO(16*log2(N)) blits of size NxN, with the limitation that the image must be square, and the size must be a power of 2. 2 OPTIONS blitspin accepts the following options: -window Draw on a newly-created window. This is the default. -root Draw on the root window. -mono If on a color display, pretend we're on a monochrome display. -bitmap bitmap-name The file name of a bitmap to rotate. It need not be square: it will be padded with the background color. If unspecified or the string (default), a builtin bitmap is used. If support for the XPM library was enabled at compile-time, the specified file may be in XPM format as well as XBM, and thus may be a color image. The XPM*bitmapFilePath resource will be searched if the bitmap name is not a fully-qualified pathname. 2 ENVIRONMENT -delay microseconds How long to delay between steps of the rotation process, in microseconds. Default is 500000, one-half second. -delay2 microseconds How long to delay between each 90-degree rotation, in microseconds. Default is 500000, one-half second. DISPLAY to get the default host and display number. XENVIRONMENT to get the name of a resource file that overrides the global resources stored in the RESOURCE_MANAGER property. 2 COPYRIGHT Copyright (co 1992, 1993 by Jamie Zawinski. Permission to use, copy, modify, distribute, and sell this software and its documentation for any purpose is hereby granted without fee, provided that the above copyright notice appear in all copies and that both that copyright notice and this permission notice appear in supporting documentation. No representations are made about the suitability of this software for any purpose. It is provided "as is" without express or implied warranty. 2 AUTHOR Jamie Zawinski , 17-aug-92. Based on SmallTalk code which appeared in the August 1981 issue of Byte magazine.