From 1f289a0b90529346ea88169840a1cf11c7da3842 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Mattias Andrée Date: Wed, 19 Mar 2014 05:46:06 +0100 Subject: doc MIME-Version: 1.0 Content-Type: text/plain; charset=UTF-8 Content-Transfer-Encoding: 8bit Signed-off-by: Mattias Andrée --- examples/comprehensive | 25 +++++++++++++------------ 1 file changed, 13 insertions(+), 12 deletions(-) (limited to 'examples/comprehensive') diff --git a/examples/comprehensive b/examples/comprehensive index ec0a42e..29070d4 100644 --- a/examples/comprehensive +++ b/examples/comprehensive @@ -1,13 +1,11 @@ # -*- python -*- -# This example is complete with exceptions for less normal colour -# curve modifiers: nothing else than CIE 1964 10 degree CMF for -# colour temperature, nor use of temporarly linear RGB curves, -# sigmoid correction, or free function modifier, work on individual -# subpixels in CIE xyY colour space. Neither does it # support multiple -# screens, this is normally not an issue because Xinerama is normally -# used to put all monitors on the same screen; # nor does it parse -# options other than -r from ad-hoc settigns, or use monitor identifiation. +# This example covers most of what Blueshift offers. For a complete +# coverage of Blueshift complement this example with: +# backlight, crtc-detection, crtc-searching, logarithmic, +# stored-settings, modes, textconf +# However the are features that are only covered by the info manual: +# Methods for calculating correlated colour temperature # This file is dual-licensed under GNU General Public License @@ -188,10 +186,13 @@ if not panicgate: # colour resolution. `red_x_resolution` is the number of colours # colours there are one encoding axis of the red curve. # `red_y_resolution` is how many colours there are on the -# output axis of the red curve. -red_x_resolution, red_y_resolution = [i_size], [o_size] -green_x_resolution, green_y_resolution = [i_size], [o_size] -blue_x_resolution, blue_y_resolution = [i_size], [o_size] +# output axis of the red curve. `None` means that the default +# resolution should be used, which are `i_size` for *_x_resolution +# and `o_size` for *_y_resolution. `...` means that the value +# above should be used. +red_x_resolution, red_y_resolution = [None], [None] +green_x_resolution, green_y_resolution = [...], [...] +blue_x_resolution, blue_y_resolution = [...], [...] # Negative image settings. `None` means that negative image -- cgit v1.2.3-70-g09d2