pschart - produce annotated ‘chart recordings’ on a PostScript device
pschart [ [ options ... ] script ... ]
pschart produces high-quality
annotated plots of WFDB records on PostScript devices. When rendered on
a PostScript laser printer or phototypesetter, the plots closely resemble
those that appear on pages 99-177 of the MIT-BIH Arrhythmia Database Directory.
pschart reads one or more script files containing newline-terminated commands.
Its standard output is a PostScript file suitable for printing directly
with no further processing. By default, pschart draws ‘zero-width’ lines;
doing so typically reduces the printing time by a factor of three for
a first-generation (300 dpi) laser printer while producing visually pleasing
results. If the output is destined for a high-resolution (600 dpi or more)
printer or phototypesetter, however, be sure to use the -d option (see below),
or the traces and grid will be invisible (or nearly so).
- -a ann
- Print
annotations from annotator ann (default: ‘atr’). To suppress annotation printing,
use ‘-a ""’.
- -A ann
- As for -a, but for a second annotator. The second set of
annotations is shown below the first set.
- -b n
- Set the binding offset to
n millimeters (default: 0). The inside margin is increased by n mm, and
the outside margin is decreased by the same amount.
- -c string
- Print ‘Copyright
© string’ in the left page footer; string may include whitespace if it is
quoted. The characters ‘%d’, if included in string, are replaced by the current
year. A default copyright notice is printed if no -c option is specified.
To suppress printing the copyright notice, use ‘-c ""’.
- -C
- Produce charts in
color (default: black and white).
- -Ca r g b
- Draw annotations (if enabled)
in the specified color. The color is specified using three numerical arguments
(with values between 0 and 1 inclusive) that indicate the amounts of red,
green, and blue respectively. Examples: -Ca 0.5 0.5 1.0 produces light blue
(the default obtained using -C only); -Ca 0 0.5 0 produces a deep green color.
- -Cg r g b
- Draw the grid (if enabled) in the specified color. Default: red
(1 0 0).
- -Cl r g b
- Draw labels and other non-annotation text in the specified
color. Default: black (0 0 0).
- -Cs r g b
- Draw signals in the specified color.
Default: deep blue (0 0 0.5).
- -d n
- Set up for using a printer with a resolution
of n dots per inch (default: n = 300, the typical resolution for laser
printers). For a phototypesetter, n is typically 1200 or 2400. Note that
n does not have to be correct in order to get properly scaled output;
the value determines the granularity of the calculations made by pschart
and the line width used by the printer, but not the scales.
- -e
- Process even-numbered
pages in a manner appropriate for two-sided printing. Even-numbered pages
are printed with reversed page headers, and with the outside margin on
the left (default: page headers are not reversed, and the inside margin
is always on the left).
- -E
- Generate EPSF format (encapsulated PostScript
file format), suitable for inclusion in another PostScript file.
- -g
- Print
a 0.5 mV x 0.2 sec grid with 0.1 mV x 0.04 sec subticks under each strip (default:
no grid). This grid is drawn using the grid procedure in the prolog file
(see ENVIRONMENT below).
- -G
- Print a 0.5 mV x 0.2 sec grid without subticks
under each strip (default: no grid). This grid is drawn using the Grid
procedure in the prolog file (see ENVIRONMENT below).
- -h
- Print a usage summary.
- -H
- Read the signal files in high-resolution mode (default: standard mode).
These modes are identical for ordinary records. For multifrequency records,
the standard decimation of oversampled signals to the frame rate is suppressed
in high-resolution mode (rather, all other signals are resampled at the
highest sampling frequency).
- -i file
- Print the (text) contents of file instead
of the title in the title area of the first page of output. The text is
printed in a monospaced font; use spaces rather than tabs in the text
to align columns.
- -l
- Label the signals in the margins next to each strip
(default: no signal labels).
- -L
- Print in landscape orientation (default:
portrait orientation).
- -m inside outside top bottom
- Specify page margins
in millimeters. Defaults: top and bottom, 25 mm; inside and outside, 25-37.5
mm (half of the difference between the page width and the default strip
width). The default strip width is the largest multiple of 25 mm that is
at least 50 mm less than the page width. Note that page headers and footers,
time stamps, and signal labels are printed in the margins. Also note that
hardware-enforced, printer-specific margins are not included; the margins
specified using -m apply to the imageable area, and not necessarily to the
physical page.
- -M
- Print marker bars across the signals to show the locations
of beat annotations (equivalent to -M1).
- -Mbarstyle
- Set marker bar and annotation
format (note: no space between -M and barstyle). Legal values for barstyle:
0 (no bars); 1 (bars across all signals); 2 (bars across attached signal,
annotations at center); 3 (bars across attached signal, annotations above
bars). Default: barstyle = 0.
- -n n
- Use n as the number of the first page
(default: 1). Use ‘-n 0’ (or any negative value for n) to suppress page numbering.
- -p
- Pack sufficiently short strips side-by-side (default: print each strip
centered between the inside and outside margins in a row by itself).
- -P pagesize
- Specify the size of the output pages to be printed. Legal values for pagesize
are: ‘letter’ (8.5" x 11", 216 mm x 279 mm; imageable area 209 mm x 272 mm),
‘lwletter’ (8.5" x 11", 216 mm x 279 mm; imageable area 203 mm x 277 mm),
‘legal’ (8.5" x 14", 216 mm x 356 mm; imageable area 209 mm x 348 mm), ‘legal13’
(8.5" x 13", 216 x 330 mm; imageable area 209 mm x 322 mm), ‘A4’ (8.27" x 11.69",
210 mm x 297 mm; imageable area 202 mm x 289 mm), ‘A5’ (5.84" x 8.27", 148
mm x 210 mm; imageable area 140 mm x 202 mm); ‘B4’ (9.84" x 13.9", 250 mm x
353 mm; imageable area 249 mm x 356 mm), ‘B5’ (6.93" x 9.84", 176 mm x 250
mm; imageable area 173 mm x 249 mm), or ‘widthxheight’ (where width and height
are the width and height of the imageable area in millimeters). ‘lwletter’
is the standard letter size for the Apple LaserWriter; all of the other
predefined page sizes are those used by the Sun SPARCprinter. Note that
some printers may require non-standard PostScript code to select non-standard
page sizes; in such cases, it may be necessary to customize the prolog
file (see FILES). Default: letter size.
- -r
- Print ‘‘Record xxx’’ as the first
part of the title of each strip, where xxx is the record name.
- -R
- Print a
record name as part of the header on each page. If strips from two or more
records are printed on one page, the name of the last record is printed.
- -s signal-list
- Print only the signals named in the signal-list (one or more
signal numbers or names, separated by spaces; default: print all signals).
- -S scale-mode timestamp-mode
- Print scales and timestamps in the specified
modes. Legal values for scale-mode: 0 (no scales); 1 (mm/unit in footers);
2 (units/tick in footers); 3 (mm/unit above strips); 4 (units/tick above
strips); 5 (mm/unit within strips); 6 (units/tick within strips). Legal
values for timestamp-mode: 0 (no timestamps); 1 (elapsed times only); 2
(absolute times if defined, elapsed times otherwise). Defaults: scale-mode
= 1, timestamp-mode = 2.
- -t n
- Set the time scale to n millimeters per second
(default: n = 12.5, half of the standard scale for chart recorders).
- -T title
- Set the page title to title (which may include whitespace if quoted). If
no -T option is specified, the page title is constructed from the date of
the last recording on the page, if defined, or today’s date otherwise. To
suppress printing the page title, use ‘-T ""’.
- -u
- Generate ‘unstructured’ PostScript
as a workaround for a bug in the Adobe TranScript software (also see ENVIRONMENT
below). Default: generate structured PostScript, suitable for processing
by page-selection or page-reversal post-processors.
- -v n
- Set the voltage (ordinate)
scale to n millimeters per millivolt. Signals that do not have units of
millivolts (as specified in the record’s header file) are scaled proportionately,
as specified by the calibration file (see wfdbcal(5)
). The default scale
is 5 mm/mV, half of the standard scale for chart recorders.
- -V
- Verbose mode
(echo each command as it is read from the script file).
- -w n
- Set the line
width for signals, grid lines, and marker bars to n mm. Default: 0 (the
narrowest possible width; note that some devices may not render zero-width
lines correctly).
- -1
- Print only the first character of each comment annotation.
If none of the -C options is used, output is in black and white.
If any color option is used, output is in the default colors (light blue
annotations, red grid, black labels, deep blue signals) unless overridden
by one or more of the -Ca, -Cg, -Cl, or -Cs options. Color output can be rendered
in greyscale by monochrome PostScript printers, although black-and-white
output may look better in such cases.
Any argument that is not an
option or an option argument is taken as the name of a script of newline-terminated
commands to be executed by pschart. If the script name is ‘-’, pschart reads
commands from the standard input. Options that follow a script name are
not applied to the processing of that script, so it is possible to use
two or more scripts with different sets of options in a single run. Standard
commands are of the following form:
record time title
in which record is the name of the record for which a strip is to be printed,
time indicates the time of the left edge of the strip to be printed, and
title is a description to be printed above the strip. Fields are separated
by spaces or tabs. If the time field contains a hyphen (‘-’), the portion
that precedes the hyphen is taken as the time of the left edge of the strip,
and the portion that follows the hyphen indicates the end of the desired
segment; additional strips continuous with the first are printed if necessary.
Unless the -p option is specified, strips that are less than the full width
of the page are centered within the margins. The title field may include
embedded spaces or tabs, or it may be omitted. A totally empty command line
specifies a page break, i.e., it causes pschart to put the next strip at
the top of a new page, even if the current page is not full.
The
environment variable PSCHARTPRO can be used to name an alternate prolog
file (see below) for custom formats. The environment variable TRANSCRIPTBUG
may be set (to any value) to generate ‘unstructured’ PostScript by default
(see the -u option above). It may be necessary to set and export the shell
variables WFDB and WFDBCAL (see setwfdb(1)
).
- /usr/local/lib/ps/pschart.pro
- default PostScript prolog file.
- /usr/local/lib/ps/12lead.pro
- alternative
PostScript prolog file, suitable for printing standard 12-lead diagnostic
ECGs (10 seconds, 4 traces, with the top three traces divided into 2.5 second
segments by marker bars). This file redefines the grid drawn by the -G option
(see the Grid procedure for details).
On older PostScript printers,
output may be quite slow. A full page, with grids and default scales, typically
takes about 3 minutes to render on an Apple LaserWriter, or about 6 minutes
on a Linotronic 1200 dpi phototypesetter. Most modern printers can render
pschart output at nearly full speed.
If the record you wish to plot is sampled
at a very high rate relative to the printer resolution (i.e., if one sample
interval would appear on the page as much less than the distance between
pixels), you may wish to use xform(1)
to decimate to a lower frequency
for efficiency’s sake. In extreme cases, this may be necessary to avoid
running out of memory in your PostScript printer.
Specifying EPSF output
using the -E option does not prevent pschart from producing multi-page output,
which is not permitted in EPSF. You should make sure that your output fits
entirely onto one page (most easily verified using the -V option) before
including it in another document. Note that the bounding box calculated
by pschart covers the entire width of the page and most of its height (excluding
only about half of the top and bottom margins, so that the header and footer
material is included), even if only a small portion of the page contains
plots. If you wish to fit such a plot into another document with a minimum
of empty space around it, you may either edit the bounding box comment
in the pschart output, or specify a page size that closely matches the
size of your plot. The document in which pschart output is included can
arbitrarily rescale the plot, so that scales expressed in mm/unit cannot
be relied upon.
Under MS-DOS, a bug in command.com makes it impossible to
pass an empty string in the argument list of a command, so that -a "", -c
"", and -T "" do not work as described above. Type a space between the quotation
marks to avoid this bug, or use one of the UNIX shells that have been ported
to MS-DOS instead of command.com.
There are too many options. Invoke pschart
with no arguments for a brief summary of options.
This program
is provided in the app directory of the WFDB Software Package. Run make
in that directory to compile and install it if it have not been installed
already.
The PhysioNet ATM (http://physionet.org/cgi-bin/ATM) provides web
access to pschart (select Plot waveforms from the Toolbox).
psfd(1)
,
setwfdb(1)
, wave(1)
, xform(1)
George B. Moody (george@mit.edu)
http://www.physionet.org/physiotools/wfdb/app/pschart.c
http://www.physionet.org/physiotools/wfdb/app/pschart.pro
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Updated 8 March 2019