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-rw-r--r--pamtopng.html15
-rw-r--r--pnmtopng.html12
2 files changed, 20 insertions, 7 deletions
diff --git a/pamtopng.html b/pamtopng.html
index acdec95e..8cc0bfe8 100644
--- a/pamtopng.html
+++ b/pamtopng.html
@@ -142,9 +142,10 @@ library routine</a>.  E.g. <b>red</b> or <b>rgb:ff/00/0d</b>.
 This causes <b>pamtopng</b> to create a background color chunk in the PNG
 output which can be used for subsequent transparency channel or transparent
 color conversions.  Specify <i>color</i> the same as for <b>-transparent</b>.
+<p>
 
 <dt><b>-gamma=</b><i>value</i>
-<dd>This causes <b>pnmtopng</b> to create a gAMA chunk.  This information
+<dd>This causes <b>pamtopng</b> to create a gAMA chunk.  This information
 helps describe how the color values in the PNG must be interpreted.  Without
 the gAMA chunk, whatever interprets the PNG must get this information
 separately (or just assume something standard).  If your input is a true PPM
@@ -154,7 +155,8 @@ gamma transfer function than the one specified for PPM.  A common case of this
 is when the image is created by simple hardware that doesn't have digital
 computational ability.  Also, some simple programs that generate images from
 scratch do it with a gamma transfer in which the gamma value is 1.0.
-
+<p>
+  
 <dt><b>-chroma=</b><i>chroma_list</i>
 <dd>This option specifies how red, green, and blue component values
 of a pixel specify a particular color, by telling the chromaticities
@@ -226,12 +228,13 @@ string.  There is no limit on the number of entries.
 
 <dt><b>-ztxt=</b><i>filename</i>
 <dd>The same as <b>-text</b>, except the text string is compressed in the
-PNG output.  <b>pnmtopng</b> uses zTXt chunks instead of a tEXt chunks.
+PNG output.  <b>pamtopng</b> uses zTXt chunks instead of a tEXt chunks.
+<p>
 
 <dt><b>-itxt=</b><i>filename</i>
 <dd>Similar to <b>-text</b>, but the text strings can be in a language other
 than English.  The PNG image indicates what language that is and includes the
-text string key both in English and that language.  <b>pnmtopng</b> uses
+text string key both in English and that language.  <b>pamtopng</b> uses
 iTXt chunks instead of tEXt chunks.
 
 <p>For each record, you must specify the language and give the key both in
@@ -254,7 +257,8 @@ The format is either a two character "nl" or an extended code like "en-US".
 <dd>This option allows you to specify the modification time value to be placed
 in the PNG output.  You can specify the year parameter either as a two or four
 digit value.
-
+<p>
+    
 <dt><b>-interlace</b>
 <dd>
 This causes the PNG file to be interlaced, in Adam7 format.  The interlaced
@@ -285,6 +289,7 @@ when generating an interlaced PNG).
 <dt><b>-verbose</b>
 <dd>
 This causes the program to display various facts about the conversion.
+<p>
 
 </dl>
 
diff --git a/pnmtopng.html b/pnmtopng.html
index 8536c5e4..5067dd63 100644
--- a/pnmtopng.html
+++ b/pnmtopng.html
@@ -145,12 +145,14 @@ command line options:
 <dd>
 This causes <b>pnmtopng</b> to display information about the format of the
 output file.
+<p>
 
 <dt><b>-downscale</b>
 <dd>
 This enables <b>pnmtopng</b> to scale maxvalues of more then 65535 to 16
 bits. Since this means loss of image data, <b>pnmtopng</b> does not do it by
 default.
+<p>
 
 <dt><b>-interlace</b>
 <dd>
@@ -168,6 +170,7 @@ top, so the displayer could display each row of the image as it arrives and
 gradually paint down to the bottom.  But with an interlaced image, the
 displayer can start by showing a low-resolution version of the image, then
 gradually improve the display as more data arrives.
+<p>
      
 <dt><b>-alpha=</b><i>filename</i>
 
@@ -179,6 +182,7 @@ in the PNG format.  If it can represent the transparency information through a
 palette, it will do so in order to make a smaller PNG file.
 <b>pnmtopng</b> even sorts the palette so it can omit the opaque colors
 from the transparency part of the palette and save space for the palette.
+<p>
 
 <dt><b>-transparent=</b><i>color</i>
 <dd>
@@ -212,6 +216,7 @@ color does not appear in the image, there will be no transparency.
 Causes <b>pnmtopng</b> to create a background color chunk in the PNG output
 which can be used for subsequent transparency channel or transparent color
 conversions.  Specify <i>color</i> the same as for <b>-transparent</b>.
+<p>
 
 <dt><b>-palette=</b><i>palettefile</i>
 
@@ -250,11 +255,13 @@ case of this is when the image is created by simple hardware that doesn't
 have digital computational ability.  Also, some simple programs that generate
 images from scratch do it with a gamma transfer in which the gamma value is
 1.0.
+<p>
 
 <dt><b>-hist</b>
 
 <dd>Use this parameter to create a chunk that specifies the frequency
 (or histogram) of the colors in the image.
+<p>
 
 <dt><b>-text=</b><i>filename</i>
 
@@ -262,6 +269,7 @@ images from scratch do it with a gamma transfer in which the gamma value is
 This option lets you include arbitrary text strings in the PNG output, as tEXt
 chunks.
 
+<p>
 <i>filename</i> is the name of a file that contains your text strings.
 
 <p>The output contains a distinct tEXt chunk for each entry in the file.
@@ -302,7 +310,7 @@ key for the text string starts with &quot;A&quot; or &quot;T&quot;.  This
 odd exception exists for backward compatibility; we don't know why the program
 was originally designed this way, except that the distinction was meant to
 roughly identify the keys &quot;Author&quot; and &quot;Title&quot;.
-
+<p>
 
 <dt><b>-rgb=</b><i>chroma_list</i>
 
@@ -482,7 +490,7 @@ resulting PNG output is as similar to the Netpbm input as possible.  For
 example, the PNG output will not be paletted and the transparency channel will
 be represented as a full transparency channel even if the information could be
 represented more succinctly with a transparency chunk.
-
+<p>
 
 <dt><b>-libversion</b>