Hello, Janusz S. Bien wrote: > I placed an example at > http://www.mimuw.edu.pl/~jsbien/PTJ1927/
> the result of unpaper on a sample file=20 > > ./unpaper -vv --layout double 04b.pgm unpaper04.pgm > > is slightly surprising: the pages has been shifted slighty to the left Ah, I agree it is badly documented that "--layout double" implies both=20 "--pre-rotate 90" and "--post-rotate -90": "unpaper --help" says: [...] 'double' - two pages per sheet, rotated anti-clockwise (i.e. the top- sides of the pages are heading leftwards, and the pages are placed right-page above left- page on the unrotated sheet) Using this option automatically adjusts the --mask-point and --pre/post-rotation options. [...] Try ./unpaper -vv --layout double --pre-rotate 0 --post-rotate 0 04b.pgm=20 unpaper04.pgm instead. (Note that --pre-rotate and --post-rotate must appear after the --layout=20 option, because they need to overwrite the default-settings changed by=20 --layout.) The current version of unpaper will issue a message telling you that it=20 is not possible to set pre/post-rotation values other than -90 or 90,=20 but as a consequence to this it will set the value to 0 anyway, so the=20 message can be ignored. The original idea behind the default rotation performed with "--layout=20 double" was that when scanning sheets via scanimage or scanadf, one=20 would by default get images that are rotated the described way (or 180=B0= =20 flipped, if the paper gets fed in the other way, of course). Maybe iff one day I would find time for an update of unpaper, this=20 should be changed to a "--layout double-rotated" option, while "--layout=20 double" would use no pre- or post-rotations. But that's just an idea for=20 today. I have also tried to find some other settings which make your original=20 image better. Try e.g. unpaper -vv --layout double --pre-rotate 0 --post-rotate 0=20 --mask-scan-threshold 0.4 --grayfilter-size 5 --grayfilter-step 5=20 --blurfilter-size 25 --blurfilter-step 15 --blurfilter-intensity 0.05=20 --border-scan-threshold 8 04test.pgm unpaper04test_jens.pgm The one example image looks quite nice after doing this. Besides some=20 more filtering, now also the mask-scanning works, which correctly=20 centers both pages on their half of the sheet. This might also be a good preparation for cutting the sheets into halfs. (Note that in the example above, the mask-scan-threshold value of 0.4 is=20 unusually high, so this maybe would cause problems on pages that include=20 e.g. line-drawings instead of text. I don't know what kind of other=20 pages you have. If pages include text and line-drawings, but no=20 grayscale-photos or color, converting them to 1-bit black-and-white PBM=20 files before running them through unpaper probably makes the=20 configuration of unpaper a little easier.) Hope that helps, Jens