It’s exactly what it sounds like. It takes an image as an argument in the form of a file on the local file system or a link to an image on a web server, and returns the ratio of the image. That’s literally it.
Perhaps I can give you some visual representation. Let’s say you have an image of a neat little background of an unrealistically oversaturated landscape and want to make sure it fully fits in your 16:9 monitor:
$ uirc unrealistically-oversaturated-landscape.png
unrealistically-oversaturated-landscape.png > 16:9
Neat! What about images that don’t really play nice? Take this lovely image of Peter Griffin. Let’s throw him into uirc:
$ uirc peter.jpg
peter.jpg > 1:1.45 (uneven)
Good to know! I can also give the -r
flag to display the resolution if I so incline, or even find out the ratio of both images:
$ uirc -r peter.jpg unrealistically-oversaturated-landscape.png
peter.jpg > 1:1.45 (uneven) [247x359]
unrealistically-oversaturated-landscape.png > 16:9 [1920x1080]
What if I don’t want my wife to find a photo of Peter Griffin on my laptop? Well, you can use a link instead::
$ uirc https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/c/c2/Peter_Griffin.png
downloading "https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/c/c2/Peter_Griffin.png"...ok
Peter_Griffin.png > 1:1.45 (uneven)
There’s also a help menu with the -h
flag if you really need it.
Why does this exist?
The reason UIRC exists is actually the combination of two events:
- I’ve recently started learning more and more about the C programming language, it’s history, and how nice and flirty it gets with the actual machine (maybe even making your relationship more serious if you’re a psychopath). It runs my OS (Linux) and my window manager (dwm). I use it every day, and it makes me want to learn more and what it can do. Ever since I’ve been looking for an excuse to make a C program of my own.
- I was working at my on-campus job when I needed to know the ratio of an image. Being too lazy to do the math with the image’s resolution and oddly hesitant to use a web tool (which I did eventually use), I switched to my terminal quickly to find the file I needed to see what the resolution was, and badda bing badda boom.
Born was my idea. I found an excuse to learn and code in C for an issue that is over-saturated with solutions everywhere.
Why should I use this?
Don’t.
Or you could I guess, I won’t stop you. There’s just way more convenient (and possibly easier for the command-line-illiterate) ways to find the ratio of an image. This is just an idea that I had and the excuse to get me learning how to program in C.
I’ve made my decision. How do I install?
Ah, the UNIX community. Stubborn about always wanting to use command line tools over convenience. It just warms my heart. You can head to the INSTALL page on the GitHub repo for uirc for more information on how to install it to your computer. Compatible with Linux, BSD, macOS, and Windows (WSL).
Yes, the README of this project is satirical. The project is not.