Daniel Victoria wrote: > what I normally do is first run r.colors -e color=grey on each band so > I get a equalized color composite. Then I run r.composite. So far I've > got good results...
The main problem with equalisation (or just using the raster's range) is that the resulting mapping is specific to that particular map. If you have multiple maps, regions which are identical may appear different due to each map using a different mapping. If you have all of the maps in advance, you can create some kind of mixture, generate a colour table for that, then apply it to the individual maps. But that won't work if you're producing maps on a regular basis and you need tomorrow's map to be consistent with today's. -- Glynn Clements <gl...@gclements.plus.com> _______________________________________________ grass-user mailing list grass-user@lists.osgeo.org http://lists.osgeo.org/mailman/listinfo/grass-user