Hi,
Again, it works for me.
You need to use an equals sign with the double minus
options (this is common across almost all of FSL and
many other linux utilities). So the command:
fslview epi --bricon=0,2000
should do the trick.
All the best,
Mark
On 11 Feb 2009, at 00:41, Rajeev Raizada wrote:
> On Tue, 10 Feb 2009 23:59:26 +0000, Mark Jenkinson <[log in to unmask]
> > wrote:
>
>> Are you doing this in the right order?
>> You specify it after the image name.
>> On my mac it works fine. I just run:
>> fslview epi -b 0,2000
>> and it gives me the requested range.
>>
>> All the best,
>> Mark
>
> Aha!
> You're absolutely right!
> I had been entering the -b option immediately after
> the fslview command itself, before the image name.
> Oops, I should have tried it the other way around
> before sending my "it's not working" claim.
> I hate it when people do that. :-)
>
> The --bricon option still yields "--bricon: unknown error!"
> even when it is entered after the image name.
> So, I guess at least one thing isn't working. :-)
>
> Many thanks for your help,
>
> Raj
>
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