#N canvas 689 0 632 608 10; #X obj 0 0 doc_h; #X obj 3 160 doc_i 1; #X text 62 37 This is GridFlow's special file format. This is the only I/O format that can hold nearly anything that the [#store] object can. ; #X obj 3 92 doc_c ...; #X msg 62 127 open foo.grid; #X obj 14 190 doc_ii 0; #X obj 97 465 doc_m i0 type; #X text 232 465 type that the output will be written as. (#out only) ; #X text 232 487 supported: uint8 int32 and perhaps some others; #X obj 97 369 doc_m i0 headerful; #X obj 97 404 doc_m i0 headerless; #X text 232 369 cancels "headerless" (and back to reading the real .grid format); #X text 232 404 instead of reading .grid files with header \, will read raw data \, faking a .grid header to itself. It will use the hereby specified dimension list \, as well as two other settings: type and endian.; #X obj 97 190 doc_m i0 endian; #X text 232 190 When writing "raw" data \, a file may be considered a long string of base 256 digits (called bytes) \, but different computers have different conventions for dealing with them:; #X text 232 238 big: A number will be written starting with the biggest digit. This is the natural way on the Macintosh \, Sun \, Amiga \, and so on.; #X text 232 286 little: A number will be written starting with the smallest digit. This is the natural way on the Intel 386/Pentium.; #X text 232 321 same: A number will be written in whichever way is more natural on this computer. The natural way is slightly faster to handle. This is the default setting.; #X obj 0 579 doc_f; #X obj 3 519 doc_o 1; #X obj 14 549 doc_oo 0; #X connect 6 1 7 0; #X connect 6 1 8 0; #X connect 9 1 11 0; #X connect 10 1 12 0; #X connect 13 1 14 0; #X connect 13 1 15 0; #X connect 13 1 16 0; #X connect 13 1 17 0;