package Imager::Fountain; use strict; use Imager::Color::Float; use vars qw($VERSION); $VERSION = "1.007"; =head1 NAME Imager::Fountain - a class for building fountain fills suitable for use by the fountain filter. =head1 SYNOPSIS use Imager::Fountain; my $f1 = Imager::Fountain->read(gimp=>$filename); $f->write(gimp=>$filename); my $f1 = Imager::Fountain->new; $f1->add(start=>0, middle=>0.5, end=>1.0, c0=>Imager::Color->new(...), c1=>Imager::Color->new(...), type=>$trans_type, color=>$color_trans_type); =head1 DESCRIPTION Provide an interface to build arrays suitable for use by the Imager fountain filter. These can be loaded from or saved to a GIMP gradient file or you can build them from scratch. =over =item read(gimp=>$filename) =item read(gimp=>$filename, name=>\$name) Loads a gradient from the given GIMP gradient file, and returns a new Imager::Fountain object. If the name parameter is supplied as a scalar reference then any name field from newer GIMP gradient files will be returned in it. my $gradient = Imager::Fountain->read(gimp=>'foo.ggr'); my $name; my $gradient2 = Imager::Fountain->read(gimp=>'bar.ggr', name=>\$name); =cut sub read { my ($class, %opts) = @_; if ($opts{gimp}) { my $fh; $fh = ref($opts{gimp}) ? $opts{gimp} : IO::File->new($opts{gimp}); unless ($fh) { $Imager::ERRSTR = "Cannot open $opts{gimp}: $!"; return; } my $trash_name; my $name_ref = $opts{name} && ref $opts{name} ? $opts{name} : \$trash_name; return $class->_load_gimp_gradient($fh, $opts{gimp}, $name_ref); } else { warn "${class}::read: Nothing to do!"; return; } } =item write(gimp=>$filename) =item write(gimp=>$filename, name=>$name) Save the gradient to a GIMP gradient file. The second variant allows the gradient name to be set (for newer versions of the GIMP). $gradient->write(gimp=>'foo.ggr') or die Imager->errstr; $gradient->write(gimp=>'bar.ggr', name=>'the bar gradient') or die Imager->errstr; =cut sub write { my ($self, %opts) = @_; if ($opts{gimp}) { my $fh; $fh = ref($opts{gimp}) ? $opts{gimp} : IO::File->new("> ".$opts{gimp}); unless ($fh) { $Imager::ERRSTR = "Cannot open $opts{gimp}: $!"; return; } return $self->_save_gimp_gradient($fh, $opts{gimp}, $opts{name}); } else { warn "Nothing to do\n"; return; } } =item new Create an empty fountain fill description. =cut sub new { my ($class) = @_; return bless [], $class; } sub _first { for (@_) { return $_ if defined; } return undef; } =item add(start=>$start, middle=>$middle, end=>1.0, c0=>$start_color, c1=>$end_color, type=>$trans_type, color=>$color_trans_type) Adds a new segment to the fountain fill, the possible options are: =over =item * C - the start position in the gradient where this segment takes effect between 0 and 1. Default: 0. =item * C - the mid-point of the transition between the 2 colors, between 0 and 1. Default: average of C and C. =item * C - the end of the gradient, from 0 to 1. Default: 1. =item * C - the color of the fountain fill where the fill parameter is equal to I. Default: opaque black. =item * C - the color of the fountain fill where the fill parameter is equal to I. Default: opaque black. =item * C - the type of segment, controls the way in which the fill parameter moves from 0 to 1. Default: linear. This can take any of the following values: =over =item * C =item * C - unimplemented so far. =item * C =item * C =item * C =back =item * C - the way in which the color transitions between C and C. Default: direct. This can take any of the following values: =over =item * C - each channel is simple scaled between c0 and c1. =item * C - the color is converted to a HSV value and the scaling is done such that the hue increases as the fill parameter increases. =item * C - the color is converted to a HSV value and the scaling is done such that the hue decreases as the fill parameter increases. =back =back In most cases you can ignore some of the arguments, eg. # assuming $f is a new Imager::Fountain in each case here use Imager ':handy'; # simple transition from red to blue $f->add(c0=>NC('#FF0000'), c1=>NC('#0000FF')); # simple 2 stages from red to green to blue $f->add(end=>0.5, c0=>NC('#FF0000'), c1=>NC('#00FF00')) $f->add(start=>0.5, c0=>NC('#00FF00'), c1=>NC('#0000FF')); =cut # used to translate segment types and color transition types to numbers my %type_names = ( linear => 0, curved => 1, sine => 2, sphereup=> 3, spheredown => 4, ); my %color_names = ( direct => 0, hueup => 1, huedown => 2 ); sub add { my ($self, %opts) = @_; my $start = _first($opts{start}, 0); my $end = _first($opts{end}, 1); my $middle = _first($opts{middle}, ($start+$end)/2); my @row = ( $start, $middle, $end, _first($opts{c0}, Imager::Color::Float->new(0,0,0,1)), _first($opts{c1}, Imager::Color::Float->new(1,1,1,0)), _first($opts{type} && $type_names{$opts{type}}, $opts{type}, 0), _first($opts{color} && $color_names{$opts{color}}, $opts{color}, 0) ); push(@$self, \@row); $self; } =item simple(positions=>[ ... ], colors=>[...]) Creates a simple fountain fill object consisting of linear segments. The array references passed as positions and colors must have the same number of elements. They must have at least 2 elements each. colors must contain Imager::Color or Imager::Color::Float objects. eg. my $f = Imager::Fountain->simple(positions=>[0, 0.2, 1.0], colors=>[ NC(255,0,0), NC(0,255,0), NC(0,0,255) ]); =cut sub simple { my ($class, %opts) = @_; if ($opts{positions} && $opts{colors}) { my $positions = $opts{positions}; my $colors = $opts{colors}; unless (@$positions == @$colors) { $Imager::ERRSTR = "positions and colors must be the same size"; return; } unless (@$positions >= 2) { $Imager::ERRSTR = "not enough segments"; return; } my $f = $class->new; for my $i (0.. $#$colors-1) { $f->add(start=>$positions->[$i], end=>$positions->[$i+1], c0 => $colors->[$i], c1=>$colors->[$i+1]); } return $f; } else { warn "Nothing to do"; return; } } =back =head2 Implementation Functions Documented for internal use. =over =item _load_gimp_gradient($class, $fh, $name) Does the work of loading a GIMP gradient file. =cut sub _load_gimp_gradient { my ($class, $fh, $filename, $name) = @_; my $head = <$fh>; chomp $head; unless ($head eq 'GIMP Gradient') { $Imager::ERRSTR = "$filename is not a GIMP gradient file"; return; } my $count = <$fh>; chomp $count; if ($count =~ /^name:\s?(.*)/i) { ref $name and $$name = $1; $count = <$fh>; # try again chomp $count; } unless ($count =~ /^\d+$/) { $Imager::ERRSTR = "$filename is missing the segment count"; return; } my @result; for my $i (1..$count) { my $row = <$fh>; chomp $row; my @row = split ' ', $row; unless (@row == 13) { $Imager::ERRSTR = "Bad segment definition"; return; } my ($start, $middle, $end) = splice(@row, 0, 3); my $c0 = Imager::Color::Float->new(splice(@row, 0, 4)); my $c1 = Imager::Color::Float->new(splice(@row, 0, 4)); my ($type, $color) = @row; push(@result, [ $start, $middle, $end, $c0, $c1, $type, $color ]); } return bless \@result, } =item _save_gimp_gradient($self, $fh, $name) Does the work of saving to a GIMP gradient file. =cut sub _save_gimp_gradient { my ($self, $fh, $filename, $name) = @_; print $fh "GIMP Gradient\n"; defined $name or $name = ''; $name =~ tr/ -~/ /cds; if ($name) { print $fh "Name: $name\n"; } print $fh scalar(@$self),"\n"; for my $row (@$self) { printf $fh "%.6f %.6f %.6f ",@{$row}[0..2]; for my $i (0, 1) { for ($row->[3+$i]->rgba) { printf $fh "%.6f ", $_/255.0; } } print $fh "@{$row}[5,6]"; unless (print $fh "\n") { $Imager::ERRSTR = "write error: $!"; return; } } return 1; } =back =head1 FILL PARAMETER The add() documentation mentions a fill parameter in a few places, this is as good a place as any to discuss it. The process of deciding the color produced by the gradient works through the following steps: =over =item 1. calculate the base value, which is typically a distance or an angle of some sort. This can be positive or occasionally negative, depending on the type of fill being performed (linear, radial, etc). =item 2. clamp or convert the base value to the range 0 through 1, how this is done depends on the repeat parameter. I'm calling this result the fill parameter. =item 3. the appropriate segment is found. This is currently done with a linear search, and the first matching segment is used. If there is no matching segment the pixel is not touched. =item 4. the fill parameter is scaled from 0 to 1 depending on the segment type. =item 5. the color produced, depending on the segment color type. =back =head1 AUTHOR Tony Cook =head1 SEE ALSO Imager(3) =cut