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gimp::pixel(1) [redhat man page]

PIXEL(1)						User Contributed Perl Documentation						  PIXEL(1)

NAME
Gimp::Pixel - how to operate on raw pixels. ***WARNING*** this manpage is no longer up-to-date. See "examples/map_to_gradient" for a simple raw-pixel-manipulating plug-in. If you bug me enough I'll rewrite this document. SYNOPSIS
use Gimp; use PDL; # to make sensible things with the pixels # Gimp::GimpDrawable - The GimpDrawable structure # Gimp::Tile - The Tile family of functions. # Gimp::PixelRgn - The PixelRgn family of functions. DESCRIPTION
You can access the pixels in a drawable through tiles or pixel regions. This manpage explains how this is done in perl. All classes (Gimp::GimpDrawable, "Gimp::Tile", "Gimp::PixelRgn") are available with and without the "Gimp::" prefix. GDRAWABLES
Well, you know drawables? (also known as PARAM_DRAWABLE or Gimp::Drawable)? In the Gimp, drawables are things you can draw on: layers, channels or whole images. While most functions named "gimp_drawable_something" operate on "drawable_ID"s, some functions (notably the ones operating on raw pixel data!) need a "GimpDrawable" instead. Every drawable has a corresponding "GimpDrawable", you can get it with the "gimp_drawable_get" function: my $gdrawable = $drawable->get; When the $gdrawable is destroyed, it is automatically flushed & detached, so you don't need to do this yourself. TILES
Tiles are the basic building blocks of all drawables. Each drawable consists of a "grid" of tiles, each tile having the same size. The size of a tile is always the same (it's hardcoded in your Gimp program). The "gimp_tile_width" and "gimp_tile_height" functions return the current width/height of a tile (at the moment, this is 64x64). How do I get a tile? First, you have to grab a GimpDrawable structure. You can get one from any drawable, by calling the "get" function: my $gdrawable = $drawable->get; in a sense, <$gdrawable> contains all tiles. Changes you make to them might not be reflected in the image until you destroy this variable. (Thats the reason I used "my" int he above example. Once $gdrawable gets out of scope, the drawable in the gimp automatically gets updated). To get access to a tile, you have to call "get_tile" or "get_tile2". "get_tile" expects row/column numbers of the tile, while "get_tile2" expects pixel coordinates and will return the tile that pixel is in: my $tile = $gdrawable->get_tile2(1,75,60); The "data" method returns and sets the raw pixel data. $piddle = $tile->data; # get the tile data as a piddle $piddle *= 0.5; # do sth. with the pixels $tile->data($piddle); # and modify the tile PIXELREGIONS
"PixelRgn"s are rectangular parts of a drawable. You can access single pixels, rows, columns and rectangles within these regions. Don't expect me to explain everything now, I don't understand the mechanism too well myself.. How do I create a pixel region? First, you have to grab a GimpDrawable structure. You can get one from any drawable, by calling the "get" function: my $gdrawable = $drawable->get; Now you can create as many PixelRgn structures as you want from the "GimpDrawable": my $region = new PixelRgn($gdrawable,0,0,50,30,1,0); # with "new" my $region = $gdrawable->pixel_rgn(0,0,50,30,1,0); # or from a drawable which method you choose is purely a question of style... The following functions return packed pixel data (see Gimp::PDL for an easier way to manipulate on image data): $piddle = $region->get_pixel(45,60); # return the pixel at (45|60) $piddle = $region->get_row(45,60,10); # return ten horizontal pixels $piddle = $region->get_col(45,60,10); # same but vertically $piddle = $region->get_rect(45,60,10,12); # a 10x12 rectangle To modify pixels, the dirty bit of the region must be set (I believe, but I don't see the reason what the dirty bit in a region is for so I might be wrong), and you can write pixel data to the region with the following functions, each one corresponding to a get-function: $region->set_pixel($piddle,45,60); # set pixel at (45|60) $region->set_row($piddle,45,60); # set a row $region->set_col($piddle,45,60); # set a column $region->set_rect($piddle,45,60); # set a whole rectangle Please note that (unlike the C functions they call), the size arguments (width and/or height) are missing, they can be calculated from the piddle. AUTHOR
Marc Lehmann <pcg@goof.com> SEE ALSO
perl(1), Gimp(1). perl v5.8.0 2000-08-24 PIXEL(1)
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