NAME

Imager::Draw - Draw primitives to images

SYNOPSIS

  use Imager;
  use Imager::Fill;

  $img = ...;
  $blue = Imager::Color->new( 0, 0, 255 );
  $fill = Imager::Fill->new(hatch=>'stipple');

  $img->line(color=>$blue, x1=>10, x2=>100,
                           y1=>20, y2=>50, aa=>1, endp=>1 );

  $img->polyline(points=>[[$x0,$y0], [$x1,$y1], [$x2,$y2]],
                 color=>$blue);
  $img->polyline(x=>[$x0,$x1,$x2], y=>[$y0,$y1,$y2], aa=>1);

  $img->box(color=> $blue, xmin=> 10, ymin=>30,
                           xmax=>200, ymax=>300, filled=>1);
  $img->box(fill=>$fill);

  $img->arc(color=>$blue, r=>20, x=>200, y=>100,
            d1=>10, d2=>20 );

  $img->circle(color=>$blue, r=>50, x=>200, y=>100);

  $img->polygon(points=>[[$x0,$y0], [$x1,$y1], [$x2,$y2]], 
                color=>$blue);

  $img->polygon(x=>[$x0,$x1,$x2], y=>[$y0,$y1,$y2]);
  
  $img->flood_fill(x=>50, y=>50, color=>$color);

  $img->setpixel(x=>50, y=>70, color=>$color);

  $img->setpixel(x=>[ 50, 60, 70 ], y=>[20, 30, 40], color=>$color);

  my $color = $img->getpixel(x=>50, y=>70);

  my @colors = $img->getpixel(x=>[ 50, 60, 70 ], y=>[20, 30, 40]);

  # drawing text
  my $font = Imager::Font->new(...) or die;
  $img->string(x => 50, y => 70,
               font => $font,
               string => "Hello, World!",
               color => 'red',
               size => 30,
               aa => 1);

  # bottom right-hand corner of the image
  $img->align_string(x => $img->getwidth() - 1,
                     y => $img->getheight() - 1,
                     halign => 'right',
                     valign => 'bottom',
                     string => 'Imager',
                     font => $font,
                     size => 12);

  # low-level functions
  my @colors = $img->getscanline(y=>50, x=>10, width=>20);
  
  $img->setscanline(y=>60, x=>20, pixels=>\@colors);

  my @samples = $img->getsamples(y=>50, x=>10, width=>20, 
                                 channels=>[ 2, 0 ]);

DESCRIPTION

It is possible to draw with graphics primitives onto images. Such primitives include boxes, arcs, circles, polygons and lines. The coordinate system in Imager has the origin (0,0) in the upper left corner of an image with co-ordinates increasing to the right and bottom. For non anti-aliasing operation all coordinates are rounded towards the nearest integer. For anti-aliased operations floating point coordinates are used.

Drawing is assumed to take place in a coordinate system of infinite resolution. This is the typical convention and really only matters when it is necessary to check for off-by-one cases. Typically it's useful to think of (10, 20) as (10.00, 20.00) and consider the consequences.

Color Parameters

The color parameter for any of the drawing methods can be an Imager::Color object, a simple scalar that Imager::Color can understand, a hashref of parameters that Imager::Color->new understands, or an arrayref of red, green, blue values, for example:

  $image->box(..., color=>'red');
  $image->line(..., color=>'#FF0000');
  $image->flood_fill(..., color=>[ 255, 0, 255 ]);

While supplying colors as names, array references or CSS color specifiers is convenient, for maximum performance you should supply the color as an Imager::Color object:

  my @colors = map Imager::Color->new($_), qw/red green blue/
  for my $i (1..1000) {
    $image->box(..., color => $colors[rand @colors]);
  }

Fill Parameters

All filled primitives, i.e. arc(), box(), circle(), polygon() and the flood_fill() method can take a fill parameter instead of a color parameter which can either be an Imager::Fill object, or a reference to a hash containing the parameters used to create the fill, for example:

  $image->box(..., fill=>{ hatch => 'check1x1' });
  my $fillimage = Imager->new;
  $fillimage->read(file=>$somefile) or die;
  $image->flood_fill(..., fill=>{ image=>$fillimage });

Currently you can create opaque or transparent plain color fills, hatched fills, image based fills and fountain fills. See Imager::Fill for more information.

List of primitives

line()
  $img->line(color=>$green, x1=>10, x2=>100,
                            y1=>20, y2=>50, aa=>1, endp=>1 );

Draws a line from (x1,y1) to (x2,y2). The endpoint (x2,y2) is drawn by default. If endp of 0 is specified then the endpoint will not be drawn. If aa is set then the line will be drawn anti-aliased. The antialias parameter is still available for backwards compatibility.

Parameters:

  • x1, y1 - starting point of the line. Required.

  • x2, y2 - end point of the line. Required.

  • color - the color of the line. See "Color Parameters". Default: black.

  • endp - if zero the end point of the line is not drawn. Default: 1 - the end point is drawn. This is useful to set to 0 when drawing a series of connected lines.

  • aa - if true the line is drawn anti-aliased. Default: 0.

polyline()
  $img->polyline(points=>[[$x0,$y0],[$x1,$y1],[$x2,$y2]],color=>$red);
  $img->polyline(x=>[$x0,$x1,$x2], y=>[$y0,$y1,$y2], aa=>1);

polyline is used to draw multiple lines between a series of points. The point set can either be specified as an arrayref to an array of array references (where each such array represents a point). The other way is to specify two array references.

The antialias parameter is still available for backwards compatibility.

  • points - a reference to an array of references to arrays containing the co-ordinates of the points in the line, for example:

      my @points = ( [ 0, 0 ], [ 100, 0 ], [ 100, 100 ], [ 0, 100 ] );
      $img->polyline(points => \@points);
  • x, y - each is an array of x or y ordinates. This is an alternative to supplying the points parameter.

      # same as the above points example
      my @x = ( 0, 100, 100, 0 );
      my @y = ( 0, 0, 100, 100 );
      $img->polyline(x => \@x, y => \@y);
  • color - the color of the line. See "Color Parameters". Default: black.

  • aa - if true the line is drawn anti-aliased. Default: 0. Can also be supplied as antialias for backward compatibility.

box()
  $blue = Imager::Color->new( 0, 0, 255 );
  $img->box(color => $blue, xmin=>10, ymin=>30, xmax=>200, ymax=>300, 
            filled=>1);

If any of the edges of the box are omitted it will snap to the outer edge of the image in that direction. If filled is omitted the box is drawn as an outline. Instead of a color it is possible to use a fill pattern:

  $fill = Imager::Fill->new(hatch=>'stipple');
  $img->box(fill=>$fill);  # fill entire image with a given fill pattern

  $img->box(xmin=>10, ymin=>30, xmax=>150, ymax=>60,
            fill => { hatch=>'cross2' });

Also if a color is omitted a color with (255,255,255,255) is used instead. [NOTE: This may change to use $img->fgcolor() in the future].

Box does not support fractional coordinates yet.

Parameters:

  • xmin - left side of the box. Default: 0 (left edge of the image)

  • ymin - top side of the box. Default: 0 (top edge of the image)

  • xmax - right side of the box. Default: $img->getwidth-1. (right edge of the image)

  • ymax - bottom side of the box. Default: $img->getheight-1. (bottom edge of the image)

    Note: xmax and ymax are inclusive - the number of pixels drawn for a filled box is (xmax-xmin+1) * (ymax-ymin+1).

  • box - a reference to an array of (left, top, right, bottom) co-ordinates. This is an alternative to supplying xmin, ymin, xmax, ymax and overrides their values.

  • color - the color of the line. See "Color Parameters". Default: white. This is ignored if the filled parameter

  • filled - if non-zero the box is filled with color instead of outlined. Default: an outline is drawn.

  • fill - the fill for the box. If this is supplied then the box will be filled. See "Fill Parameters".

arc()
  $img->arc(color=>$red, r=>20, x=>200, y=>100, d1=>10, d2=>20 );

This creates a filled red arc with a 'center' at (200, 100) and spans 10 degrees and the slice has a radius of 20.

It's also possible to supply a fill parameter.

To draw just an arc outline - just the curve, not the radius lines, set filled to 0:

Parameters:

  $img->arc(color=>$red, r=>20, x=>200, y=>100, d1=>10, d2=>20, filled=>0 );
  • x, y - center of the filled arc. Default: center of the image.

  • r - radius of the arc. Default: 1/3 of min(image height, image width).

  • d1 - starting angle of the arc, in degrees. Default: 0

  • d2 - ending angle of the arc, in degrees. Default: 361.

  • color - the color of the filled arc. See "Color Parameters". Default: white. Overridden by fill.

  • fill - the fill for the filled arc. See "Fill Parameters"

  • aa - if true the filled arc is drawn anti-aliased. Default: false.

    Anti-aliased arc() is experimental for now, I'm not entirely happy with the results in some cases.

  • filled - set to 0 to draw only an outline.

  # arc going through angle zero:
  $img->arc(d1=>320, d2=>40, x=>100, y=>100, r=>50, color=>'blue');

  # complex fill arc
  $img->arc(d1=>135, d2=>45, x=>100, y=>150, r=>50, 
            fill=>{ solid=>'red', combine=>'diff' });

  # draw an anti-aliased circle outline
  $img->arc(x => 100, y => 150, r => 150, filled => 0, 
            color => '#F00', aa => 1);

  # draw an anti-aliased arc
  $img->arc(x => 100, y => 150, r => 90, filled => 0,
            color => '#0f0', aa => 1, d1 => 90, d2 => 180);
circle()
  $img->circle(color=>$green, r=>50, x=>200, y=>100, aa=>1, filled=>1);

This creates an anti-aliased green circle with its center at (200, 100) and has a radius of 50. It's also possible to supply a fill parameter instead of a color parameter.

  $img->circle(r => 50, x=> 150, y => 150, fill=>{ hatch => 'stipple' });

To draw a circular outline, set filled to 0:

  $img->circle(color=>$green, r=>50, x=>200, y=>100, aa=>1, filled=>0);
  • x, y - center of the filled circle. Default: center of the image.

  • r - radius of the circle. Default: 1/3 of min(image height, image width).

  • color - the color of the filled circle. See "Color Parameters". Default: white. Overridden by fill.

  • fill - the fill for the filled circle. See "Fill Parameters"

  • aa - if true the filled circle is drawn anti-aliased. Default: false.

  • filled - set to 0 to just draw an outline.

polygon()
  $img->polygon(points=>[[$x0,$y0],[$x1,$y1],[$x2,$y2]],color=>$red);
  $img->polygon(x=>[$x0,$x1,$x2], y=>[$y0,$y1,$y2], fill=>$fill);

Polygon is used to draw a filled polygon. Currently the polygon is always drawn anti-aliased, although that will change in the future. Like other anti-aliased drawing functions its coordinates can be specified with floating point values. As with other filled shapes it's possible to use a fill instead of a color.

  • points - a reference to an array of references to arrays containing the co-ordinates of the points in the line, for example:

      my @points = ( [ 0, 0 ], [ 100, 0 ], [ 100, 100 ], [ 0, 100 ] );
      $img->polygon(points => \@points);
  • x, y - each is an array of x or y ordinates. This is an alternative to supplying the points parameter.

      # same as the above points example
      my @x = ( 0, 100, 100, 0 );
      my @y = ( 0, 0, 100, 100 );
      $img->polygon(x => \@x, y => \@y);
  • color - the color of the filled polygon. See "Color Parameters". Default: black. Overridden by fill.

  • fill - the fill for the filled circle. See "Fill Parameters"

flood_fill()

You can fill a region that all has the same color using the flood_fill() method, for example:

  $img->flood_fill(x=>50, y=>50, color=>$color);

will fill all regions the same color connected to the point (50, 50).

Alternatively you can fill a region limited by a given border color:

  # stop at the red border
  $im->flood_fill(x=>50, y=>50, color=>$color, border=>"red");

You can also fill with a complex fill:

  $img->flood_fill(x=>50, y=>50, fill=>{ hatch=>'cross1x1' });

Parameters:

  • x, y - the start point of the fill.

  • color - the color of the filled area. See "Color Parameters". Default: white. Overridden by fill.

  • fill - the fill for the filled area. See "Fill Parameters"

  • border - the border color of the region to be filled. If this parameter is supplied flood_fill() will stop when it finds this color. If this is not supplied then a normal fill is done. border can be supplied as a "Color Parameters".

setpixel()
  $img->setpixel(x=>50, y=>70, color=>$color);
  $img->setpixel(x=>[ 50, 60, 70 ], y=>[20, 30, 40], color=>$color);

setpixel() is used to set one or more individual pixels.

Parameters:

  • x, y - either integers giving the co-ordinates of the pixel to set or array references containing a set of pixels to be set.

  • color - the color of the pixels drawn. See "Color Parameters". Default: white.

When called with array parameters, returns the number of pixels successfully set, or false if none.

When called with scalars for x and y, return $img on success, false on failure.

getpixel()
  my $color = $img->getpixel(x=>50, y=>70);
  my @colors = $img->getpixel(x=>[ 50, 60, 70 ], y=>[20, 30, 40]);
  my $colors_ref = $img->getpixel(x=>[ 50, 60, 70 ], y=>[20, 30, 40]);

getpixel() is used to retrieve one or more individual pixels.

For either method you can supply a single set of co-ordinates as scalar x and y parameters, or set each to an arrayref of ordinates.

When called with arrays, getpixel() will return a list of colors in list context, and an arrayref in scalar context.

To receive floating point colors from getpixel(), set the type parameter to 'float'.

Parameters:

  • x, y - either integers giving the co-ordinates of the pixel to set or array references containing a set of pixels to be set.

  • type - the type of color object to return, either '8bit' for Imager::Color objects or 'float' for Imager::Color::Float objects. Default: '8bit'.

string()
  my $font = Imager::Font->new(file=>"foo.ttf");
  $img->string(x => 50, y => 70,
               string => "Hello, World!",
               font => $font,
               size => 30,
               aa => 1,
               color => 'white');

Draws text on the image.

Parameters:

  • x, y - the point to draw the text from. If align is 0 this is the top left of the string. If align is 1 (the default) then this is the left of the string on the baseline. Required.

  • string - the text to draw. Required unless you supply the text parameter.

  • font - an Imager::Font object representing the font to draw the text with. Required.

  • aa - if non-zero the output will be anti-aliased. Default: the value set in Imager::Font->new() or 0 if not set.

  • align - if non-zero the point supplied in (x,y) will be on the base-line, if zero then (x,y) will be at the top-left of the string.

    i.e. if drawing the string "yA" and align is 0 the point (x,y) will aligned with the top of the A. If align is 1 (the default) it will be aligned with the baseline of the font, typically bottom of the A, depending on the font used.

    Default: the value set in Imager::Font->new, or 1 if not set.

  • channel - if present, the text will be written to the specified channel of the image and the color parameter will be ignore.

  • color - the color to draw the text in. Default: the color supplied to Imager::Font->new, or red if none.

  • size - the point size to draw the text at. Default: the size supplied to Imager::Font->new, or 15.

  • sizew - the width scaling to draw the text at. Default: the value of size.

  • utf8 - for drivers that support it, treat the string as UTF-8 encoded. For versions of perl that support Unicode (5.6 and later), this will be enabled automatically if the string parameter is already a UTF-8 string. See "UTF-8" in Imager::Font for more information.

  • vlayout - for drivers that support it, draw the text vertically. Note: I haven't found a font that has the appropriate metrics yet.

  • text - alias for the string parameter.

On error, string() returns false and you can use $img->errstr to get the reason for the error.

align_string()

Draws text aligned around a point on the image.

  # "Hello" centered at 100, 100 in the image.
  my ($left, $top, $right, $bottom) = 
    $img->align_string(string=>"Hello",
                       x=>100, y=>100, 
                       halign=>'center', valign=>'center', 
                       font=>$font);

Parameters:

  • x, y - the point to draw the text from. If align is 0 this is the top left of the string. If align is 1 (the default) then this is the left of the string on the baseline. Required.

  • string - the text to draw. Required unless you supply the text parameter.

  • font - an Imager::Font object representing the font to draw the text with. Required.

  • aa - if non-zero the output will be anti-aliased

  • valign - vertical alignment of the text against (x,y)

    • top - Point is at the top of the text.

    • bottom - Point is at the bottom of the text.

    • baseline - Point is on the baseline of the text. This is the default.

    • center - Point is vertically centered within the text.

  • halign - horizontal alignment of the text against (x,y)

    • left - The point is at the left of the text. This is the default.

    • start - The point is at the start point of the text.

    • center - The point is horizontally centered within the text.

    • right - The point is at the right end of the text.

    • end - The point is at the end point of the text.

  • channel - if present, the text will be written to the specified channel of the image and the color parameter will be ignore.

  • color - the color to draw the text in. Default: the color supplied to Imager::Font->new, or red if none.

  • size - the point size to draw the text at. Default: the size supplied to Imager::Font->new, or 15.

  • sizew - the width scaling to draw the text at. Default: the value of size.

  • utf8 - for drivers that support it, treat the string as UTF-8 encoded. For versions of perl that support Unicode (5.6 and later), this will be enabled automatically if the string parameter is already a UTF-8 string. See "UTF-8" in Imager::Font for more information.

  • vlayout - for drivers that support it, draw the text vertically. Note: I haven't found a font that has the appropriate metrics yet.

  • text - alias for the string parameter.

On success returns a list of bounds of the drawn text, in the order left, top, right, bottom.

On error, align_string() returns an empty list and you can use $img->errstr to get the reason for the error.

setscanline()

Set all or part of a horizontal line of pixels to an image. This method is most useful in conjunction with "getscanline()".

The parameters you can pass are:

  • y - vertical position of the scan line. This parameter is required.

  • x - position to start on the scan line. Default: 0

  • pixels - either a reference to an array containing Imager::Color objects, an reference to an array containing Imager::Color::Float objects or a scalar containing packed color data.

    If type is index then this can either be a reference to an array of palette color indexes or a scalar containing packed indexes.

    See "Packed Color Data" for information on the format of packed color data.

  • type - the type of pixel data supplied. If you supply an array reference of object then this is determined automatically. If you supply packed color data this defaults to '8bit', if your data is packed floating point color data then set this to 'float'.

    You can use float or 8bit samples with any image.

    If this is 'index' then pixels should be either an array of palette color indexes or a packed string of color indexes.

Returns the number of pixels set.

Each of the following sets 5 pixels from (5, 10) through (9, 10) to blue, red, blue, red, blue:

  my $red_color = Imager::Color->new(255, 0, 0);
  my $blue_color = Imager::Color->new(0, 0, 255);

  $image->setscanline(y=>10, x=>5, pixels=>
                      [ ($blue_color, $red_color) x 2, $blue_color ]);

  # use floating point color instead, for 16-bit plus images
  my $red_colorf = Imager::Color::Float->new(1.0, 0, 0);
  my $blue_colorf = Imager::Color::Float->new(0, 0, 1.0);

  $image->setscanline(y=>10, x=>5, pixels=>
                      [ ($blue_colorf, $red_colorf) x 2, $blue_colorf ]);

  # packed 8-bit data
  $image->setscanline(y=>10, x=>5, pixels=>
                      pack("C*", ((0, 0, 255, 255), (255, 0, 0, 255)) x 2,
                            (0, 0, 255, 255)));

  # packed floating point samples
  $image->setscanline(y=>10, x=>5, type=>'float', pixels=>
                      pack("d*", ((0, 0, 1.0, 1.0), (1.0, 0, 0, 1.0)) x 2,
                            (0, 0, 1.0, 1.0)));

Copy even rows from one image to another:

  for (my $y = 0; $y < $im2->getheight; $y+=2) {
    $im1->setscanline(y=>$y,
                      pixels=>scalar($im2->getscanline(y=>$y)));
  }

Set the blue channel to 0 for all pixels in an image. This could be done with convert too:

  for my $y (0..$im->getheight-1) {
    my $row = $im->getscanline(y=>$y);
    $row =~ s/(..).(.)/$1\0$2/gs;
    $im->setscanline(y=>$y, pixels=>$row);
  }
getscanline()

Read all or part of a horizontal line of pixels from an image. This method is most useful in conjunction with "setscanline()".

The parameters you can pass are:

  • y - vertical position of the scan line. This parameter is required.

  • x - position to start on the scan line. Default: 0

  • width - number of pixels to read. Default: $img->getwidth - x

  • type - the type of pixel data to return. Default: 8bit.

    Permitted values are 8bit and float and index.

In list context this method will return a list of Imager::Color objects when type is 8bit, or a list of Imager::Color::Float objects when type if float, or a list of integers when type is index.

In scalar context this returns a packed 8-bit pixels when type is 8bit, or a list of packed floating point pixels when type is float, or packed palette color indexes when type is index.

The values of samples for which the image does not have channels is undefined. For example, for a single channel image the values of channels 1 through 3 are undefined.

Check image for a given color:

  my $found;
  YLOOP: for my $y (0..$img->getheight-1) {
    my @colors = $img->getscanline(y=>$y);
    for my $color (@colors) {
      my ($red, $green, $blue, $alpha) = $color->rgba;
      if ($red == $test_red && $green == $test_green && $blue == $test_blue
          && $alpha == $test_alpha) {
        ++$found;
        last YLOOP;
      }
    }
  }

Or do it using packed data:

  my $found;
  my $test_packed = pack("CCCC", $test_red, $test_green, $test_blue, 
                         $test_alpha);
  YLOOP: for my $y (0..$img->getheight-1) {
    my $colors = $img->getscanline(y=>$y);
    while (length $colors) {
      if (substr($colors, 0, 4, '') eq $test_packed) {
        ++$found;
        last YLOOP;
      }
    }
  }

Some of the examples for "setscanline()" for more examples.

getsamples()

Read specified channels from all or part of a horizontal line of pixels from an image.

The parameters you can pass are:

  • y - vertical position of the scan line. This parameter is required.

  • x - position to start on the scan line. Default: 0

  • width - number of pixels to read. Default: $img->getwidth - x

  • type - the type of sample data to return. Default: 8bit.

    Permitted values are 8bit and float.

    As of Imager 0.61 this can be 16bit only for 16 bit images.

  • channels - a reference to an array of channels to return, where 0 is the first channel. Default: [ 0 .. $self->getchannels()-1 ]

  • target - if an array reference is supplied in target then the samples will be stored here instead of being returned.

  • offset - the offset within the array referenced by target

In list context this will return a list of integers between 0 and 255 inclusive when type is 8bit, or a list of floating point numbers between 0.0 and 1.0 inclusive when type is float.

In scalar context this will return a string of packed bytes, as with pack("C*", ...) when type is 8bit or a string of packed doubles as with pack("d*", ...) when type is float.

If the target option is supplied then only a count of samples is returned.

Example: Check if any pixels in an image have a non-zero alpha channel:

  my $has_coverage;
  for my $y (0 .. $img->getheight()-1) {
    my $alpha = $img->getsamples(y=>$y, channels=>[0]);
    if ($alpha =~ /[^\0]/) {
      ++$has_coverage;
      last;
    }
  }

Example: Convert a 2 channel gray image into a 4 channel RGBA image:

  # this could be done with convert() instead
  my $out = Imager->new(xsize => $src->getwidth(), 
                        ysize => $src->getheight(),
                        channels => 4);
  for my $y ( 0 .. $src->getheight()-1 ) {
    my $data = $src->getsamples(y=>$y, channels=>[ 0, 0, 0, 1 ]);
    $out->setscanline(y=>$y, pixels=>$data);
  }

Retrieve 16-bit samples:

  if ($img->bits == 16) {
    my @samples;
    $img->getsamples(x => 0, y => $y, target => \@samples, type => '16bit');
  }
setsamples()

This allows writing of samples back to some images. Currently this is only supported for 16-bit/sample images.

Parameters:

  • y - vertical position of the scan line. This parameter is required.

  • x - position to start on the scan line. Default: 0

  • width - number of pixels to write. Default: $img->getwidth - x. The minimum of this and the number of pixels represented by the samples provided will be written.

  • type - the type of sample data to write. This parameter is required.

    As of Imager 0.61 this can only be 16bit only for 16 bit images.

  • channels - a reference to an array of channels to return, where 0 is the first channel. Default: [ 0 .. $self->getchannels()-1 ]

  • data - a reference to an array of samples to write. Required.

  • offset - the starting offset within the array referenced by data

Returns the number of samples written.

Packed Color Data

The getscanline() and setscanline() functions can work with pixels packed into scalars. This is useful to remove the cost of creating color objects, but should only be used when performance is an issue.

Packed data can either be 1 byte per sample or 1 double per sample.

Each pixel returned by getscanline() or supplied to setscanline() contains 4 samples, even if the image has fewer then 4 channels. The values of the extra samples as returned by getscanline() is not specified. The extra samples passed to setscanline() are ignored.

To produce packed 1 byte/sample pixels, use the pack C template:

  my $packed_8bit_pixel = pack("CCCC", $red, $blue, $green, $alpha);

To produce packed double/sample pixels, use the pack d template:

  my $packed_float_pixel = pack("dddd", $red, $blue, $green, $alpha);

If you use a type parameter of index then the values are palette color indexes, not sample values:

  my $im = Imager->new(xsize => 100, ysize => 100, type => 'paletted');
  my $black_index = $im->addcolors(colors => [ 'black' ]);
  my $red_index = $im->addcolors(colors => [ 'red' ]);
  # 2 pixels
  my $packed_index_data = pack("C*", $black_index, $red_index);
  $im->setscanline(y => $y, pixels => $packed_index_data, type => 'index');

Combine Types

Some methods accept a combine parameter, this can be any of the following:

none

The fill pixel replaces the target pixel.

normal

The fill pixels alpha value is used to combine it with the target pixel.

multiply
mult

Each channel of fill and target is multiplied, and the result is combined using the alpha channel of the fill pixel.

dissolve

If the alpha of the fill pixel is greater than a random number, the fill pixel is alpha combined with the target pixel.

add

The channels of the fill and target are added together, clamped to the range of the samples and alpha combined with the target.

subtract

The channels of the fill are subtracted from the target, clamped to be >= 0, and alpha combined with the target.

diff

The channels of the fill are subtracted from the target and the absolute value taken this is alpha combined with the target.

lighten

The higher value is taken from each channel of the fill and target pixels, which is then alpha combined with the target.

darken

The higher value is taken from each channel of the fill and target pixels, which is then alpha combined with the target.

hue

The combination of the saturation and value of the target is combined with the hue of the fill pixel, and is then alpha combined with the target.

sat

The combination of the hue and value of the target is combined with the saturation of the fill pixel, and is then alpha combined with the target.

value

The combination of the hue and value of the target is combined with the value of the fill pixel, and is then alpha combined with the target.

color

The combination of the value of the target is combined with the hue and saturation of the fill pixel, and is then alpha combined with the target.

combines()

Returns a list of possible combine types.

BUGS

box() does not support anti-aliasing yet. Default color is not unified yet.

AUTHOR

Tony Cook <tonyc@cpan.org>, Arnar M. Hrafnkelsson.

SEE ALSO

Imager(3), Imager::Cookbook(3)

REVISION

$Revision$