man Imager::Filters () - Entire Image Filtering Operations
NAME
Imager::Filters - Entire Image Filtering Operations
SYNOPSIS
use Imager;
$img = ...;
$img->filter(type=>'autolevels'); $img->filter(type=>'autolevels', lsat=>0.2); $img->filter(type=>'turbnoise')
# and lots of others
load_plugin("dynfilt/dyntest.so") or die "unable to load plugin\n";
$img->filter(type=>'lin_stretch', a=>35, b=>200);
unload_plugin("dynfilt/dyntest.so") or die "unable to load plugin\n";
$out = $img->difference(other=>$other_img);
DESCRIPTION
Filters are operations that have similar calling interface.
- filter
- Parameters:
- *
- type - the type of filter, see Types of Filters.
- *
- many other possible parameters, see Types of Filters below.
Types of Filters
Here is a list of the filters that are always avaliable in Imager. This list can be obtained by running the CWfilterlist.perl script that comes with the module source.
Filter Arguments Default value autolevels lsat 0.1 usat 0.1 skew 0
bumpmap bump lightx lighty elevation 0 st 2
bumpmap_complex bump channel 0 tx 0 ty 0 Lx 0.2 Ly 0.4 Lz -1 cd 1.0 cs 40.0 n 1.3 Ia (0 0 0) Il (255 255 255) Is (255 255 255)
contrast intensity
conv coef
fountain xa ya xb yb ftype linear repeat none combine none super_sample none ssample_param 4 segments(see below)
gaussian stddev
gradgen xo yo colors dist 0
hardinvert
mosaic size 20
noise amount 3 subtype 0
postlevels levels 10
radnoise xo 100 yo 100 ascale 17.0 rscale 0.02
turbnoise xo 0.0 yo 0.0 scale 10.0
unsharpmask stddev 2.0 scale 1.0
watermark wmark pixdiff 10 tx 0 ty 0
All parameters must have some value but if a parameter has a default value it may be omitted when calling the filter function.
Every one of these filters modifies the image in place.
A reference of the filters follows:
- autolevels
-
scales the value of each channel so that the values in the image will
cover the whole possible range for the channel. lsat and usat
truncate the range by the specified fraction at the top and bottom of
the range respectivly.
# increase contrast, losing little detail $img->filter(type=>"autolevels") or die $img->errstr;
# increase contrast, losing 20% of highlight at top and bottom range $img->filter(type=>"autolevels", lsat=>0.2, usat=>0.2) or die $img->errstr;
- bumpmap
-
uses the channel elevation image bump as a bumpmap on your
image, with the light at (lightx, lightty), with a shadow length
of st.
$img->filter(type=>"bumpmap", bump=>$bumpmap_img, lightx=>10, lighty=>10, st=>5) or die $img->errstr;
- bumpmap_complex
-
uses the channel channel image bump as a bumpmap on your image.
If Lz<0 the three L parameters are considered to be the direction of
the light. If Lz>0 the L parameters are considered to be the light
position. Ia is the ambient colour, Il is the light colour,
Is is the color of specular highlights. cd is the diffuse
coefficient and cs is the specular coefficient. n is the
shininess of the surface.
$img->filter(type=>"bumpmap_complex", bump=>$bumpmap_img) or die $img->errstr;
- contrast
-
scales each channel by intensity. Values of intensity < 1.0
will reduce the contrast.
# higher contrast $img->filter(type=>"contrast", intensity=>1.3) or die $img->errstr;
# lower contrast $img->filter(type=>"contrast", intensity=>0.8) or die $img->errstr;
- conv
-
performs 2 1-dimensional convolutions on the image using the values
from coef. coef should be have an odd length and the sum of the
coefficients must be non-zero.
# sharper $img->filter(type=>"conv", coef=>[-0.5, 2, -0.5 ]) or die $img->errstr;
# blur $img->filter(type=>"conv", coef=>[ 1, 2, 1 ]) or die $img->errstr;
- fountain
- renders a fountain fill, similar to the gradient tool in most paint software. The default fill is a linear fill from opaque black to opaque white. The points A(xa, ya) and B(xb, yb) control the way the fill is performed, depending on the ftype parameter:
- linear
- the fill ramps from A through to B.
- bilinear
- the fill ramps in both directions from A, where AB defines the length of the gradient.
- radial
- A is the center of a circle, and B is a point on it's circumference. The fill ramps from the center out to the circumference.
- radial_square
- A is the center of a square and B is the center of one of it's sides. This can be used to rotate the square. The fill ramps out to the edges of the square.
- revolution
- A is the centre of a circle and B is a point on it's circumference. B marks the 0 and 360 point on the circle, with the fill ramping clockwise.
- conical
- A is the center of a circle and B is a point on it's circumference. B marks the 0 and point on the circle, with the fill ramping in both directions to meet opposite. The repeat option controls how the fill is repeated for some ftypes after it leaves the AB range:
- none
- no repeats, points outside of each range are treated as if they were on the extreme end of that range.
- sawtooth
- the fill simply repeats in the positive direction
- triangle
- the fill repeats in reverse and then forward and so on, in the positive direction
- saw_both
- the fill repeats in both the positive and negative directions (only meaningful for a linear fill).
- tri_both
- as for triangle, but in the negative direction too (only meaningful for a linear fill). By default the fill simply overwrites the whole image (unless you have parts of the range 0 through 1 that aren't covered by a segment), if any segments of your fill have any transparency, you can set the combine option to 'normal' to have the fill combined with the existing pixels. See the description of combine in Imager::Fill. If your fill has sharp edges, for example between steps if you use repeat set to 'triangle', you may see some aliased or ragged edges. You can enable super-sampling which will take extra samples within the pixel in an attempt anti-alias the fill. The possible values for the super_sample option are:
- none
- no super-sampling is done
- grid
- a square grid of points are sampled. The number of points sampled is the square of ceil(0.5 + sqrt(ssample_param)).
- random
- a random set of points within the pixel are sampled. This looks pretty bad for low ssample_param values.
- circle
- the points on the radius of a circle within the pixel are sampled. This seems to produce the best results, but is fairly slow (for now). You can control the level of sampling by setting the ssample_param option. This is roughly the number of points sampled, but depends on the type of sampling. The segments option is an arrayref of segments. You really should use the Imager::Fountain class to build your fountain fill. Each segment is an array ref containing:
- start
- a floating point number between 0 and 1, the start of the range of fill parameters covered by this segment.
- middle
- a floating point number between start and end which can be used to push the color range towards one end of the segment.
- end
- a floating point number between 0 and 1, the end of the range of fill parameters covered by this segment. This should be greater than start.
- c0
- c1
- The colors at each end of the segment. These can be either Imager::Color or Imager::Color::Float objects.
- segment type
- The type of segment, this controls the way the fill parameter varies over the segment. 0 for linear, 1 for curved (unimplemented), 2 for sine, 3 for sphere increasing, 4 for sphere decreasing.
- color type
-
The way the color varies within the segment, 0 for simple RGB, 1 for
hue increasing and 2 for hue decreasing.
Don't forget to use Imager::Fountain instead of building your own.
Really. It even loads GIMP gradient files.
# build the gradient the hard way - linear from black to white, # then back again my @simple = ( [ 0, 0.25, 0.5, 'black', 'white', 0, 0 ], [ 0.5. 0.75, 1.0, 'white', 'black', 0, 0 ], ); # across my $linear = $img->copy; $linear->filter(type => "fountain", ftype => 'linear', repeat => 'sawtooth', xa => 0, ya => $linear->getheight / 2, xb => $linear->getwidth - 1, yb => $linear->getheight / 2) or die $linear->errstr; # around my $revolution = $img->copy; $revolution->filter(type => "fountain", ftype => 'revolution', xa => $revolution->getwidth / 2, ya => $revolution->getheight / 2, xb => $revolution->getwidth / 2, yb => 0) or die $revolution->errstr; # out from the middle my $radial = $img->copy; $radial->filter(type => "fountain", ftype => 'radial', xa => $im->getwidth / 2, ya => $im->getheight / 2, xb => $im->getwidth / 2, yb => 0) or die $radial->errstr;
- gaussian
-
performs a gaussian blur of the image, using stddev as the standard
deviation of the curve used to combine pixels, larger values give
bigger blurs. For a definition of Gaussian Blur, see:
http://www.maths.abdn.ac.uk/~igc/tch/mx4002/notes/node99.html
Values of CWstddev around 0.5 provide a barely noticable blur, values around 5 provide a very strong blur.# only slightly blurred $img->filter(type=>"gaussian", stddev=>0.5) or die $img->errstr;
# more strongly blurred $img->filter(type=>"gaussian", stddev=>5) or die $img->errstr;
- gradgen
-
renders a gradient, with the given colors at the corresponding
points (x,y) in xo and yo. You can specify the way distance is
measured for color blending by setting dist to 0 for Euclidean, 1
for Euclidean squared, and 2 for Manhattan distance.
$img->filter(type="gradgen", xo=>[ 10, 50, 10 ], yo=>[ 10, 50, 50 ], colors=>[ qw(red blue green) ]);
- hardinvert
-
inverts the image, black to white, white to black. All channels are
inverted, including the alpha channel if any.
$img->filter(type=>"hardinvert") or die $img->errstr;
- mosaic
-
produces averaged tiles of the given size.
$img->filter(type=>"mosaic", size=>5) or die $img->errstr;
- noise
-
adds noise of the given amount to the image. If subtype is
zero, the noise is even to each channel, otherwise noise is added to
each channel independently.
# monochrome noise $img->filter(type=>"noise", amount=>20, subtype=>0) or die $img->errstr;
# color noise $img->filter(type=>"noise", amount=>20, subtype=>1) or die $img->errstr;
- radnoise
-
renders radiant Perlin turbulent noise. The centre of the noise is at
(xo, yo), ascale controls the angular scale of the noise ,
and rscale the radial scale, higher numbers give more detail.
$img->filter(type=>"radnoise", xo=>50, yo=>50, ascale=>1, rscale=>0.02) or die $img->errstr;
- postlevels
-
alters the image to have only levels distinct level in each
channel.
$img->filter(type=>"postlevels", levels=>10) or die $img->errstr;
- turbnoise
-
renders Perlin turbulent noise. (xo, yo) controls the origin of
the noise, and scale the scale of the noise, with lower numbers
giving more detail.
$img->filter(type=>"turbnoise", xo=>10, yo=>10, scale=>10) or die $img->errstr;
- unsharpmask
-
performs an unsharp mask on the image. This is the result of
subtracting a gaussian blurred version of the image from the original.
stddev controls the stddev parameter of the gaussian blur. Each
output pixel is: in + scale * (in - blurred).
$img->filter(type=>"unsharpmask", stddev=>1, scale=>0.5) or die $img->errstr;
- watermark
-
applies wmark as a watermark on the image with strength pixdiff,
with an origin at (tx, ty)
$img->filter(type=>"watermark", tx=>10, ty=>50, wmark=>$wmark_image, pixdiff=>50) or die $img->errstr;
A demonstration of most of the filters can be found at:
http://www.develop-help.com/imager/filters.html
External Filters
As of Imager 0.48 you can create perl or XS based filters and hook them into Imager's filter() method:
- register_filter
-
Registers a filter so it is visible via Imager's filter() method.
Imager->register_filter(type => 'your_filter', defaults => { parm1 => 'default1' }, callseq => [ qw/image parm1/ ], callsub => \&your_filter); $img->filter(type=>'your_filter', parm1 => 'something');
The following parameters are needed: - *
- type - the type value that will be supplied to filter() to use your filter.
- *
- defaults - a hash of defaults for the filter's parameters
- *
- callseq - a reference to an array of required parameter names.
- *
- callsub - a code reference called to execute your filter. The parameters passed to filter() are supplied as a list of parameter name, value ... which can be assigned to a hash. The special parameters CWimage and CWimager are supplied as the low level image object from CW$self and CW$self itself respectively. The function you supply must modify the image in place. See Imager::Filter::Mandelbrot for an example.
Plugins
The plugin interface is deprecated. Please use the Imager API, see Imager::API and External Filters for details
It is possible to add filters to the module without recompiling the module itself. This is done by using DSOs (Dynamic shared object) avaliable on most systems. This way you can maintain our own filters and not have to get me to add it, or worse patch every new version of the Module. Modules can be loaded AND UNLOADED at runtime. This means that you can have a server/daemon thingy that can do something like:
load_plugin("dynfilt/dyntest.so") or die "unable to load plugin\n";
$img->filter(type=>'lin_stretch', a=>35, b=>200);
unload_plugin("dynfilt/dyntest.so") or die "unable to load plugin\n";
Someone decides that the filter is not working as it should - dyntest.c modified and recompiled.
load_plugin("dynfilt/dyntest.so") or die "unable to load plugin\n";
$img->filter(%hsh);
An example plugin comes with the module - Please send feedback to addi@umich.edu if you test this.
Note: This seems to test ok on the following systems: Linux, Solaris, HPUX, OpenBSD, FreeBSD, TRU64/OSF1, AIX. If you test this on other systems please let me know.
- load_plugin
- This is a function, not a method, exported by default. You should import this function explicitly for future compatibility if you need it. Accepts a single parameter, the name of a shared library file to load. Returns true on success. Check Imager->errstr on failure.
- unload_plugin
- This is a function, not a method, which is exported by default. You should import this function explicitly for future compatibility if you need it. Accepts a single parameter, the name of a shared library to unload. This library must have been previously loaded by load_plugin(). Returns true on success. Check Imager->errstr on failure.
Image Difference
- difference
-
You can create a new image that is the difference between 2 other images.
my $diff = $img->difference(other=>$other_img);
For each pixel in CW$img that is different to the pixel in CW$other_img, the pixel from CW$other_img is given, otherwise the pixel is transparent black. This can be used for debugging image differences (Where are they different?), and for optimizing animated GIFs. Note that CW$img and CW$other_img must have the same number of channels. The width and heigh of CW$diff will be the minimum of each of the width and height of CW$img and CW$other_img.