Difference between revisions of "ImageMagick"
Line 93: | Line 93: | ||
# Or mutate the existing foreground image (result $fg) | # Or mutate the existing foreground image (result $fg) | ||
$fg->Composite(compose => 'dst_over', image => $bg); | $fg->Composite(compose => 'dst_over', image => $bg); | ||
+ | </syntaxhighlight> | ||
+ | |||
+ | ===Change a grayscale image to an alpha mask image (white as opaque)=== | ||
+ | |||
+ | <syntaxhighlight lang=bash> | ||
+ | convert gray-mask.png -alpha shape alpha-mask.png | ||
+ | </syntaxhighlight> | ||
+ | |||
+ | ===Apply an alpha mask image to another image=== | ||
+ | |||
+ | This is what the "in" compose method does. | ||
+ | |||
+ | <syntaxhighlight lang=bash> | ||
+ | composite -compose in src.png alpha-mask.png result.png | ||
</syntaxhighlight> | </syntaxhighlight> |
Revision as of 16:11, 2 January 2015
ImageMagick is a common image processing program (convert
) and library (e.g. PerlMagick, aka Image::Magick
).
Contents
- 1 Snippets
Snippets
Composite
A Composite
operation combines two images. Useful for such things as adding backgrounds to partially transparent images.
General
In the docs, the "src" (or "overlay") is combined with the "dst" (or "background") using a compose method.
composite -compose METHOD SRC.png DST.png COMPOSED.png
When using Perl, the operation is destructive of the dst image. Use the Clone
method to operate on a copy while preserving the original.
# Result is $dst
$dst->Composite(compose => 'METHOD', image => $src);
# Result is $composed, $dst is unchanged
my $composed = $dst->Clone;
$composed->Composite(...);
over: Copy src on top of dst
The default operation: Src (the foreground) is copied over dst (the background).
# The method may be omitted here
composite -compose fg.png bg.png fg_on_bg.png
# More verbosely
composite -compose over fg.png bg.png fg_on_bg.png
# Result is $bg
$bg->Composite(image => $fg);
# More verbosely
$bg->Composite(method => 'over', image => $fg);
dst_over: Copy src behind dst
The same as over
but with roles reversed: src (now the background) is copied under dst (now the foreground). In Perl, this is a useful way to mutate the foreground instead of the background.
composite -compose dst_over bg.png fg.png fg_on_bg.png
# Result is $fg
$fg->Composite(compose => 'dst_over', image => $bg);
New image filled with color
export COLOR=white
export WIDTH=800
export HEIGHT=600
convert -size ${WIDTH}x${HEIGHT} xc:${COLOR} filled.png
my $color = 'white';
my $width = 800;
my $height = 600;
my $filled = new Image::Magick size => "${width}x${height}";
$filled->Read("xc:$color");
New image the same size as an existing image
my $new_image = new Image::Magick size => join('x', $existing_image->Get('width','height'));
Fill the background of an existing (partly transparent) image with a color
my $bg_color = 'white';
my $bg = new Image::Magick size => join('x', $fg->Get('width','height'));
$bg->Read("xc:$bg_color");
# Either put the result in the new image (result $bg)
$bg->Composite(image => $fg);
# Or mutate the existing foreground image (result $fg)
$fg->Composite(compose => 'dst_over', image => $bg);
Change a grayscale image to an alpha mask image (white as opaque)
convert gray-mask.png -alpha shape alpha-mask.png
Apply an alpha mask image to another image
This is what the "in" compose method does.
composite -compose in src.png alpha-mask.png result.png