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Imager::TrimColorList(3) |
User Contributed Perl Documentation |
Imager::TrimColorList(3) |
Imager::TrimColorList - represent a list of color ranges for
Imager's trim() method.
use Imager::TrimColorList;
# empty list
my $tcl = Imager::TrimColorList->new;
# add an entry in a variety of forms
$tcl->add($entry);
# add an explicit color object entry
$tcl->add_color($c1, $c2);
# add an explicit floating color object entry
$tcl->add_fcolor($cf1, $cf2);
# number of entries
my $count = $tcl->count;
# fetch an entry
my $entry = $tcl->get($index);
# fetch all entries
my @all = $tcl->all;
# make a list and populate it
my $tcl = Imager::TrimColorList->new($entry1, $entry2, ...);
# dump contents of the list as a string
print $tcl->describe;
An Imager::TrimColorList represents a list of color ranges to
supply to the trim() method.
Each range can be either an 8-bit color range, ie. Imager::Color
objects, or a floating point color range, ie. Imager::Color::Float objects,
these can be mixed freely in a single list but each range must be 8-bit or
floating point.
You can supply an entry in a small variety of forms:
- a simple color object of either type, or something convertible to a color
object such as a color name such as
"red", a hex color such as
"#FFF". Any of the forms that
Imager::Color supports should work here except for the array form.
This becomes a range of only that color.
$tcl->add("#000");
$tcl->add(Imager::Color->new(0, 0, 0));
$tcl->add(Imager::Color::Float->new(0, 0, 0));
- an arrayref containing a single color object, or something convertible to
a color object. This becomes a range of only that color.
$tcl->add([ "#000" ]);
$tcl->add([ Imager::Color->new(0, 0, 0) ]);
$tcl->add([ Imager::Color::Float->new(0, 0, 0) ]);
- an arrayref containing two color objects of the same type, ie. both
Imager::Color objects or convertible to Imager::Color objects, or two
Imager::Color::Float objects. This becomes a range between those two
colors inclusive.
$tcl->add([ "#000", "#002" ]);
$tcl->add([ Imager::Color->new(0, 0, 0), Imager::Color->new(0, 0, 2) ]);
$tcl->add([ Imager::Color::Float->new(0, 0, 0), Imager::Color::Float->new(0, 0, 2/255) ]);
- an arrayref containing a color object of either type and a number
representing the variance within the color space on either side of the
specified color to include.
$tcl->add([ "#000", 0.01 ])
$tcl->add([ Imager::Color->new(0, 0, 0), 0.01 ]);
$tcl->add([ Imager::Color::Float->new(0, 0, 0), 0.01 ]);
A range specified this way with an 8-bit color clips at the
top and bottom of the sample ranges, so the example 8-bit range above
goes from (0, 0, 0) to (2, 2, 2) inclusive, while the floating point
range isn't clipped and results in the floating color range (-0.01,
-0.01, -0.01) to (0.01, 0.01, 0.01) inclusive.
- new()
- new($entry1,
...)
- Class method. Create a new Imager::TrimColorList object and optionally add
some color ranges to it.
Returns an optionally populated Imager::TrimColorList object,
or an empty list (or undef) or failure.
- add($entry)
- Add a single range entry. Note that this accepts a single value which can
be a color or convertible to a color, or a reference to an array as
described above.
Returns a true value on success and a false value on
failure.
- add_color($color1,
$color2)
- Add a single 8-bit color range going from the
$color1 object to the
$color2 object inclusive. Both parameters must be
Image::Color objects or an exception is thrown.
- add_fcolor($fcolor1,
$fcolor2)
- Add a single floating point color range going from the
$fcolor1 object to the
$fcolor2 object inclusive. Both parameters must be
Image::Color::Float objects or an exception is thrown.
- count()
- Fetch the number of color ranges stored in the object.
- get($index)
- Fetch the color range at the given index. This returns a reference to an
array containing either two Imager::Color objects or two
Imager::Color::Float objects.
Returns undef if $index is out of
range and does not set
"Imager->errstr".
- all()
- Fetch all ranges from the object.
- describe()
- Return a string describing the color range as code that can create the
object.
- clone()
- Duplicate the object.
- auto()
- Automatically produce a trim color list based on an input image.
This is used to implement 'auto' for image trim() and
trim_rect() methods.
Parameters:
- "image" - the image to base the color
list on. Required.
- "auto" - the mechanism used to produce
the color list, one of:
- 1 - a "best" mechanism is selected, this
is currently the "center" method, but it
subject to change.
- "center",
"centre" - the pixels at the center of
each side of the image are used.
- "tolerance" - used to control the range
of pixel colors to be accepted as part of the color list. Default:
0.01.
- "name" - used internally to attribute
errors back to the original method. Default:
"auto".
If any method returns an error you can fetch a diagnostic from
"Imager->errstr".
Imager::TrimColorList objects are properly duplicated when new
perl threads are created.
Tony Cook <tonyc@cpan.org>
Originally the range handling for this was going to be embedded in
the trim() method, but this meant that every called that used color
ranges would pay some cost as the range list was checked for names (vs color
objects) and non-standard forms such as single colors and the color plus
variance.
The object allows a simple test for the trim()
"colors" parameter that doesn't pay that
cost, and still allows a caller to use the explicit convention.
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