—————————#==========================================================================
# Copyright (c) 1995-1998 Martien Verbruggen
#--------------------------------------------------------------------------
#
# Name:
# GD::Graph::colour.pm
#
# Description:
# Package of colour manipulation routines, to be used
# with GD::Graph.
#
# $Id: colour.pm,v 1.10 2005/12/14 04:09:40 ben Exp $
#
#==========================================================================
package
GD::Graph::colour;
(
$GD::Graph::colour::VERSION
) =
'$Revision: 1.10 $'
=~ /\s([\d.]+)/;
=head1 NAME
GD::Graph::colour - Colour manipulation routines for use with GD::Graph
=head1 SYNOPSIS
use GD::Graph::colour qw(:colours :lists :files :convert);
=head1 DESCRIPTION
The B<GD::Graph::colour> package provides a few routines to work with
colours. The functionality of this package is mainly defined by what is
needed, now and historically, by the GD::Graph modules.
=cut
use
strict;
require
Exporter;
use
Carp;
@GD::Graph::colour::ISA
=
qw( Exporter )
;
@EXPORT_OK
=
qw(
_rgb _luminance _hue add_colour
colour_list sorted_colour_list
read_rgb
hex2rgb rgb2hex
)
;
%EXPORT_TAGS
= (
colours
=> [
qw( add_colour _rgb _luminance _hue )
],
lists
=> [
qw( colour_list sorted_colour_list )
],
files
=> [
qw( read_rgb )
],
convert
=> [
qw( hex2rgb rgb2hex )
],
);
my
%RGB
= (
white
=> [0xFF,0xFF,0xFF],
lgray
=> [0xBF,0xBF,0xBF],
gray
=> [0x7F,0x7F,0x7F],
dgray
=> [0x3F,0x3F,0x3F],
black
=> [0x00,0x00,0x00],
lblue
=> [0x00,0x00,0xFF],
blue
=> [0x00,0x00,0xBF],
dblue
=> [0x00,0x00,0x7F],
gold
=> [0xFF,0xD7,0x00],
lyellow
=> [0xFF,0xFF,0x00],
yellow
=> [0xBF,0xBF,0x00],
dyellow
=> [0x7F,0x7F,0x00],
lgreen
=> [0x00,0xFF,0x00],
green
=> [0x00,0xBF,0x00],
dgreen
=> [0x00,0x7F,0x00],
lred
=> [0xFF,0x00,0x00],
red
=> [0xBF,0x00,0x00],
dred
=> [0x7F,0x00,0x00],
lpurple
=> [0xFF,0x00,0xFF],
purple
=> [0xBF,0x00,0xBF],
dpurple
=> [0x7F,0x00,0x7F],
lorange
=> [0xFF,0xB7,0x00],
orange
=> [0xFF,0x7F,0x00],
pink
=> [0xFF,0xB7,0xC1],
dpink
=> [0xFF,0x69,0xB4],
marine
=> [0x7F,0x7F,0xFF],
cyan
=> [0x00,0xFF,0xFF],
lbrown
=> [0xD2,0xB4,0x8C],
dbrown
=> [0xA5,0x2A,0x2A],
);
=head1 FUNCTIONS
=head2 colour_list( I<number of colours> )
Returns a list of I<number of colours> colour names known to the package.
Exported with the :lists tag.
=cut
sub
colour_list
{
my
$n
= (
$_
[0] ) ?
$_
[0] :
keys
%RGB
;
return
(
keys
%RGB
)[0 ..
$n
-1];
}
=head2 sorted_colour_list( I<number of colours> )
Returns a list of I<number of colours> colour names known to the package,
sorted by luminance or hue.
B<NB.> Right now it always sorts by luminance. Will add an option in a later
stage to decide sorting method at run time.
Exported with the :lists tag.
=cut
sub
sorted_colour_list
{
my
$n
=
$_
[0] ?
$_
[0] :
keys
%RGB
;
return
(
sort
by_luminance
keys
%RGB
)[0 ..
$n
-1];
# return (sort by_hue keys %rgb)[0..$n-1];
sub
by_luminance { _luminance(@{
$RGB
{
$b
}}) <=> _luminance(@{
$RGB
{
$a
}}) }
sub
by_hue { _hue(@{
$RGB
{
$b
}}) <=> _hue(@{
$RGB
{
$a
}}) }
}
=head2 _rgb( I<colour name> )
Returns a list of the RGB values of I<colour name>. if the colour name
is a string of the form that is acceptable to the hex2rgb sub, then the
colour will be added to the list dynamically.
Exported with the :colours tag.
=cut
my
%warned_clrs
= ();
# return the RGB values of the colour name
sub
_rgb
{
my
$clr
=
shift
or
return
;
# Try adding the colour if it doesn't exist yet. It may be of a
# parseable form
add_colour(
$clr
)
unless
exists
$RGB
{
$clr
};
my
$rgb_ref
=
$RGB
{
$clr
};
if
(!
defined
$rgb_ref
)
{
$rgb_ref
=
$RGB
{
'black'
};
unless
(
$warned_clrs
{
$clr
})
{
$warned_clrs
{
$clr
}++;
carp
"Colour $clr is not defined, reverting to black"
;
}
};
@{
$rgb_ref
};
}
=head2 _hue( I<R,G,B> )
Returns the hue of the colour with the specified RGB values.
Exported with the :colours tag.
=head2 _luminance( I<R,G,B> )
Returns the luminance of the colour with the specified RGB values.
Exported with the :colours tag.
=cut
# return the luminance of the colour (RGB)
sub
_luminance
{
(0.212671 *
$_
[0] + 0.715160 *
$_
[1] + 0.072169 *
$_
[2])/0xFF
}
# return the hue of the colour (RGB)
sub
_hue
{
(
$_
[0] +
$_
[1] +
$_
[2])/(3 * 0xFF)
}
=head2 add_colour(colourname => [$r, $g, $b]) or
add_colour('#7fe310')
Self-explanatory.
Exported with the :colours tag.
=cut
sub
add_colour
{
my
$name
=
shift
;
my
$val
=
shift
;
if
(!
defined
$val
)
{
my
@rgb
= hex2rgb(
$name
) or
return
;
$val
= [
@rgb
];
}
if
(
ref
$val
&&
ref
$val
eq
'ARRAY'
)
{
$RGB
{
$name
} = [@{
$val
}];
return
$name
;
}
return
;
}
=head2 rgb2hex($red, $green, $blue)
=head2 hex2rgb('#7fe310')
These functions translate a list of RGB values into a hexadecimal
string, as is commonly used in HTML and the Image::Magick API, and vice
versa.
Exported with the :convert tag.
=cut
# Color translation
sub
rgb2hex
{
return
unless
@_
== 3;
my
$color
=
'#'
;
foreach
my
$cc
(
@_
)
{
$color
.=
sprintf
(
"%02x"
,
$cc
);
}
return
$color
;
}
sub
hex2rgb
{
my
$clr
=
shift
;
my
@rgb
=
$clr
=~ /^
#([a-f0-9]{2})([a-f0-9]{2})([a-f0-9]{2})$/i;
return
unless
@rgb
;
return
map
{
hex
$_
}
@rgb
;
}
=head2 read_rgb( F<file name> )
Reads in colours from a rgb file as used by the X11 system.
Doing something like:
use GD::Graph::bars;
use GD::Graph::colour;
GD::Graph::colour::read_rgb("rgb.txt") or die "cannot read colours";
Will allow you to use any colours defined in rgb.txt in your graph.
Exported with the :files tag.
=cut
#
# Read a rgb.txt file (X11)
#
# Expected format of the file:
#
# R G B colour name
#
# Fields can be separated by any number of whitespace
# Lines starting with an exclamation mark (!) are comment and
# will be ignored.
#
# returns number of colours read
sub
read_rgb($)
# (filename)
{
my
$fn
=
shift
;
my
$n
= 0;
my
$line
;
open
(RGB,
$fn
) or
return
0;
while
(
defined
(
$line
= <RGB>))
{
next
if
(
$line
=~ /\s*!/);
chomp
(
$line
);
# remove leading white space
$line
=~ s/^\s+//;
# get the colours
my
(
$r
,
$g
,
$b
,
$name
) =
split
(/\s+/,
$line
, 4);
# Ignore bad lines
next
unless
(
defined
$name
);
$RGB
{
$name
} = [
$r
,
$g
,
$b
];
$n
++;
}
close
(RGB);
return
$n
;
}
sub
version {
$GD::Graph::colour::VERSION
}
sub
dump_colours
{
my
$max
=
$_
[0] ?
$_
[0] :
keys
%RGB
;
my
$n
= 0;
my
$clr
;
foreach
$clr
(sorted_colour_list(
$max
))
{
last
if
$n
>
$max
;
"colour: $clr, "
.
"${$RGB{$clr}}[0], ${$RGB{$clr}}[1], ${$RGB{$clr}}[2]\n"
}
}
"Just another true value"
;
__END__
=head1 PREDEFINED COLOUR NAMES
white,
lgray,
gray,
dgray,
black,
lblue,
blue,
dblue,
gold,
lyellow,
yellow,
dyellow,
lgreen,
green,
dgreen,
lred,
red,
dred,
lpurple,
purple,
dpurple,
lorange,
orange,
pink,
dpink,
marine,
cyan,
lbrown,
dbrown.
=head1 AUTHOR
Martien Verbruggen E<lt>mgjv@tradingpost.com.auE<gt>
=head2 Copyright
GIFgraph: Copyright (c) 1995-1999 Martien Verbruggen.
Chart::PNGgraph: Copyright (c) 1999 Steve Bonds.
GD::Graph: Copyright (c) 1999 Martien Verbruggen.
All rights reserved. This package is free software; you can redistribute
it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself.
=head1 SEE ALSO
L<GD::Graph>,
L<GD::Graph::FAQ>