NAME
Image::Base::Gtk2::Gdk::Pixbuf -- draw image files using Gtk2::Gdk::Pixbuf
SYNOPSIS
use Image::Base::Gtk2::Gdk::Pixbuf;
my $image = Image::Base::Gtk2::Gdk::Pixbuf->new
(-width => 100,
-height => 100);
$image->line (0,0, 99,99, '#FF00FF');
$image->rectangle (10,10, 20,15, 'white');
CLASS HIERARCHY
Image::Base::Gtk2::Gdk::Pixbuf
is a subclass of Image::Base
,
Image::Base
Image::Base::Gtk2::Gdk::Pixbuf
DESCRIPTION
Image::Base::Gtk2::Gdk::Pixbuf
extends Image::Base
to create and update image files using GdkPixbuf. PNG and JPEG can always be read and written, and in recent Gtk also TIFF, ICO and BMP. Many further formats can be read but not written, including XPM, GIF, XBM and PCX.
Pixbufs are held in client-side memory and don't require an X server or Gtk2->init()
, which means they can be used for general-purpose image and image file manipulations.
The current drawing code is not very fast, but if you've got some pixel twiddling in Image::Base
style then this is a handy way to have it read or write several file formats.
Colour Names
Colour names are anything recognised by Gtk2::Gdk::Color->parse()
, which means various names like "pink" plus hex #RRGGBB or #RRRRGGGGBBB. As of Gtk 2.20 the names are from the Pango compiled-in copy of the X11 rgb.txt. Special colour "None" means a transparent pixel on a pixbuf with an "alpha" channel.
Only 8-bit RGB or RGBA pixbufs are supported by this module. This is all that Gtk 2.20 itself supports too.
FUNCTIONS
See "FUNCTIONS" in Image::Base for the behaviour common to all Image-Base classes.
$image = Image::Base::Gtk2::Gdk::Pixbuf->new (key=>value,...)
-
Create and return a new GdkPixbuf image object. It can be pointed at an existing pixbuf,
$image = Image::Base::Gtk2::Gdk::Pixbuf->new (-pixbuf => $gdkpixbuf);
Or a file can be read,
$image = Image::Base::Gtk2::Gdk::Pixbuf->new (-file => '/my/file/name.jpeg');
Or a new pixbuf created with width and height,
$image = Image::Base::Gtk2::Gdk::Pixbuf->new (-width => 10, -height => 10);
When creating a pixbuf an alpha channel (transparency) can be requested with
-has_alpha
,$image = Image::Base::Gtk2::Gdk::Pixbuf->new (-width => 10, -height => 10, -has_alpha => 1);
$image->load ()
$image->load ($filename)
-
Read the
-file
, or set-file
to$filename
and then read. This creates and sets a new underlying-pixbuf
because it's not possible to read into an existing pixbuf object, only read a new one.-file_format
is set from the loaded file's format. $image->save ()
$image->save ($filename)
-
Write the
-file
, or set-file
to$filename
and then write.-file_format
is the saved format.If
-file_format
is not set there's a secret experimental feature which looks up the-file
filename extension in the available pixbuf formats. Is that a good idea, or would just saypng
fallback be better?Some formats can be loaded but not saved.
png
andjpeg
can be saved always, thenico
in Gtk 2.4 up,bmp
in Gtk 2.8 up, andtiff
in Gtk 2.10 up.
ATTRIBUTES
-pixbuf
(Gtk2::Gdk::Pixbuf
object)-
The target
Gtk2::Gdk::Pixbuf
object. -file_format
(string, default undef)-
The file format from the last
load
and to use insave
. This is one of the GdkPixbuf format names such as "png" or "jpeg", in upper or lower case. -width
(integer, read-only)-height
(integer, read-only)-
The size of a pixbuf cannot be changed once created.
-has_alpha
(boolean, read-only)-
Whether the underlying pixbuf has a alpha channel, meaning a transparency mask (or partial transparency). This cannot be changed once created.
-quality_percent
(0 to 100 orundef
)-
The image quality when saving to JPEG format. JPEG compresses by reducing colours and resolution in ways that are not too noticeable to the human eye. 100 means full quality, no such reductions.
undef
means the GdkPixbuf default, which is 75.This becomes the
quality
parameter to$pixbuf->save()
. -zlib_compression
(integer, no default)-
The Zlib compression level to use when saving.
This becomes the
compress
parameter to$pixbuf->save()
if applicable (only "png" format currently) and if possible (which means Gtk 2.8.0 up). -hotx
(integer or undef, default undef)-hoty
(integer or undef, default undef)-
The cursor hotspot in
xpm
andico
images.These are loaded from
xpm
andico
files in Gtk 2.2 up (get_option
"x_hot" and "y_hot"), and are saved toico
in Gtk 2.4 and higher (ico
saving is new in Gtk 2.4, and there's noxpm
saving as of Gtk 2.22).In the current code these are treated as belonging to the pixbuf, so a new pixbuf set or loaded replaces
-hotx
or-hoty
. But the settings are not held in the pixbuf as such since as of Gtk 2.22$pixbuf->set_option
won't replace existing option values in the pixbuf.
SEE ALSO
Image::Base, Gtk2::Gdk::Pixbuf, Image::Xpm
HOME PAGE
http://user42.tuxfamily.org/image-base-gtk2/index.html
LICENSE
Copyright 2010, 2011, 2012 Kevin Ryde
Image-Base-Gtk2 is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by the Free Software Foundation; either version 3, or (at your option) any later version.
Image-Base-Gtk2 is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU General Public License for more details.
You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License along with Image-Base-Gtk2. If not, see http://www.gnu.org/licenses/.