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GitHub - maxim/skeptick: Better ImageMagick for Ruby
Better ImageMagick for Ruby. Contribute to maxim/skeptick development by creating an account on GitHub.
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Better ImageMagick for Ruby. Contribute to maxim/skeptick development by creating an account on GitHub.
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Skeptick: Better ImageMagick for Ruby
Skeptick is an all-purpose DSL for building and running ImageMagick commands. It helps you build any transformations, from trivial resizes to complex mask algorithms and free drawing. In a nutshell, Skeptick is nothing more than a string manipulator and a process spawner. That's all it's meant to be. However, with Skeptick you get quite a few advantages over using plain shell-out or other libraries.
What you get
- Clean Ruby syntax to build ImageMagick commands
- Composable Image objects
- ImageMagick's
STDERR
output revealed in a Ruby exception - Ability to save intermediate images for debugging
- Minimal memory consumption on shell-outs thanks to posix-spawn
- Emphasis on performing the whole transformation in a single command
Installation
Add this line to your application's Gemfile:
gem 'skeptick'
And then execute:
$ bundle
Or install it yourself as:
$ gem install skeptick
Usage
To use Skeptick, you simply require it and include the module into your class.
require 'skeptick'
class MyClass
include Skeptick
def convert_some_image
cmd = convert(to: 'result.png') do
# ...
end
cmd.run
end
end
The cmd
object seen in above example can be inspected to see the exact command
that Skeptick will run. Simply use cmd.inspect
or cmd.to_s
. Skeptick never
runs anything until you call run
(except for one very special case), so you
can inspect commands all you want before executing them.
If you don't want to require all of Skeptick, you can just require the core, and and select any specific sugar you want.
require 'skeptick/core'
require 'skeptick/sugar/resized_image'
require 'skeptick/sugar/compose'
See the lib/skeptick/sugar
dir for all the goodies.
In Rails Skeptick will automatically use Rails.logger
and Rails.root
as
cd_path
. You can also configure your own.
Skeptick.logger = MyLogger.new
Skeptick.cd_path = '/some/dir'
You can enable debug_mode
to display every executed command in the log.
Skeptick.debug_mode = true
Security Note
Never insert any user input into any of Skeptick's commands. This should be obvious. Skeptick executes strings in your shell.
DSL
Take a look at logo.rb to see thow this logo was generated.
A lot is going on in the above script, no worries, it's just a showcase. I bet
the first thing you noticed is a shitstorm of little method names like canvas
,
font
, write
, draw
, etc. Well, they are all sugar. We will cover sugar
below.
There are actually only 2 useful methods in all of Skeptick: convert
and
set
.
Convert
convert
can be used both standalone and inside another convert
. You could
say this.
command = convert('image1.png', to: 'image2.png') do
set :resize, '200x200'
end
# OUTPUT:
# convert image1.png -resize 200x200 image2.png
Or you could put it inside, and it will become a parenthesized subcommand.
command = convert('image1.png', to: 'image2.png') do
convert do
set '+clone' # pull in image1 into parentheses
set :resize, '100x100' # resize image1's clone in memory
end
set '-compose', 'over'
set '-composite'
end
# OUTPUT:
# convert image1.png ( +clone -resize 100x100 )
# -compose over -composite image2.png
If you love parentheses a lot, you could nest convert
infinitely. However,
ImageMagick's clone
, delete
, and swap
are your friends, learn them to
cure parenthethitis.
Oh, speaking of nesting — we can reuse that whole command inside another command
by passing it to convert
in place of an image filepath.
new_command = convert(command, to: 'whatever.png') do
set '-resize', '300x300'
end
# OUTPUT:
# convert
# ( image1.png ( +clone -resize 100x100 ) -compose over -composite )
# -resize 300x300 whatever.png
See what I did there? The command
from previous snippet is passed into
convert
. If you have a convert
object in a variable, you can use it inside
another convert
object down the line. Nesting possibilities are endless.
The same snippet could also be written like this.
new_command = convert(to: 'whatever.png') do
image command
set :resize, '300x300'
end
2 differences: 1 - instead of passing in command
as argument we declare it
inside the block. 2 - resize is a symbol. Any symbol passed into set
automatically becomes a string with dash in front of it. Speaking of set.
Set
set
adds stuff to your command. You can give it any various arguments, it
doesn't care.
# Works the same way:
set '-resize', '100x100'
set :resize, '100x100'
# bad, won't work
set '-resize 100x100'
Watch out for the fact that it shell-escapes every argument, so if you write set '-resize foo'
, you will get an error, since the space will be escaped, and shell would treat that whole string as single word.`
In addition to set
there are also prepend
and append
to put stuff at the
beginning or end of a command, but they are rarely useful, and mostly for
implementing your own sugar.
Sugar
Skeptick comes with a bunch of sugar. When you require Skeptick, you can simply require everything. This includes all the sugar functionality.
require 'skeptick'
However, you can require just the core stuff described above, and select any sugar you want.
require 'skeptick/core'
require 'skeptick/sugar/compose'
Compose Sugar
Compose is sugar that adds compose
shortcut to Skeptick's DSL.
command = compose(:multiply, 'a.png', 'b.png', to: 'out.png') do
set :resize, '200x200'
end
# OUTPUT:
# convert a.png b.png -compose multiply -resize 200x200 -composite out.png
It takes the blending type as the first argument, and injects some extra stuff into the resulting command.
As with convert
, you don't have to list your images as method arguments.
Instead you could declare them inside the block using the image
method. The
following command does the same thing.
command = compose(:multiply, to: 'out.png') do
image 'a.png'
convert 'b.png'
set :resize, '200x200'
end
Note: image
is alias of convert
.
Since most of Skeptick's power comes from the ability to infinitely nest things,
here's an example involving a nested compose
.
command = convert('image1.png', to: 'result.png') do
compose(:multiply) do
image 'image2.png[200x200]'
convert 'image3.png' do
set :unsharp, '0x5'
end
end
end
# OUTPUT:
# convert
# image1.png image2.png[200x200] ( image3.png -unsharp 0x5 ) -compose
# multiply -composite result.png"
Notice how we nest compose
inside of convert
, and then convert
inside of
compose
.
Compose Operators
This is more of a gimmick than a real feature, but you can use math operators
like +
, -
, *
, /
, &
, |
to compose images. These are all based on
compose
method. Here's a multiply example.
image1 = image('foo.png')
image2 = image('bar.png')
result = convert(image1 * image2, to: 'baz.png')
# OUTPUT:
# convert foo.png bar.png -compose multiply -composite baz.png
As you can see, this is equivalent of simply using compose
.
# Same thing
result = compose(:multiply, 'foo.png', 'bar.png', to: 'baz.png')
Check out lib/skeptick/sugar/compose.rb for what these operators do.
clone, delete, swap
Skeptick provides methods clone
, delete
, and swap
to
manipulate declared images in a sequence, just like in ImageMagick CLI.
command = compose(:over, 'image1.png', to: 'result.png') do
# You could think of image sequence as a ruby array. Here's what it would
# look like right now.
# [ 'image1.png' ]
compose(:multiply) do
image 'mask.png' # loading another image for this operation
clone(0) # cloning image1.png from outside "into parentheses"
end
# Sequence at this point:
# [ 'image1.png', 'result of compose(:multiply)' ]
delete(0) # deleting image1.png from the sequence and from memory
# Sequence at this point:
# [ 'result of compose(:multiply)' ]
# At this point the only image loaded in memory is the one produced by the
# compose(:multiply) command above. Let's load another one.
image 'image2.png'
# Sequence at this point:
# [ 'result of compose(:multiply)', 'image2.png' ]
# Now we have two images in the sequence. We can swap them in case we need
# to change their order.
swap
# Sequence at this point:
# [ 'image2.png', 'result of compose(:multiply)' ]
# Now image2.png is first in the sequence, and the output of
# compose(:multiply) is second. Since our outermost command is compose(:over),
# at this point these 2 images will be composed over each other, and the
# result written to result.png.
end
# OUTPUT
# convert
# image1.png ( mask.png -clone 0 -compose multiply -composite )
# -delete 0 image2.png +swap -compose over -composite result.png
You can use clone
and delete
to refer to multiple images at once by passing
mutliple indexes as arguments, like clone(0,1,2)
or delete(0,1)
. Ranges are
also accepted. Without any arguments clone
and delete
are translated to
ImageMagick's +clone
and +delete
. They then refer to the last image in the
sequence. Same with swap
- you can provide two indexes in arguments like
swap(1,3)
to swap any 2 images in the sequence, or without arguments it'll
act as +swap
- which swaps last two images.
Write
Sometimes you might want to take a look at an intermediate image that's being
generated inside parentheses, nested somewhere in your command. You can do so
with the help of write '/path/to/img.png'
, which is defined in
skeptick/sugar/write.rb
.
command = convert(to: 'result.png') do
compose(:multiply, 'a.png', 'b.png') do
write '~/Desktop/debug.png'
end
set :resize, '200x200'
end
In this case the result of inner compose
command will be saved to desktop
without affecting anything else. This is a feature that already exists in
ImageMagick, as you can see for yourself from generated command:
convert
( a.png b.png -compose multiply -composite -write ~/Desktop/debug.png )
-resize 200x200 result.png
Documentation is to be continued...
Contributing
- Fork it
- Create your feature branch (
git checkout -b my-new-feature
) - Commit your changes (
git commit -am 'Add some feature'
) - Push to the branch (
git push origin my-new-feature
) - Create new Pull Request
Ruby Resources
are all listed below.
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