#============================================================= -*-Perl-*- # # Template::Plugin::GD::Image # # DESCRIPTION # # Simple Template Toolkit plugin interfacing to the GD::Image # class in the GD.pm module. # # AUTHOR # Craig Barratt # # COPYRIGHT # Copyright (C) 2001 Craig Barratt. All Rights Reserved. # # This module is free software; you can redistribute it and/or # modify it under the same terms as Perl itself. # #---------------------------------------------------------------------------- # # $Id: Image.pm,v 1.55 2004/01/13 16:20:46 abw Exp $ # #============================================================================ package Template::Plugin::GD::Image; require 5.004; use strict; use GD; use Template::Plugin; use base qw( GD Template::Plugin ); use vars qw( $VERSION ); $VERSION = sprintf("%d.%02d", q$Revision: 1.55 $ =~ /(\d+)\.(\d+)/); sub new { my $class = shift; my $context = shift; return new GD::Image(@_); } 1; __END__ #------------------------------------------------------------------------ # IMPORTANT NOTE # This documentation is generated automatically from source # templates. Any changes you make here may be lost. # # The 'docsrc' documentation source bundle is available for download # from http://www.template-toolkit.org/docs.html and contains all # the source templates, XML files, scripts, etc., from which the # documentation for the Template Toolkit is built. #------------------------------------------------------------------------ =head1 NAME Template::Plugin::GD::Image - Interface to GD Graphics Library =head1 SYNOPSIS [% USE im = GD.Image(x_size, y_size) %] =head1 EXAMPLES [% FILTER null; USE gdc = GD.Constants; USE im = GD.Image(200,100); black = im.colorAllocate(0 ,0, 0); red = im.colorAllocate(255,0, 0); r = im.string(gdc.gdLargeFont, 10, 10, "Large Red Text", red); im.png | stdout(1); END; -%] [% FILTER null; USE im = GD.Image(100,100); # allocate some colors black = im.colorAllocate(0, 0, 0); red = im.colorAllocate(255,0, 0); blue = im.colorAllocate(0, 0, 255); # Draw a blue oval im.arc(50,50,95,75,0,360,blue); # And fill it with red im.fill(50,50,red); # Output binary image in PNG format im.png | stdout(1); END; -%] [% FILTER null; USE im = GD.Image(100,100); USE c = GD.Constants; USE poly = GD.Polygon; # allocate some colors white = im.colorAllocate(255,255,255); black = im.colorAllocate(0, 0, 0); red = im.colorAllocate(255,0, 0); blue = im.colorAllocate(0, 0,255); green = im.colorAllocate(0, 255,0); # make the background transparent and interlaced im.transparent(white); im.interlaced('true'); # Put a black frame around the picture im.rectangle(0,0,99,99,black); # Draw a blue oval im.arc(50,50,95,75,0,360,blue); # And fill it with red im.fill(50,50,red); # Draw a blue triangle poly.addPt(50,0); poly.addPt(99,99); poly.addPt(0,99); im.filledPolygon(poly, blue); # Output binary image in PNG format im.png | stdout(1); END; -%] =head1 DESCRIPTION The GD.Image plugin provides an interface to GD.pm's GD::Image class. The GD::Image class is the main interface to GD.pm. It is very important that no extraneous template output appear before or after the image. Since some methods return values that would otherwise appear in the output, it is recommended that GD.Image code be wrapped in a null filter. The methods that produce the final output (eg, png, jpeg, gd etc) can then explicitly make their output appear by using the stdout filter, with a non-zero argument to force binary mode (required for non-modern operating systems). See L for a complete description of the GD library and all the methods that can be called via the GD.Image plugin. See L for a plugin that allows you access to GD.pm's constants. =head1 AUTHOR Craig Barratt Ecraig@arraycomm.comE Lincoln D. Stein wrote the GD.pm interface to the GD library. =head1 VERSION 1.55, distributed as part of the Template Toolkit version 2.13, released on 30 January 2004. =head1 COPYRIGHT Copyright (C) 2001 Craig Barratt Ecraig@arraycomm.comE The GD.pm interface is copyright 1995-2000, Lincoln D. Stein. This module is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself. =head1 SEE ALSO L, L, L, L, L =cut # Local Variables: # mode: perl # perl-indent-level: 4 # indent-tabs-mode: nil # End: # # vim: expandtab shiftwidth=4: