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=head1 NAME

Imager::Engines - Programmable transformation operations

=head1 SYNOPSIS

  use Imager;

  my %opts;
  my @imgs;
  my $img;
  ...

  my $newimg = $img->transform(
      xexpr=>'x',
      yexpr=>'y+10*sin((x+y)/10)')
    or die $img->errstr;

  my $newimg = Imager::transform2(\%opts, @imgs)
    or die "transform2 failed: $Imager::ERRSTR";

  my $newimg = $img->matrix_transform(
     matrix=>[ -1, 0, $img->getwidth-1,
                0,  1, 0,
                0,  0, 1 ]);


=head1 DESCRIPTION

=head2 transform

The C<transform()> function can be used to generate spatial warps and
rotations and such effects.  It only operates on a single image and
its only function is to displace pixels.

It can be given the operations in postfix notation or the module
Affix::Infix2Postfix can be used to generate postfix code from infix
code.  Look in the test case t/t55trans.t for an example.

C<transform()> needs expressions (or opcodes) that determine the
source pixel for each target pixel.  Source expressions are infix
expressions using any of the +, -, *, / or ** binary operators, the -
unary operator, ( and ) for grouping and the sin() and cos()
functions.  The target pixel is input as the variables x and y.

You specify the x and y expressions as xexpr and yexpr respectively.
You can also specify opcodes directly, but that's magic deep enough
that you can look at the source code.

Note: You can still use the transform() function, but the transform2()
function is just as fast and is more likely to be enhanced and
maintained.



=head2 transform2

Imager also supports a C<transform2()> class method which allows you
perform a more general set of operations, rather than just specifying
a spatial transformation as with the transform() method, you can also
perform colour transformations, image synthesis and image
combinations from multiple source images.

C<transform2()> takes an reference to an options hash, and a list of
images to operate one (this list may be empty):

  my %opts;
  my @imgs;
  ...
  my $img = Imager::transform2(\%opts, @imgs)
      or die "transform2 failed: $Imager::ERRSTR";

The options hash may define a transformation function, and optionally:

=over

=item *

width - the width of the image in pixels.  If this isn't supplied the
width of the first input image is used.  If there are no input images
an error occurs.

=item *

height - the height of the image in pixels.  If this isn't supplied
the height of the first input image is used.  If there are no input
images an error occurs.

=item *

constants - a reference to hash of constants to define for the
expression engine.  Some extra constants are defined by Imager

=item *

channels - the number of channels in the output image.  If this isn't
supplied a 3 channel image will be created.

=back

The tranformation function is specified using either the expr or
rpnexpr member of the options.

=over

=item Infix expressions

You can supply infix expressions to transform 2 with the expr keyword.

$opts{expr} = 'return getp1(w-x, h-y)'

The 'expression' supplied follows this general grammar:

   ( identifier '=' expr ';' )* 'return' expr

This allows you to simplify your expressions using variables.

A more complex example might be:

$opts{expr} = 'pix = getp1(x,y); return if(value(pix)>0.8,pix*0.8,pix)'

Currently to use infix expressions you must have the Parse::RecDescent
module installed (available from CPAN).  There is also what might be a
significant delay the first time you run the infix expression parser
due to the compilation of the expression grammar.

=item Postfix expressions

You can supply postfix or reverse-polish notation expressions to
transform2() through the rpnexpr keyword.

The parser for rpnexpr emulates a stack machine, so operators will
expect to see their parameters on top of the stack.  A stack machine
isn't actually used during the image transformation itself.

You can store the value at the top of the stack in a variable called
foo using !foo and retrieve that value again using @foo.  The !foo
notation will pop the value from the stack.

An example equivalent to the infix expression above:

 $opts{rpnexpr} = 'x y getp1 !pix @pix value 0.8 gt @pix 0.8 * @pix ifp'

=back

transform2() has a fairly rich range of operators.

=over

=item +, *, -, /, %, **

multiplication, addition, subtraction, division, remainder and
exponentiation.  Multiplication, addition and subtraction can be used
on colour values too - though you need to be careful - adding 2 white
values together and multiplying by 0.5 will give you grey, not white.

Division by zero (or a small number) just results in a large number.
Modulo zero (or a small number) results in zero.  % is implemented
using fmod() so you can use this to take a value mod a floating point
value.

=item sin(N), cos(N), atan2(y,x)

Some basic trig functions.  They work in radians, so you can't just
use the hue values.

=item distance(x1, y1, x2, y2)

Find the distance between two points.  This is handy (along with
atan2()) for producing circular effects.

=item sqrt(n)

Find the square root.  I haven't had much use for this since adding
the distance() function.

=item abs(n)

Find the absolute value.

=item getp1(x,y), getp2(x,y), getp3(x, y)

Get the pixel at position (x,y) from the first, second or third image
respectively.  I may add a getpn() function at some point, but this
prevents static checking of the instructions against the number of
images actually passed in.

=item value(c), hue(c), sat(c), hsv(h,s,v), hsva(h,s,v,alpha)

Separates a colour value into it's value (brightness), hue (colour)
and saturation elements.  Use hsv() to put them back together (after
suitable manipulation), or hsva() to include a tranparency value.

=item red(c), green(c), blue(c), rgb(r,g,b)

Separates a colour value into it's red, green and blue colours.  Use
rgb(r,g,b) to put it back together, or rgba() to include a
transparency value.

=item alpha(c)

Retrieve the alpha value from a colour.

=item int(n)

Convert a value to an integer.  Uses a C int cast, so it may break on
large values.

=item if(cond,ntrue,nfalse), if(cond,ctrue,cfalse)

A simple (and inefficient) if function.

=item <=,<,==,>=,>,!=

Relational operators (typically used with if()).  Since we're working
with floating point values the equalities are 'near equalities' - an
epsilon value is used.

=item &&, ||, not(n)

Basic logical operators.

=back

A few examples:

=over

=item rpnexpr=>'x 25 % 15 * y 35 % 10 * getp1 !pat x y getp1 !pix @pix sat 0.7 gt @pat @pix ifp'

tiles a smaller version of the input image over itself where the
colour has a saturation over 0.7.

=item rpnexpr=>'x 25 % 15 * y 35 % 10 * getp1 !pat y 360 / !rat x y getp1 1 @rat - pmult @pat @rat pmult padd'

tiles the input image over itself so that at the top of the image the
full-size image is at full strength and at the bottom the tiling is
most visible.

=item rpnexpr=>'x y getp1 !pix @pix value 0.96 gt @pix sat 0.1 lt and 128 128 255 rgb @pix ifp'

replace pixels that are white or almost white with a palish blue

=item rpnexpr=>'x 35 % 10 * y 45 % 8 * getp1 !pat x y getp1 !pix @pix sat 0.2 lt @pix value 0.9 gt and @pix @pat @pix value 2 / 0.5 + pmult ifp'

Tiles the input image overitself where the image isn't white or almost
white.

=item rpnexpr=>'x y 160 180 distance !d y 180 - x 160 - atan2 !a @d 10 / @a + 3.1416 2 * % !a2 @a2 180 * 3.1416 / 1 @a2 sin 1 + 2 / hsv'

Produces a spiral.

=item rpnexpr=>'x y 160 180 distance !d y 180 - x 160 - atan2 !a @d 10 / @a + 3.1416 2 * % !a2 @a 180 * 3.1416 / 1 @a2 sin 1 + 2 / hsv'

A spiral built on top of a colour wheel.

=back

For details on expression parsing see L<Imager::Expr>.  For details on
the virtual machine used to transform the images, see
L<Imager::regmach.pod>.

  # generate a colorful spiral
  # requires that Parse::RecDescent be installed
  my $newimg = Imager::transform2({
                                   width => 160, height=>160,
                                   expr => <<EOS
  dist = distance(x, y, w/2, h/2);
  angle = atan2(y-h/2, x-w/2);
  angle2 = (dist / 10 + angle) % ( 2 * pi );
  return hsv(angle*180/pi, 1, (sin(angle2)+1)/2);
  EOS
                                  });

  # replace green portions of an image with another image
  my $newimg = Imager::transform2({
                                   rpnexpr => <<EOS
  x y getp2 !pat # used to replace green portions
  x y getp1 !pix # source with "green screen"
  @pix red 10 lt @pix blue 10 lt && # low blue and red
  @pix green 254 gt && # and high green
  @pat @pix ifp
  EOS
                                  }, $source, $background);

=head2 Matrix Transformations

Rather than having to write code in a little language, you can use a
matrix to perform affine transformations, using the matrix_transform()
method:

  my $newimg = $img->matrix_transform(matrix=>[ -1, 0, $img->getwidth-1,
                                            0,  1, 0,
                                            0,  0, 1 ]);

By default the output image will be the same size as the input image,
but you can supply the xsize and ysize parameters to change the size.

Rather than building matrices by hand you can use the Imager::Matrix2d
module to build the matrices.  This class has methods to allow you to
scale, shear, rotate, translate and reflect, and you can combine these
with an overloaded multiplication operator.

WARNING: the matrix you provide in the matrix operator transforms the
co-ordinates within the B<destination> image to the co-ordinates
within the I<source> image.  This can be confusing.

Since Imager has 3 different fairly general ways of transforming an
image spatially, this method also has a yatf() alias.  Yet Another
Transformation Function.

=cut