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triangulizor 1.0.2
Triangulizor is a little Python script to apply a “triangular pixel”
effect to images, like so:
⇊☁⇊
Installation
Use pip to install:
pip install triangulizor
Usage
Command Line Usage
First, find an image to triangulize! To generate the example above,
either of these commands will do the trick:
$ triangulizor --show --tile-size=16 examples/in.jpg
The --show flag will cause the resulting image to be displayed
immediately instead of written to stdout or to disk. You can also
pass in the URL to an image that you want to process:
$ triangulizor --show --tile-size=16 https://github.com/mccutchen/triangulizor/raw/master/examples/in.jpg
All command line options are given below:
$ triangulizor --help
Outputs:
usage: triangulizor [-h] [-t TILE_SIZE] [-v] [-vv] [-s] [infile] [outfile]
Applies a "triangular pixel" effect to an image.
positional arguments:
infile Image to process (path or URL; defaults to STDIN)
outfile Output file (defaults to STDOUT)
optional arguments:
-h, --help show this help message and exit
-t TILE_SIZE, --tile-size TILE_SIZE
Tile size (should be divisible by 2)
-v, --verbose Verbose output
-vv Very verbose output
-s, --show Immediately display image instead of writing to
OUTFILE.
Library Usage
Triangulizor can also be used as a plain old Python library:
>>> import triangulizor
>>> triangulizor.triangulize('examples/in.jpg', 24)
<Image._ImageCrop image mode=RGB size=384x216 at 0x10A5BA758>
Credits
This was inspired entirely by this awesomely helpful blog post by
@revdancatt.
For personal and professional use. You cannot resell or redistribute these repositories in their original state.
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