| Pynche - The PYthonically Natural Color and Hue Editor |
| |
| Contact: Barry A. Warsaw |
| Email: bwarsaw@python.org |
| Version: 1.3 |
| |
| Introduction |
| |
| Pynche is a color editor based largely on a similar program that I |
| originally wrote back in 1987 for the Sunview window system. That |
| editor was called ICE, the Interactive Color Editor. I'd always |
| wanted to port this program to X but didn't feel like hacking X |
| and C code to do it. Fast forward many years, to where Python + |
| Tkinter provides such a nice programming environment, with enough |
| power, that I finally buckled down and re-implemented it. I |
| changed the name because these days, too many other systems have |
| the acronym `ICE'. |
| |
| Pynche should work with any variant of Python after 1.5.2 |
| (e.g. 2.0.1 and 2.1.1), using Tk 8.0.x. It's been tested on |
| Solaris 2.6, Windows NT 4, and various Linux distros. You'll want |
| to be sure to have at least Tk 8.0.3 for Windows. Also, Pynche is |
| very colormap intensive, so it doesn't work very well on 8-bit |
| graphics cards; 24bit+ graphics cards are so cheap these days, |
| I'll probably never "fix" that. |
| |
| Pynche must find a text database of colors names in order to |
| provide `nearest' color matching. Pynche is distributed with an |
| rgb.txt file from the X11R6.4 distribution for this reason, along |
| with other "Web related" database (see below). You can use a |
| different file with the -d option. The file xlicense.txt contains |
| the license only for rgb.txt and both files are in the X/ |
| subdirectory. |
| |
| Pynche is pronounced: Pin'-chee |
| |
| |
| Running Standalone |
| |
| On Unix, start it by running the `pynche' script. On Windows, run |
| pynche.pyw to inhibit the console window. When run from the |
| command line, the following options are recognized: |
| |
| --database file |
| -d file |
| Alternate location of the color database file. Without this |
| option, the first valid file found will be used (see below). |
| |
| --initfile file |
| -i file |
| Alternate location of the persistent initialization file. See |
| the section on Persistency below. |
| |
| --ignore |
| -X |
| Ignore the persistent initialization file when starting up. |
| Pynche will still write the current option settings to the |
| persistent init file when it quits. |
| |
| --help |
| -h |
| Print the help message. |
| |
| initialcolor |
| a Tk color name or #rrggbb color spec to be used as the |
| initially selected color. This overrides any color saved in |
| the persistent init file. Since `#' needs to be escaped in |
| many shells, it is optional in the spec (e.g. #45dd1f is the |
| same as 45dd1f). |
| |
| |
| Running as a Modal Dialog |
| |
| Pynche can be run as a modal dialog, inside another application, |
| say as a general color chooser. In fact, Grail 0.6 uses Pynche |
| and a future version of IDLE may as well. Pynche supports the API |
| implemented by the Tkinter standard tkColorChooser module, with a |
| few changes as described below. By importing pyColorChooser from |
| the Pynche package, you can run |
| |
| pyColorChooser.askcolor() |
| |
| which will popup Pynche as a modal dialog, and return the selected |
| color. |
| |
| There are some UI differences when running as a modal |
| vs. standalone. When running as a modal, there is no "Quit" menu |
| item under the "File" menu. Instead there are "Okay" and "Cancel" |
| buttons. |
| |
| When "Okay" is hit, askcolor() returns the tuple |
| |
| ((r, g, b), "name") |
| |
| where r, g, and b are red, green, and blue color values |
| respectively (in the range 0 to 255). "name" will be a color name |
| from the color database if there is an exact match, otherwise it |
| will be an X11 color spec of the form "#rrggbb". Note that this |
| is different than tkColorChooser, which doesn't know anything |
| about color names. |
| |
| askcolor() supports the following optional keyword arguments: |
| |
| color |
| the color to set as the initial selected color |
| |
| master[*] |
| the master window to use as the parent of the modal |
| dialog. Without this argument, pyColorChooser will create |
| it's own Tkinter.Tk instance as the master. This may not |
| be what you want. |
| |
| databasefile |
| similar to the --database option, the value must be a |
| file name |
| |
| initfile[*] |
| similar to the --initfile option, the value must be a |
| file name |
| |
| ignore[*] |
| similar to the --ignore flag, the value is a boolean |
| |
| wantspec |
| When this is true, the "name" field in the return tuple |
| will always be a color spec of the form "#rrggbb". It |
| will not return a color name even if there is a match; |
| this is so pyColorChooser can exactly match the API of |
| tkColorChooser. |
| |
| [*] these arguments must be specified the first time |
| askcolor() is used and cannot be changed on subsequent calls. |
| |
| |
| The Colorstrip Window |
| |
| The top part of the main Pynche window contains the "variation |
| strips". Each strip contains a number of "color chips". The |
| strips always indicate the currently selected color by a highlight |
| rectangle around the selected color chip, with an arrow pointing |
| to the chip. Each arrow has an associated number giving you the |
| color value along the variation's axis. Each variation strip |
| shows you the colors that are reachable from the selected color by |
| varying just one axis of the color solid. |
| |
| For example, when the selected color is (in Red/Green/Blue |
| notation) 127/127/127, the Red Variations strip shows you every |
| color in the range 0/127/127 to 255/127/127. Similarly for the |
| green and blue axes. You can select any color by clicking on its |
| chip. This will update the highlight rectangle and the arrow, as |
| well as other displays in Pynche. |
| |
| Click on "Update while dragging" if you want Pynche to update the |
| selected color while you drag along any variation strip (this will |
| be a bit slower). Click on "Hexadecimal" to display the arrow |
| numbers in hex. |
| |
| There are also two shortcut buttons in this window, which |
| auto-select Black (0/0/0) and White (255/255/255). |
| |
| |
| The Proof Window |
| |
| In the lower left corner of the main window you see two larger |
| color chips. The Selected chip shows you a larger version of the |
| color selected in the variation strips, along with its X11 color |
| specification. The Nearest chip shows you the closest color in |
| the X11 database to the selected color, giving its X11 color |
| specification, and below that, its X11 color name. When the |
| Selected chip color exactly matches the Nearest chip color, you |
| will see the color name appear below the color specification for |
| the Selected chip. |
| |
| Clicking on the Nearest color chip selects that color. Color |
| distance is calculated in the 3D space of the RGB color solid and |
| if more than one color name is the same distance from the selected |
| color, the first one found will be chosen. |
| |
| Note that there may be more than one X11 color name for the same |
| RGB value. In that case, the first one found in the text database |
| is designated the "primary" name, and this is shown under the |
| Nearest chip. The other names are "aliases" and they are visible |
| in the Color List Window (see below). |
| |
| Both the color specifications and color names are selectable for |
| copying and pasting into another window. |
| |
| |
| The Type-in Window |
| |
| At the lower right of the main window are three entry fields. |
| Here you can type numeric values for any of the three color axes. |
| Legal values are between 0 and 255, and these fields do not allow |
| you to enter illegal values. You must hit Enter or Tab to select |
| the new color. |
| |
| Click on "Update while typing" if you want Pynche to select the |
| color on every keystroke (well, every one that produces a legal |
| value!) Click on "Hexadecimal" to display and enter color values |
| in hex. |
| |
| |
| Other Views |
| |
| There are three secondary windows which are not displayed by |
| default. You can bring these up via the "View" menu on the main |
| Pynche window. |
| |
| |
| The Text Window |
| |
| The "Text Window" allows you to see what effects various colors |
| have on the standard Tk text widget elements. In the upper part |
| of the window is a plain Tk text widget and here you can edit the |
| text, select a region of text, etc. Below this is a button "Track |
| color changes". When this is turned on, any colors selected in |
| the other windows will change the text widget element specified in |
| the radio buttons below. When this is turned off, text widget |
| elements are not affected by color selection. |
| |
| You can choose which element gets changed by color selection by |
| clicking on one of the radio buttons in the bottom part of this |
| window. Text foreground and background affect the text in the |
| upper part of the window. Selection foreground and background |
| affect the colors of the primary selection which is what you see |
| when you click the middle button (depending on window system) and |
| drag it through some text. |
| |
| The Insertion is the insertion cursor in the text window, where |
| new text will be inserted as you type. The insertion cursor only |
| has a background. |
| |
| |
| The Color List Window |
| |
| The "Color List" window shows every named color in the color name |
| database (this window may take a while to come up). In the upper |
| part of the window you see a scrolling list of all the color names |
| in the database, in alphabetical order. Click on any color to |
| select it. In the bottom part of the window is displayed any |
| aliases for the selected color (those color names that have the |
| same RGB value, but were found later in the text database). For |
| example, find the color "Black" and you'll see that its aliases |
| are "gray0" and "grey0". |
| |
| If the color has no aliases you'll see "<no aliases>" here. If you |
| just want to see if a color has an alias, and do not want to select a |
| color when you click on it, turn off "Update on Click". |
| |
| Note that the color list is always updated when a color is selected |
| from the main window. There's no way to turn this feature off. If |
| the selected color has no matching color name you'll see |
| "<no matching color>" in the Aliases window. |
| |
| |
| The Details Window |
| |
| The "Details" window gives you more control over color selection |
| than just clicking on a color chip in the main window. The row of |
| buttons along the top apply the specified increment and decrement |
| amounts to the selected color. These delta amounts are applied to |
| the variation strips specified by the check boxes labeled "Move |
| Sliders". Thus if just Red and Green are selected, hitting -10 |
| will subtract 10 from the color value along the red and green |
| variation only. Note the message under the checkboxes; this |
| indicates the primary color level being changed when more than one |
| slider is tied together. For example, if Red and Green are |
| selected, you will be changing the Yellow level of the selected |
| color. |
| |
| The "At Boundary" behavior determines what happens when any color |
| variation hits either the lower or upper boundaries (0 or 255) as |
| a result of clicking on the top row buttons: |
| |
| Stop |
| When the increment or decrement would send any of the tied |
| variations out of bounds, the entire delta is discarded. |
| |
| Wrap Around |
| When the increment or decrement would send any of the tied |
| variations out of bounds, the out of bounds value is wrapped |
| around to the other side. Thus if red were at 238 and +25 |
| were clicked, red would have the value 7. |
| |
| Preserve Distance |
| When the increment or decrement would send any of the tied |
| variations out of bounds, all tied variations are wrapped as |
| one, so as to preserve the distance between them. Thus if |
| green and blue were tied, and green was at 238 while blue was |
| at 223, and +25 were clicked, green would be at 15 and blue |
| would be at 0. |
| |
| Squash |
| When the increment or decrement would send any of the tied |
| variations out of bounds, the out of bounds variation is set |
| to the ceiling of 255 or floor of 0, as appropriate. In this |
| way, all tied variations are squashed to one edge or the |
| other. |
| |
| The top row buttons have the following keyboard accelerators: |
| |
| -25 == Shift Left Arrow |
| -10 == Control Left Arrow |
| -1 == Left Arrow |
| +1 == Right Arrow |
| +10 == Control Right Arrow |
| +25 == Shift Right Arrow |
| |
| |
| Keyboard Accelerators |
| |
| Alt-w in any secondary window dismisses the window. In the main |
| window it exits Pynche (except when running as a modal). |
| |
| Alt-q in any window exits Pynche (except when running as a modal). |
| |
| |
| Persistency |
| |
| Pynche remembers various settings of options and colors between |
| invocations, storing these values in a `persistent initialization |
| file'. The actual location of this file is specified by the |
| --initfile option (see above), and defaults to ~/.pynche. |
| |
| When Pynche exits, it saves these values in the init file, and |
| re-reads them when it starts up. There is no locking on this |
| file, so if you run multiple instances of Pynche at a time, you |
| may clobber the init file. |
| |
| The actual options stored include |
| |
| - the currently selected color |
| |
| - all settings of checkbox and radio button options in all windows |
| |
| - the contents of the text window, the current text selection and |
| insertion point, and all current text widget element color |
| settings. |
| |
| - the name of the color database file (but not its contents) |
| |
| You can inhibit Pynche from reading the init file by supplying the |
| --ignore option on the command line. However, you cannot suppress |
| the storing of the settings in the init file on Pynche exit. If |
| you really want to do this, use /dev/null as the init file, using |
| --initfile. |
| |
| |
| Color Name Database Files |
| |
| Pynche uses a color name database file to calculate the nearest |
| color to the selected color, and to display in the Color List |
| view. Several files are distributed with Pynche, described |
| below. By default, the X11 color name database file is selected. |
| Other files: |
| |
| html40colors.txt -- the HTML 4.0 guaranteed color names |
| |
| websafe.txt -- the 216 "Web-safe" colors that Netscape and MSIE |
| guarantee will not be dithered. These are specified in #rrggbb |
| format for both values and names |
| |
| webcolors.txt -- The 140 color names that Tim Peters and his |
| sister say NS and MSIE both understand (with some controversy over |
| AliceBlue). |
| |
| namedcolors.txt -- an alternative set of Netscape colors. |
| |
| You can switch between files by choosing "Load palette..." from |
| the "File" menu. This brings up a standard Tk file dialog. |
| Choose the file you want and then click "Ok". If Pynche |
| understands the format in this file, it will load the database and |
| update the appropriate windows. If not, it will bring up an error |
| dialog. |
| |
| |
| To Do |
| |
| Here's a brief list of things I want to do (some mythical day): |
| |
| - Better support for resizing the top level windows |
| |
| - More output views, e.g. color solids |
| |
| - Have the notion of a `last color selected'; this may require a |
| new output view |
| |
| - Support setting the font in the text view |
| |
| - Support distutils setup.py for installation |
| |
| I'm open to suggestions! |
| |
| |
| |
| Local Variables: |
| indent-tabs-mode: nil |
| End: |