User:Jacopo/Prototyping

From XPUB & Lens-Based wiki

↪Prototyping



Punchedcard.png

Notes

Tue 15.09 Lesson 1

Mon 21.09 Lesson 2 w/ Michael

Mon 28.09 Lesson 3 w/ Manetta

Wed 30.09 Lesson 4 w/ Michael

Morning Journey inside some individual experiments.
> Il Pleut Bot (from Federico)

import random

width = 10
height = 10
drops = [',','    ','    ','     ']
rain = ''

for x in range(width):
    for y in range(height):
        rain += random.choice(drops)
    print(rain)
    rain = ''

> Responsive Form (from Louisa)

print('Enter your name:')
name = input()
print('Hello, ' + name + ". Are you ready to choose your own adventure? If yes, Type one of these words to kickstart the engine: hot, yellow, bright")<br>

> Differences between LOOP and WHILE
> Differences between FLAT LOOP and NESTING LOOP

PIL

The Python Imaging Library (PIL) adds image processing capabilities to your Python interpreter. This library provides extensive file format support, an efficient internal representation, and fairly powerful image processing capabilities. It should provide a solid foundation for a general image processing tool.

Blending two images: Blendprocess.png

Image.blend(use1.convert("RGBA"), use2.convert("RGBA"), 0.5)
#The two images must have the same mode and size

NOTEBOOK of the day: https://git.xpub.nl/XPUB/S13-Words-for-the-Future-notebooks
PAD of the day: https://pad.xpub.nl/p/2020-09-30-prototyping

Wed 07.10 Lesson 5 w/ Michael and Manetta

Today's Goal: Making a A0 Quilt using different patches from XPUB1 Student.
We refer to Patch both as digital and physical part of the Quilt. In the early computer era, the Patch was a set of changes for a computer programme. To update, fix or improve the programme, new paper tape or punched cards were replacing the wrong segment, after being literally cut off.

Physical patches used to correct punched holes by covering them. (1944)

PAD of the day: https://pad.xpub.nl/p/XPUB1_ONLINE_07_10_2020

Editing an image with: aalibb library
> http://aa-project.sourceforge.net/aalib/

#Patch 2
from PIL import Image
from urllib.request import urlopen

f = Image.open (urlopen("https://here's the link"))
g = f.convert("1") #for b&w
g.save ("bw.png") #to save a new copy 

import aalib
screen = aalib.AsciiScreen(width=82, height=74) #size of the canvas
h = f.resize(screen.virtual_size).convert('L',dither=Image.NONE)
screen.put_image((0, 0), h)
print (screen.render())

Links

Check-in:
> https://www.effbot.org/imagingbook/pil-index.htm
> https://pillow.readthedocs.io/en/stable/

Library Sources to work with Images and ASCII:
> http://aa-project.sourceforge.net/aalib/
> http://jwilk.net/software/python-aalib

Command Line Introduction