Text-based Image Editor
CLI tool that allows generation of images out of text script files. Inspired by Markdown and LaTeX.
Note: If you get permission errors as a result of running any of the commands below, try to run them again using sudo
command.
- Install the Node.js v8.11.4 runtime environment from https://nodejs.org.
- Update npm package manager (that gets installed with Node.js) to the latest version by running
npm install -g npm
in the command line. - Install the TypeScript runtime environment using npm by running
npm install -g [email protected] [email protected]
- Navigate to the tbieditor source code directory using the
cd
command. - Install tbieditor dependencies locally by running
npm install
. - Add the tbieditor CLI to your command line by running
npm link
. - Congratulation, you've got tbieditor installed! Confirm installation has succeeded by running
tbieditor -h
, which should output a welcome message and usage options.
- To run the tool, a script file is needed. For now, let's use the first script file in the
examples
directory called1-house.tbi
as an example. - Run
tbieditor examples/1-house.tbi
. This will generate the outputted images inside the current directory. - To run the tool on multiple files, you can supply their names together. For example, you can run
tbieditor examples/1-house.tbi examples/2-kcl.tbi
. - To change the output directory of the outputted images, you can supply the output directory using the
-o
flag. For example, you can runtbieditor examples/2-kcl.tbi -o path/to/output/directory
. - Now you could try running all of the examples inside the
exmaples
directory by runningtbieditor examples/1-house.tbi examples/2-kcl.tbi examples/3-web-browser.tbi -o output
. - Check the outputted image files in the
output
directory. They should look exactly the same as the images insideexamples/expected
.
To run the tests, run:
npm run test
This will run and output the results of:
- the TypeScript linter.
- unit and end-to-end tests.
- test code coverage report.
To add a new object in the image, we can use the node addition statement:
+
This will create a new object (which is a 100x100px black rectangle by default).
However, running the tool on this script file wouldn't output anything yet. We need to add an export statement at the end of the file:
+
-> 'foo.svg'
This will instruct the tool to output an SVG image consisting of all of the objects that has been added so far. We could also use .png
, .jpeg
and .jpg
extensions instead to output images with different formats.
To change the properties of an object, we can use the assignment statement:
+
fill = 'blue'
width = 500
-> 'foo.svg'
Mathematical expressions can be used:
width = 500
height = width / 2
Custom variables can be defined (must start with a $ sign and can contain letters, dashes and underscores):
$foo = 'bar'
Loops can be used:
for $colour in ['black', 'blue', 'red'] {
fill = $colour
}
Comments can be used:
/**
* Some multi-line comment.
*/
$foo = 'bar' // inline comment
Let's combine what we learnt so far. Try running the following script file and see what you get:
+
width = 500
height = width / 2
for $colour in ['black', 'blue', 'red'] {
fill = $colour
-> $colour + '.svg'
}
Each subsection below will list the properties that could be used by different object types.
+
type = 'rect'
width = 100
height = 100
x = 0 // x position from left edge of image
y = 0 // y position from top edge of image
rx = 0 // x radius of rectangle corners
ry = 0 // y radius of rectangle corners
+
type = 'circle'
r = 0 // radius
cx = 0 // x position of circle centre
cy = 0 // y position of circle centre
+
type = 'text'
content = 'Hello World!'
x = 0
y = 0
font-family = 'Times'
font-size = 18
font-weight = 'bold'
font-style = 'italic'
text-decoration = 'underline'
text-anchor = 'middle' // start | middle | end
letter-spacing = 2
word-spacing = 5
+
type = 'image'
href = 'assets/logo.png' // relative path to image
x = 0
y = 0
width = 100
height = 100
The following properties are presentational and can be used with any object type:
fill = 'white'
opacity = 0.5 // from 0 to 1
stroke = 'black'
stroke-width = 1
stroke-opacity = 1
Other shape type properties can be found in the src/SVG
directory. Each shape has a class file representing it in that directory.