#!e:\oml-win32\local_platform\bin\python.exe # # The Python Imaging Library # $Id$ # # this demo script illustrates how a 1-bit BitmapImage can be used # as a dynamically updated overlay # try: from tkinter import * except ImportError: from Tkinter import * from PIL import Image, ImageTk import sys # # an image viewer class UI(Frame): def __init__(self, master, im, value=128): Frame.__init__(self, master) self.image = im self.value = value self.canvas = Canvas(self, width=im.size[0], height=im.size[1]) self.backdrop = ImageTk.PhotoImage(im) self.canvas.create_image(0, 0, image=self.backdrop, anchor=NW) self.canvas.pack() scale = Scale(self, orient=HORIZONTAL, from_=0, to=255, resolution=1, command=self.update_scale, length=256) scale.set(value) scale.bind("", self.redraw) scale.pack() # uncomment the following line for instant feedback (might # be too slow on some platforms) # self.redraw() def update_scale(self, value): self.value = eval(value) self.redraw() def redraw(self, event=None): # create overlay (note the explicit conversion to mode "1") im = self.image.point(lambda v, t=self.value: v >= t, "1") self.overlay = ImageTk.BitmapImage(im, foreground="green") # update canvas self.canvas.delete("overlay") self.canvas.create_image(0, 0, image=self.overlay, anchor=NW, tags="overlay") # -------------------------------------------------------------------- # main root = Tk() im = Image.open(sys.argv[1]) if im.mode != "L": im = im.convert("L") # im.thumbnail((320,200)) UI(root, im).pack() root.mainloop()