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    This is the community forum for my apps Pythonista and Editorial.

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    How to draw a circle segment (pie) in Scene?

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    • Oscar
      Oscar last edited by

      I don't have a complete answer, but I guess that Path.add_arc is what you are looking for.

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      • upwart
        upwart last edited by

        @Oscar
        Path.add_arc() is in UI, which is not useful for Scene as far as I know.

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        • Oscar
          Oscar last edited by Oscar

          I think there has been some discussion before where you can use ImageContext.get_image() to make an image and then use that one in the (pre 2.0) Scene? Perhaps you have to save it to file in between.

          Ohh. Actually this might be the way to use a PIL image with the old scene drawing: scene_drawing.load_pil_image()

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          • Oscar
            Oscar last edited by Oscar

            Not the most straight forward bit of Code, but it works:

            def draw(self):
            	with ui.ImageContext(200, 200) as ctx:
            		path = ui.Path()
            		path.move_to(180, 100)
            		path.add_arc(100, 100,  80, 0, radians(170))
            		path.line_width = 5
            		ui.set_color('blue')
            		path.stroke()
            		ui_image = ctx.get_image()
            	pil_image = Image.open(io.BytesIO(ui_image.to_png()))
            	scene_image = load_pil_image(pil_image)
            	image(scene_image)
            
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            • Webmaster4o
              Webmaster4o last edited by

              I have also been frustrated in the past by the lack of drawing functionality in scene. It lacks simple functions like drawing a polygon from a list of points. I'd love for scene to have all the functionality of PIL.ImageDraw.

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              • Oscar
                Oscar last edited by Oscar

                I think that right now the way to do it is using a PathNode. The old way of doing explicit drawing is not very efficient.

                Edit: I meant ShapeNode when I wrote PathNode...

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                • omz
                  omz last edited by omz

                  You can either use a ShapeNode if you're using the new scene API, or the triangle_strip function (also new in 2.0) if you're working in "legacy mode".

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                  • Olaf
                    Olaf last edited by

                    Example:

                    # coding: utf-8
                    
                    import math, scene, ui
                    
                    def circle_segment_path(r, angle):
                        '''Path for circle segment (i.e. 'pizza slice') of radius r and angle degrees'''
                        path = ui.Path()
                        path.move_to(0, 0)
                        path.line_to(r, 0)
                        path.add_arc(0, 0, r, 0, -math.radians(angle), False)
                        path.line_to(0, 0)
                        return path
                        
                    def circle_segment_shape(point, r, angle):
                        '''Blue & red shape for circle segment of radius r and angle degrees at point'''
                        return scene.ShapeNode(path=circle_segment_path(r, angle),
                                               fill_color='blue', stroke_color='red', position=point)
                    
                    class MyScene (scene.Scene):
                        def setup(self):
                            self.add_child(circle_segment_shape(self.size/2, 200, 45))
                    
                    if __name__ == '__main__':
                        scene.run(MyScene(), show_fps=True)```
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                    • Olaf
                      Olaf last edited by

                      Or if you want more 'pizza':

                      class MyScene (scene.Scene):
                          def setup(self):
                              for x in xrange(0, int(self.size.w)+50, 50):
                                  for y in xrange(0, int(self.size.h)+50, 50):            
                                      self.add_child(circle_segment_shape((x, y), 50, 45))
                      
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                      • upwart
                        upwart last edited by

                        @omz
                        I am trying to work out how to use triangle_strip, but I can't get it to work. For now all I want to do is draw a (solid) triangle.
                        If I try triangle_strip(((0,0),(10,0),(0,10))) I get a "Type error: expected sequence". Same if I close the sequence with a (0,0) tuple.

                        An example would be very helpful.

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                        • upwart
                          upwart last edited by

                          Thanks for all thoce nice examples with the new node objects. But for me the classical render loop is a must, because what am actuelly doing is prototyping an animation film that finally will be ported to Python on a Windows machine, most likely with PyGame or just plain PIL. Therefor the node objects are not an option to me, although I really like the concept.

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                          • Oscar
                            Oscar last edited by

                            The list of points in your example is not strictly a list, it is a tuple of tuples.

                            I haven't tried it myself, but does triangle_strip([(0,0),(10,0),(0,10)]) work?

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                            • upwart
                              upwart last edited by

                              @Oscar
                              No also the list of tuples as you suggest does not work. Alas.

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                              • Olaf
                                Olaf last edited by Olaf

                                Although the documentation states scene_drawing.triangle_strip(points[, tex_coords, image_name]), it seems tex_coords are mandatory (and of equal length as points). image_name is optional. I don't fully comprehend the logic at this time.
                                scene_drawing contains a call to triangle_strip in image_quad.

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                                • upwart
                                  upwart last edited by

                                  @Olaf
                                  Super! I just added a list of tuples with random values and voilà it works!
                                  Thanks.

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