html5 canvas shapes fill - html

I have a basic paint application on a canvas, and I want to make a drawing-border and by that create a stencil. In other words, I want to make a shape, and then I want the user to be able to draw only inside it, even when he tries to draw outside.
Do you have any idea how can i do it?
thanks

This can be achieved by making a clipping region. The basic idea is that there is a path on the canvas that all drawing is constrained to.
Make the shape, and instead of calling stroke() or fill(), call clip()
If you don't quite get how clipping regions work, there are a few examples around.

Related

Canvas: Mouse Events

I know it is not possible to add eventhandlers to specific circles or rectangles in canvas. But there are some nice frameworks like EaselJS, KineticJS, Paper.js, Fabric.js that support the eventhandling on specific elements.
Can someone explain me how do they work?
I think there are only two solutions.
1. You create for each element a new canvas region and put them on each other. In this way you can give each region an event handler.
2. You have only one canvas region and one event handler. In this way you have to do complex mathematical calculations to find out if a specific element was clicked. If you have only circles or rectangles, this solution might be easy. But if you have path with lots of curves, this solution is quite difficult.
I don't want to use the libraries. So it would be nice, if someone can help me.
Here's a BRIEF summary of how canvas drawing libraries work
An unaltered canvas is just a big bitmap. Once you draw shapes on the canvas, they are unaccessible, forgotten pixels.
Canvas drawing libraries store all your shapes into “retained” objects. Each shape object has sufficient information about itself to allow the drawing library to redraw it whenever necessary.
The canvas drawing libraries are the "controllers" for objects. The libraries have the algorithms necessary to track, manipulate and redraw all shape objects as necessary.
The following information is retained about every shape object:
Basic identification
ID,
Shape name
Parent or Container
Inherent properties of the shape:
Rectangular shapes( rect, image, text) know width and height.
Circular shapes (circles, elipses, regular polygons, stars) know radius and sidecount.
Lines know length.
Curved shapes (arcs, beziers, paths) know anchor points and control points.
Text also knows…well, the text!
Images also know their pixel data (usually stored in javascript Image objects)
Transformational information:
Starting X/Y coordinate
Translations—accumulated movements off the starting coordinate.
Rotations—accumulated rotations of this shape (usually in radians).
Scalings—accumulated resizings
Other transforms (less common) are skews and warps
Layering information—the current z-index
Styling information:
StrokeColor,
StrokeWidth,
FillColor,
Opacity,
isVisible,
lineCaps,
cornerRadius
Tracking abilities:
Bounding box—the smallest rectangle that completely contains this shape
This is used for “hit testing” to see if the mouse is inside this object (for selecting and dragging)
If you don't want to use a library, you may find my answer in this thread helpful. As markE says once the canvas is written to there is no way of tracking that data (unless you care to loop through each individual pixel and test its colour; though that is only really useful for pixel level collision detection).

Canvas Drawing Effect

Im starting on some simple-to-complex canvas scripting. I want to draw a circle. That's easy. The problem is the circle is drawn right away. What if I wanted the circle to slowly grow (lets say from a vertical line, to a semi circle, to a half circle, to a full circle) Is there any way in canvas to do this (natively) or do I need to make a function that builds and deletes several circles (quickly) to simulate the effect?
If the latter is true, is there any sort of performance hits I should be looking out for?
Thank you!
Any form of animation using canvas requires the canvas to be cleared and the next drawing in the sequence to be made. The Mozilla Development Network has a good tutorial on canvas and canvas animations.
Check out the animate.js library. Its is exactly what you need. Usage is same as jQueryUI.
What you need can be done by the following piece of code:
canvas_element.animateCircle(x,y,r);
There are other optional parameters like animateCircle(x,y,r,{'lineWidth':5, 'lineColour':'red', 'stop': function() {alert('completed');}}) & some other functions. Check the Readme file for details.

html5 basic paint tool

I'm new to html5. And I'm trying to create a basic painting tool.
What I want to do in this tool is to have one or more shapes(maybe overlapping) and to paint the shapes without getting the colors overlapped. If a circle is drawn inside a rectangle and if I start coloring the circle, the rectangle should not be painted even if the mouse is dragged over it unless the dragging starts inside it.
To achieve this should I use multiple canvases or shapes?
Thanks in advance.
Well, first you need to program in the idea of keeping track of separate shapes. If you haven't already done that see here for a tutorial.
I imagine your shapes will all be kept as images or in-memory canvases themselves. I'm not sure how else you can do it.
There are a million ways you could do this, here's one:
When you start your drawing operation you need to detect which shape you're on. Then you draw that shape to an in-memory canvas and switch that temporary canvas' globalcompositeoperation to source-atop. This will make sure the paint can only paint in the already opaque regions of that shape (if that's your intent here, which it seems to be).
All while you are painting you will want to update the temporary canvas and redraw the main canvas constantly. While you are redrawing the main canvas, instead of painting that shape's image file you'll want to paint the temporary canvas (if you use canvases to keep the shapes you can just update those in real time).
If you are not using temporary canvases for each shape, when you stop the drawing operation you are gonna have to update the image associated with the shape to complete the operation.
Using an in-memory canvas (not added to the DOM) for every shape (that is the size of the shape and no larger) will make coding things slightly easier and might not be that bad on performance. I'd give it a try with 100 and 1000 (or more) in-memory canvases on your targeted platforms to see though.
The alternative is to use one in-memory canvas and have an HTMLImageElement (png) that represents every shape, but using the canvas.toImageURL function can be a bit of a performance hit in itself. I'd try both methods to see which works best in your case. If the shape count is small enough, it probably doesn't matter which.

How to undraw, hide, remove, or delete an image from an html canvas?

this.context.drawImage(myimage, 0, 0);
Putting the image on the canvas is pretty well covered all over the web.
But how do I remove it after it's there?
Canvas is an immediate drawing surface. This means that you execute a command on it (drawImage or fillRect) and it does that command, and it doesn't give a damn what has just done. There is no undoing of something.
You had a hard time searching for it because there's no such thing as "removing" for a Canvas. All it knows is that it has some pixels of some color from somewhere. It has no idea where.
To simplify a bit, there are generally two ways:
Clear the entire canvas, and draw everything all over again EXCEPT the one image you do not want drawn
Use two canvases, one that only has the image and one with all the other stuff. Clear this canvas with clearRect(0,0,width,height) and you're done.
You'll notice in 1. that you will probably have to start keeping track of the things that you draw on canvas if you want some of them selectively removed or repositioned. Instilling object persistence, or rather turning canvas from an immediate drawing surface to a retained drawing surface, is something that a lot of canvas libraries do. If you want to do it yourself, I've written a few tutorails to help people get started.
If you want to look into libraries, take a peek at easel.js. It's pretty learnable.
Option 1:
Draw a rectangle over it of the same color as the background.
Option 2 (works for non-trivial background, but slower):
Get the pixel data from the canvas before drawing the image, then redraw that pixel data to remove the image.
So I came up with a quick and easy way to clear my canvas. I just put my <canvas> tags in between <p> tags with an Id, then each time i needed my canvas cleared I just rerendered my <p> tags by changing the innerHTML, works like a charm.

Zooming in and out on canvas

I wrote a paint application using the HTML5 canvas element.
Now I want to give the user an option to zoom in and out while painting.
How can I do this?
There are a few ways. It really depends on what you're looking for.
You could do it by scaling the entire context, as in ctx.scale(2,2), and then redrawing everything at this larger scale. Several things drawn, like paths and text, will scale gracefully. To accomplish this you will need to keep good track of everything drawn so far.
Another way is to take the entire canvas and draw it back to itself. This requires a temporary canvas because the operation is really: Draw to temp canvas, clear main, draw back to main scaled.
Another way is to use CSS transforms to merely zoom the canvas itself, which will make the image blurry (its zoomed!) but does not require changing any of the pixels already on the canvas.