Automated image processing for Django. Currently v4.0
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Matthew Tretter 8911836b53 Change how we set ImageFile.MAXBLOCK
Previously, we set it to an arbitrary large number (which turned out
not to be large enough in some cases). Since we may have been
overriding something the user explicitly chose (and our value may be
overridden by another app), that probably wasn't good. After this
change, `MAXBLOCK` is only increased when it needs to be--and even
then, only temporarily.
2011-11-05 21:20:36 -04:00
docs Fixing some reST syntax. 2011-11-03 14:16:08 +09:00
imagekit Change how we set ImageFile.MAXBLOCK 2011-11-05 21:20:36 -04:00
tests Basic tests for extension_to_format and format_to_extension. References #45. 2011-11-03 02:57:01 +09:00
.gitignore Adding distutils stuff to .gitignore. 2011-02-11 12:59:24 -08:00
AUTHORS Merge branch 'new_api' of https://github.com/matthewwithanm/django-imagekit into release/1.0.0 2011-10-20 12:06:10 +09:00
LICENSE Wrangling in a stray line. 2011-02-10 15:20:40 -08:00
MANIFEST.in Making sure the templates make it via pip. Fixes #39. 2011-11-02 13:42:35 +09:00
README.rst Slightly updated README to correctly render as reStructuredText. 2011-10-31 16:24:29 +01:00
setup.py Making sure the templates make it via pip. Fixes #39. 2011-11-02 13:42:35 +09:00

ImageKit is a Django app that helps you to add variations of uploaded images
to your models. These variations are called "specs" and can include things
like different sizes (e.g. thumbnails) and black and white versions.


Installation
------------

1. ``pip install django-imagekit``
   (or clone the source and put the imagekit module on your path)
2. Add ``'imagekit'`` to your ``INSTALLED_APPS`` list in your project's settings.py


Adding Specs to a Model
-----------------------

Much like ``django.db.models.ImageField``, Specs are defined as properties
of a model class::

    from django.db import models
    from imagekit.models import ImageSpec

    class Photo(models.Model):
        original_image = models.ImageField(upload_to='photos')
        formatted_image = ImageSpec(image_field='original_image', format='JPEG',
                quality=90)

Accessing the spec through a model instance will create the image and return
an ImageFile-like object (just like with a normal
``django.db.models.ImageField``)::

    photo = Photo.objects.all()[0]
    photo.original_image.url # > '/media/photos/birthday.tiff'
    photo.formatted_image.url # > '/media/cache/photos/birthday_formatted_image.jpeg'

Check out ``imagekit.models.ImageSpec`` for more information.


Processors
----------

The real power of ImageKit comes from processors. Processors take an image, do
something to it, and return the result. By providing a list of processors to
your spec, you can expose different versions of the original image::

    from django.db import models
    from imagekit.models import ImageSpec
    from imagekit.processors import resize, Adjust

    class Photo(models.Model):
        original_image = models.ImageField(upload_to='photos')
        thumbnail = ImageSpec([Adjust(contrast=1.2, sharpness=1.1),
                resize.Crop(50, 50)], image_field='original_image',
                format='JPEG', quality=90)

The ``thumbnail`` property will now return a cropped image::

    photo = Photo.objects.all()[0]
    photo.thumbnail.url # > '/media/cache/photos/birthday_thumbnail.jpeg'
    photo.thumbnail.width # > 50
    photo.original_image.width # > 1000

The original image is not modified; ``thumbnail`` is a new file that is the
result of running the ``imagekit.processors.resize.Crop`` processor on the
original.

The ``imagekit.processors`` module contains processors for many common
image manipulations, like resizing, rotating, and color adjustments. However,
if they aren't up to the task, you can create your own. All you have to do is
implement a ``process()`` method::

    class Watermark(object):
        def process(self, image):
            # Code for adding the watermark goes here.
            return image

    class Photo(models.Model):
        original_image = models.ImageField(upload_to='photos')
        watermarked_image = ImageSpec([Watermark()], image_field='original_image',
                format='JPEG', quality=90)


Admin
-----

ImageKit also contains a class named ``imagekit.admin.AdminThumbnail``
for displaying specs (or even regular ImageFields) in the
`Django admin change list`_. AdminThumbnail is used as a property on
Django admin classes::

    from django.contrib import admin
    from imagekit.admin import AdminThumbnail
    from .models import Photo


    class PhotoAdmin(admin.ModelAdmin):
        list_display = ('__str__', 'admin_thumbnail')
        admin_thumbnail = AdminThumbnail(image_field='thumbnail')


    admin.site.register(Photo, PhotoAdmin)

AdminThumbnail can even use a custom template. For more information, see
``imagekit.admin.AdminThumbnail``.

.. _`Django admin change list`: https://docs.djangoproject.com/en/dev/intro/tutorial02/#customize-the-admin-change-list