Learning Objectives:

Software tools needed: terminal (command line), web browser and Python programming environment.

Download the Skeletal Notes and Focus Questions to guide you while studying this lab.
These are a useful tool for note taking and you can keep these handy to study for and refer to during the final exam.

Quizzes

At the end of this lab, don't forget to take Lab Quiz 3! See the quiz page for details of the work due this week.

Using Python, Gradescope, and Blackboard

See Lab 1 for details on using Python, Gradescope, and Blackboard.

Colors

There are several different ways to specify colors. We will use colors:

Names for Colors

For common colors, you can give the name of the color, as a string. For example, run the program (click the triangle) to see two turtles, drawing in different colors:


There are more than 100 colors that we can use by name. Here are the ones available in most web browsers and Python turtle packages:


Some are obvious, like ("red" or "blue"), others are a bit more obscure (like "mediumorchid" or "chartreuse"). What color is "mediumorchid"? Change the color of one of the turtles in the coding window above to find out. Add in a new turtle and make it your favorite color. Draw a few lines to demonstrate its color.

Colors by Decimals

As we saw above, the turtle package recognizes many common colors by name. If your favorite color is not on that list, you can make a new color by specifying how much of the red, green, and blue ('RGB') light intensity you would like. The range for each is from 0 (no light) to 255 (100% light). For example, if all the light intensities are 255 (100% of the possible), then the color is white.

Read the code below and guess what color each turtle is. Check your guess by running the program:

Let's look at some of the shades of red that are available. Here's our plan (or pseudocode):

  1. Create a turtle, tess.
  2. For 10, 20, 30, ..., 250,
  3.    Move forward 10 steps
  4.    Make the turtle a bit larger each time
  5.    Make the turtle a bit more red each time
Let's change each piece of our "To Do" list into Python code:
  1. Create a turtle, tess.

    We've done this before. We import the turtle module and set up the turtle. One new thing we need to do, is to tell the turtle library that we would like to represent colors as decimal numbers:

    #A program that demonstrates the shades of red
    #Fall 2017
    
    import turtle			#Import the turtle drawing package
    
    turtle.colormode(255)		#Allows colors to be given as 0...255
    tess = turtle.Turtle()		#Create a turtle
    

    To keep our drawing from running off the screen, we'll move tess backwards before we start our loop:

    tess.backward(100)		#Move her backwards, to give more space to draw
    
  2. For 10, 20, 30, ..., 250,

    This can be done with a for-loop and a range that starts at 10, stops at 255, and steps up by 10 each time:

    for i in range(0,255,10):
    
  3.    Move forward 10 steps
         tess.forward(10)		#Move forward
    
  4.    Make the turtle a bit larger each time
         tess.pensize(i)		#Set the drawing size to be i (larger each time)
    
  5.    Make the turtle a bit more red each time
         tess.color(i,0,0)		#Set the red channel to be i (brighter each time)
    

Here's the whole program altogether. Copy it over to an idle file window and try running it:

#A program that demonstrates the shades of red
#Fall 2017

import turtle				#Import the turtle drawing package

turtle.colormode(255)		#Allows colors to be given as 0...255
tess = turtle.Turtle()		#Create a turtle
tess.shape("turtle")		#Make it turtle shaped
tess.backward(100)			#Move her backwards, to give more space to draw

#For 0,10,20,...,250
for i in range(0,255,10):
     tess.forward(10)		#Move forward
     tess.pensize(i)		#Set the drawing size to be i (larger each time)
     tess.color(i,0,0)		#Set the red channel to be i (brighter each time)

The resulting graphics window is:

How would you show shades of green? What happens if you repeat the loop backwards (from 255 to 0)? When you have figured out the answer, see the Programming Problem List.

Colors by Hexadecimal

A common way to represent colors is using hexadecimal numbers. Our traditional decimal, or base-10 numbers, use 10 symbols for each digit: 0, 1, 2, 3, ..., 9. Hexadecimal, or base-16 numbers, use 16 symbols. In addition to 0, 1, 2, ..., 9, the letters A, B, C, D, E, and F are also used.

A good way to think about it is to think about what the world would be like if everyone had 8 fingers on each hand, instead of 5. When we count, on 10 fingers, we can use the symbols 0, 1, 2, ..., 9 to label each finger:


(from i-programmer.info)

Doing the same for 16 fingers, we use 0, 1, 2, ..., 9, and then A, B, ..., F when we run out of the normal symbols for numbers:


(from i-programmer.info)

The first 9 numbers are the same in both decimal and hexadecimal, but larger numbers are different. For example, counting to 10 on our 8-fingered hands gives the symbol A. So, the decimal number 10 is the single digit hexadecimal number, A.

Going in the other direction, the hexadecimal number 11, is counting through all the (8-fingered hands) fingers (16) plus one more, yielding 17.

Why does this matter? Our color values range in decimal from 0 to 255. If we write these in hexadecimal, the range is 0 to FF. FF is the largest two-digit hexadecimal number, so, this range of values fits perfectly in two-digit hexadecimal numbers. Triples of these hexadecimal values are an extremely common way to represent colors.

For example, here are some shades of blue, given with their name and hexadecimal value:

The leading hash sign ('#') is used to indicate that this is a hexadecimal number:

The first color on the list has 00 or 0% red, 00 or 0% green, and 00 or 0% red, and represents the color black. These shades of blue all have no red (first two digits are 00) and no green (middle two digits are 00). By varying the values of the last two digits, we have a dark, navy blue (80 in the last two digits) to a bright blue (FF in the last two digits).

We can set the color of turtles using hexcodes. For example, to create a turtle, named thea, and set her color to the medium blue (using the hex code from the above list), we can:

import turtle

thea = turtle.Turtle()
thea.shape("turtle")
thea.color("#0000CD")

producing a graphics window with:

The code above always produces a medium blue turtle. How would you modify the program to let the user specify a hex code for the color of the turtle? When you have figured out the answer, see the Programming Problem List.

Images

There are many different formats to store images. Some store the information about the color of every pixel ("picture element" or dot on the screen). Others store end points of lines or boundaries of regions and the colors of each. We focus on the former, and in particular, use the png (portable network graphics) file format, which is popular for storing images captured from cameras and is `lossless' (every pixel captured is stored, so, can also be quite large).

The textbook has a lovely visualization and explanation:

To specify a given pixel, you give its row, r, and column, c, in the grid. Counting from the upper left hand corner which has index 0,0. This is unlike standard Cartesian (math) coordinates but echos how matrices are often accessed.

Each pixel is represented by its the percentage of red, green, and blue ("RGB") values. Images are stored as a grid of red values, a grid of green values, and a grid of blue values.

For example, if we stored our image in the variable, img, we could access the red value by:

print("Upper left has red:", img[0,0,0])
and the amount of green:
print("Upper left has green:", img[0,0,1])
and the amount of blue:
print("Upper left has blue:", img[0,0,2])
Any point can be accessed via its coordinates (i,j) and the color channel (0 for red, 1 for green, and 2 for blue). In our example above, with the picture stored in the variable, img:
img[r,c,chan]
where the r is the row and c is the column of the pixel and chan is the color channel (0 for red, 1 for green, and 2 for blue). Note that when we are accessing parts of our images, we use the square brackets ('[' and ']'), just as we did for lists. The round parenthesis ('(' and ')') are used for functions (like print() and right()).

Let's write a program that manipulates an image.
To do so we will use a new package used for visualization and plotting called matplotlib.pyplot (abbreviated by convention as plt) When we use pyplot to read the image, the data is stored in a grid-like structure as described above, called a numpy array (thus the second package, numpy abbreviated np) This program does not use any of the numpy functions (we will next week), but that is what img and img2 are. Read through the code first, and then try it on your computer. What does it do? Note: this program assumes that you have a file called csBridge.png in the same directory. You can use that file, or substitute one of your own.

#Name:  CSci 127 Teaching Staff
#Date:  Fall 2017
#This program loads an image, displays it, and then creates, displays,
#    and saves a new image that has only the red channel displayed.

#Import the packages for images and arrays:
import matplotlib.pyplot as plt
import numpy as np


img = plt.imread('csBridge.png')   #Read in image from csBridge.png
plt.imshow(img)		                 #Load image into pyplot
plt.show()                         #Show the image (waits until closed to continue)

img2 = img.copy()        #make a copy of our image
img2[:,:,1] = 0          #Set the green channel to 0
img2[:,:,2] = 0          #Set the blue channel to 0

plt.imshow(img2)         #Load our new image into pyplot
plt.show()               #Show the image (waits until closed to continue)

plt.imsave('reds.png', img2)  #Save the image we created to the file: reds.png

The code above always produces an image with only the red channel displayed. What happens if you display only the red and blue channels? When you have figured out the answer, see the Programming Problem List.

More on Files & Command Line Interface

Last lab, we introduced the Unix shell commands:

The ls command has many options to give more information about what is in a folder. For example,

$ ls -l
is the "long" format of ls and gives additional information such as permissions (who is allowed to read, write, or execute the file), the owner and owner's group, the size, and the date of creation. For example, if our folder had a single directory, thomasH (like we created in Lab 2), when you type the command, you will see output similar to:
$ ls -l
drwxr-xr-x  2 stjohn  wheel  68 Jan  7 21:00 thomasH/

Two useful commands are cp and mv which copy and rename (move) files. If we have a folder with:

$ ls
p1.py     p2.py     programs/
We can make a copy of a file by using the cp and the name of the old file and the new file:
$ cp p2.py p3.py
The result would be:
$ ls
p1.py     p2.py     p3.py     programs/
Renaming a file follows the same format:
$ mv p1.py prog1.py
The result would be:
$ ls
p2.py     p3.py     prog1.py  programs/
You can also move programs into a folder by giving the directory's name as the last input to the mv command:
$ mv prog1.py programs
The result would be:
$ ls
p2.py     p3.py     programs/
If we look inside the programs folder, we see:
$ ls programs
prog1.py

What's Next?


You can start working on this week's programming assignments. The Programming Problem List has problem descriptions, suggested reading, and due dates next to each problem.
Keep in mind that the due dates are one week late for flexibility (if one week there is a setback and you can't submit your programs, you will have time catch up). Still, each week you should work on the programming assignments for that week, even if they are due a week later. If you are on a roll, you are welcome to work ahead!!!