I'm using regular imagefields on various content types in a Drupal 7 social website (and also on the user profile pictures via http://drupal.org/project/imagecache_profiles). For cropping I'm using http://drupal.org/project/imagecrop as an image style effect.
I would like to replace the original image with the one generated from the imagecrop style. How do you replace the original image from a user (the one that gets used for subsequent image styles when you say call it in views) with one that is created from an image style effect?
I'm not sure the best way to approach this problem, which is why I posted question.
To make sure I'm being clear -
A User uploads a large image (say 2,000 pixels by 1300 pixels) via a regular imagefield.
Using image styles, I perform some effects (specifically javascript crop, but this could be generic) and then replace the original image with the one generated from the image style.
All additional image styles (different sizes etc) use the new original images and are derived from it.
I think this can be done easily using a custom module and they must have used something like the image editor project - See drupal.org/project/imageeditor, just not sure what hooks to use or how to jump in on this. Any advice, tips or direction would be great.
Check module - Original image with style
I believe you can address your problem by making changes under the display settings for your field:
/admin/structure/types/manage/[your content type machine name here]/display
Related
I Googled a lot but no sufficient ans was found.
I need to place an image (900 X 5200 px) in one of my pages. As the image is sensitive, I need to prevent users from copying the image. I have an idea that can do this:
I will divide the image into pieces. Then the image grid will be loaded into some divs. So user won't be able to save the image. Or he/she will save only 1 square cm part of the whole image.
But this plan will not work if some small parts of the grid fails to load. So, I want to do another thing. I want to load the full image then cut the image into parts. Then show the parts altogether in divs.
This requires javascript. But I am confused how to start and need your help.
Now you know the matter, if you have better idea please share.
Thanks in advance.
The trick is simple. Create a div with the background being the image you want to display. Layer a div with a transparent image over it. When user goes to save the image, they get a blank. Program your server to not return "direct" requests for the image (so some clever chap can't just look at the css and retrieve the URL to the image).
Granted the image will still be in their cache but so would the sliced image so it won't make it impossible just more difficult for a determined person to retrieve the picture.
TL;DR Don't over engineer a solution, print screen will get around anything you do.
You are not going to be able to prevent people from copying this image. Plain and simple. Regardless of your best efforts, a simple PRT SCRN and paste into Paint will be enough.
Your best bet will be to not over engineer this and simply place a watermark and copyright notice on the page. Other options can include placing a transparent <div> over the top of the image so it cannot be right-click'ed and saved, but it still will not prevent the image from being stored in the user's cache. Or stop them from using developer tools or Firebug to find the source image.
You can do this with:
http://www.pixastic.com/lib/docs/actions/crop/
Yet you need to develop your logic around that library.
I have made example, you can see it on this link:
http://simplestudio.rs/yard/crop_img/
Basically you can get URL to your image via php and using my code or code similar to it crop your image into pieces and display them on canvas.
This way image is not accessible via browser or inspect element or what so ever. User can save the pieces individually but you can configure my code for piece to be 5px, I set it to 20x20px.
* test saving image piece by doing right click anywhere on image and do a "Save image as.." option.
Also you need to think of way how to hide src to image provided by php, if you need help on that I can help you.
Image this scenario:
There is a picture locally in my server, where a sketch is displayed, and there is a "blank hole" area on it.
Then, a user can upload another picture to my server.
What i'm trying to achieve is this:
After image upload is finished, the first image (the one with the "hole") is displayed, and behind it is displayed the user's photo, so that you can see it through the "blank hole" area of the first photo.
Then the user can move his picture (drag & drop style) so he can choose which area of it is visible through the "blank hole".
Then i would like to save the result - by merging the 2 photos or keeping the position of the user's picture in a db so i can display it again later.
(Something like this more or less)
What kind of technollogy should i look for? I'd guess javascript(for the drag & drop) or html5 or php(for merging the photo)?
Are there any libraries that i can use?
I hope my explanation isn't too messy, i didn't even know how to google for it.
I don't know if there are better solutions (and I suspect there are), but I suspect all of this can be done with not too much trouble. Here's a rundown of one way to approach the problem:
Use a JavaScript-powered "upload widget" such as uploadify to enable your user to upload "his" image to the server. The server will do some processing on the image (e.g. resize and crop to suitable dimensions) and save it using e.g. PHP's gd library. It will return a URL to the "prepared" image back to the browser -- all of this through AJAX.
The browser then has a URL to the user's image, so using more Javascript you can dynamically add an element that displays it inside the page and allow the user to move it around with e.g. jQuery draggable. Compositing the draggable image behind your static content (the image with the "hole") is a detail you will have to take care of using a combination of HTML, CSS and again Javascript.
When the user is done, use an AJAX call (e.g. again jQuery) to inform the server of the image's positioning (this will be available through the facilities of the Javascipt framework you have selected). The server can then "compose" the two images together (gd or something equivalent once more) and return to the browser a URL through which the final product can be accessed.
Of course there are lots of details to take care of here, but knowing exactly what the plan is should help you get started.
Have a look at the PHP GD extension. If it's installed, it's pretty easy to have an image (with a transparent center) to be merged on top of a second image that a user would upload.
Have a look at http://php.net/manual/en/function.imagecopymerge.php
Ok to get you started, yes use a JavaScript drag and drop module for the placing of the image. You can record the x /y cordinates relative to the container. Do the image merging with a PHP image library / Class. Something like this : http://www.phpclasses.org/package/3930-PHP-Generate-an-image-from-the-combination-of-2-images.html
I have images uploaded in the media library in WordPress. I would like to show the images with text composited on top of them using PHP's GD or something similar.
If this were just a plain old PHP site, I could create a URL with a search parameter for the text and center it over my image with GD and serve it up. In WordPress, I am a little unclear how to accomplish this. I am not sure if it fits well into the concepts of Posts and Pages.
I can perform the programming myself. I am just looking for some pointers on how to get started.
Thanks,
Carl
You can do that in WordPress, too. It's mostly just a plain old PHP site. For example, you could create a PHP file that creates the composite given the text and the image and use it like: <img src="/composite.php?image=...&text=...">.
Maybe all of the images are on a particular page or post type. Then you could create a custom page or post-type template that parses the $post->post_content for the images, does the compositing, and alters the image tags to point to the new composited images.
Or, more generally in that vein, create a filter for the_content that does that for all posts.
You might be able to hook into the WordPress upload system. As images are uploaded, you could create the composite. The wp_handle_upload filter might work for that.
Or you could even create a WordPress cron job that scans the media uploads for new entries and creates the composites then.
some of the script like t-shirt design script,mug designer available for customization. For an example. we add text, rotate text, change color of text add/upload image re-size image etc after customization they give image as we customize.
how to save this all customization as image ?
any this type of script in php available ?
I'm guessing what you want is to take modifications made by JavaScript to an image in a browser and "save them" to a new image using PHP?
I am not sure how you'd go about doing that without regenerating the whole thing in PHP.
If I had to do it, I'd save all the modifications in an array in Javascript and using jQuery/AJAX send a request to the PHP file along with those modifications and have the PHP script re-do the things, for example write text on the source image, re-size it, add shapes and what-not.
However, this might end up being quite a time consuming task.
This question is a bit open at the moment as I'm not sure the idea is even possible.
So far I've loaded an image from a url, and then used jQuery UI draggable feature to allow the user to drag html text (which has been replaced using cufon font replacement) over the top of the image.
The major step (which is what my question relates to) is being able to take the image and text layered over the top of the image, and save the result, either to the server, or potentially offer the option to save the altered image to the user's HD, or what would also be useful is to upload to facebook using the facebook API, but this is something I know is possible.
It all hangs on whether it's even possible to achieve the first step, which is to save the image and layered text as a combined image?
I wonder if there is a PHP/jQuery solution that would allow me to do this?
My suggestion would be to have an internal URL that outputs the final image using jQuery and PHP, then take a screenshot using webkit2png of that page. You should know the dimensions etc., so you'll be able to crop down the resulting screenshot to just the region you're looking for.