Reputation: 24896
I found the following function can draw a vertical gradient in PHP. However, many web designers like their gradients to have an upper-left lightsource to make the gradient look more realistic. So, how do I change the angle slightly on the vertical gradient, making it into a slight gradient? I don't want to completely overdo it, but just a slight movement to the right as it proceeds down the vertical gradient.
<?php
function hex2rgb($sColor) {
$sColor = str_replace('#','',$sColor);
$nLen = strlen($sColor) / 3;
$anRGB = array();
$anRGB[]=hexdec(str_repeat(substr($sColor,0,$nLen),2/$nLen));
$anRGB[]=hexdec(str_repeat(substr($sColor,$nLen,$nLen),2/$nLen));
$anRGB[]=hexdec(str_repeat(substr($sColor,2*$nLen,$nLen),2/$nLen));
return $anRGB;
}
$nWidth = 960;
$nHeight = 250;
$sStartColor = '#2b8ae1';
$sEndColor = '#0054a1';
$nStep = 1;
$hImage = imagecreatetruecolor($nWidth,$nHeight);
$nRows = imagesy($hImage);
$nCols = imagesx($hImage);
list($r1,$g1,$b1) = hex2rgb($sStartColor);
list($r2,$g2,$b2) = hex2rgb($sEndColor);
$nOld_r = 0; $nOld_g = 0; $nOld_b = 0;
for ( $i = 0; $i < $nRows; $i=$i+1+$nStep ) {
$r = ( $r2 - $r1 != 0 ) ? intval( $r1 + ( $r2 - $r1 ) * ( $i / $nRows ) ): $r1;
$g = ( $g2 - $g1 != 0 ) ? intval( $g1 + ( $g2 - $g1 ) * ( $i / $nRows ) ): $g1;
$b = ( $b2 - $b1 != 0 ) ? intval( $b1 + ( $b2 - $b1 ) * ( $i / $nRows ) ): $b1;
if ( "$nOld_r,$nOld_g,$nOld_b" != "$r,$g,$b") {
$hFill = imagecolorallocate( $hImage, $r, $g, $b );
}
imagefilledrectangle($hImage, 0, $i, $nCols, $i+$nStep, $hFill);
$nOld_r= $r;
$nOld_g= $g;
$nOld_b= $b;
}
header("Content-type: image/png");
imagepng($hImage);
Upvotes: 3
Views: 1751
Reputation: 24896
The following snippet runs much faster than the GD libraries and without the complexity. You have to install the ImageMagick extension for PHP, though.
$oImage = new Imagick();
$oImage->newPseudoImage(1000, 400, 'gradient:#09F-#048' );
$oImage->rotateImage(new ImagickPixel(), -3);
$oImage->cropImage(960, 250, 25, 100);
$oImage->setImageFormat('png');
header( "Content-Type: image/png" );
echo $oImage;
Upvotes: 1
Reputation: 7834
I'm not going to do the geometry - but create the vertical gradient as a larger image then rotate and crop it:
...
$degrees = -5;
$newImage = imagecreatetruecolor($nWidth, $nHeight);
$rotated = imagerotate($hImage, $degrees, 0);
imagecopy($newImage, $rotated, 0, 0, $x, $y, $width, $height)
Upvotes: 1