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Introduction to Computing and Programming in Python: A Multimedia Approach

Introduction to Computing and Programming in Python: A Multimedia Approach. Chapter 13: Creating and Modifying Movies. Chapter Objectives. Movies, animations, and video …oh my!. We ’ re going to refer generically to captured (recorded) motion as “ movies. ”

rogan-sharp
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Introduction to Computing and Programming in Python: A Multimedia Approach

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  1. Introduction to Computing and Programming in Python: A Multimedia Approach Chapter 13: Creating and Modifying Movies

  2. Chapter Objectives

  3. Movies, animations, and video…oh my! • We’re going to refer generically to captured (recorded) motion as “movies.” • This includes motion entirely generated by graphical drawings, which are normally called animations. • This also includes motion generated by some kind of photographic process, normally called video.

  4. Psychophysics of Movies:Persistence of Vision • What makes movies work is yet another limitation of our visual system: Persistence of vision • We do not see every change that happens in the world around us. • Instead, our eye retains an image (i.e., tells the brain “This is the latest! Yup, this is still the latest!”) for a brief period of time. • If this were not the case, you would be aware of every time that your eye blinks because the world would “go away” for a moment.

  5. 16 frames and it’s motion • If you see 16 separate pictures in one second, and these pictures are logically sequenced, • That is, #2 could logically follow from the scene in #1. • 16 pictures of completely different things doesn’t work, • You will perceive the pictures as being in motion. • 16 frames per second (fps), 16 pictures in a second, is the lower bound for the sensation of motion.

  6. Beyond 16 fps • Early silent pictures were 16 fps. • Motion picture standards shifted to 24 fps to make sound smoother. • Videocameras (digital video) captures 30 fps • How high can we go? • Air force experiments suggest that pilots can recognize a blurb of light in 1/200th of a second! • Video game players say that they can discern a difference between 30 fps and 60 fps. • Bottomlines: • Generate at least 16 fps and you provide a sense of motion. • If you want to process video, you’re going to have 30 fps to process (unless it’s been modified elsewhere for you.)

  7. Processing movies • Our frames are going to be JPEG pictures. • One JPEG file per frame. • So, if we’re going to be processing movies, we’re going to generating or processing sequences of JPEG files. • Three tools for manipulating movies <-> JPEGs • MediaTools • QuickTime Pro (free QuickTime won’t do it) • Windows Movie Maker (for converting image sequences to movies)

  8. Using MediaTools • To generate a series of frame pictures in a folder from an MPEG file. • To play a folder of frame pictures and to save it as a JMV file. • (JPEG Movie format.) • To play JMV or MPEG movies.

  9. What the other tools can do • QuickTime Pro (http://www.apple.com/quicktime) can read a sequence of JPEG images and produce MPEG, AVI, or QuickTime movies. • Windows Movie Maker can create WMV (Windows Media Player movies) from image sequences. • ImageMagick (open source toolkit) can also read a sequence of JPEG images and produce MPEG movies.

  10. QuickTime Pro: Making a Movie From Images • Open an image sequence • Choose the first image in the sequence. • Specify a frame rate • POOF! You get a movie!

  11. QuickTime Pro: Make images from movie • Choose “Export” from File menu. • Choose as Image Sequence. • Click “Options” to choose image format (PNG, JPEG) and frames per second. • This will save a numbered sequence of images.

  12. Windows Movie Maker: Making a movie from images • Free with most Windows installations. • Choose “Import Pictures” and select all the images in your sequence.

  13. Windows Movie Maker: Creating the Movie • Set the “Options” (Tools menu) so that there is a small duration between pictures. • Drag all the pictures into the timeline. • Play and export your movie!

  14. MPEG? QuickTime? AVI? JMV? • MPEG, QuickTime, and AVI are compressed movie formats. • They don’t record every frame. • Rather, they record some key frames, and then store data about what parts of the screen change on intervening frames. • MPEG is an international standard, from the same people who invented JPEG. • AVI is a Microsoft standard. • QuickTime is an Apple standard. • JMV is a file consisting of JPEG frames in an array. • All frames represented

  15. Why do we compress movies? • Do the math: • One second of 640x480 pixels at 30 fps • 30 (frames) * 640 * 480 (pixels) = 9,216,000 pixels • With 3 bytes of color per pixel, that’s 27,648,000 bytes or 27 megabytes of information per second. • For a 90 minute feature movie (short), that’s 90 * 60 * 27,648,000 = 149,299,200,000 bytes (149 gigabytes) • A DVD stores 6.47 gigabytes of data. • So even on a DVD, the movie is compressed.

  16. MPEG movie = MPEG frames plus MP3 soundtrack • An MPEG movie is actually a series of MPEG frames composed with an MP3 soundtrack. • It’s literally two files stuck together in one. • We’re not going to deal with sound movies for now. • The real challenge in doing movie processing is generating and manipulating frames.

  17. Get the frames in order • Many tools (including os.listdir()) can process frames in order if the order is specified. • We specify the order by encoding the number of the frame into the name. • If you put in leading zeroes so that everything is the same length, the order is alphabetical as well as numerical.

  18. Movies in JES • makeMovieFromInitialFile(firstFile) will create a movie object from the image sequence starting from that file. • playMovie(movie) opens a movie player on the movie object. You can write out QuickTime or AVI movies from there.

  19. Simple Motion def makeRectMovie(directory ): for num in range (1 ,30): #29 frames (1 to 29) canvas = makeEmptyPicture (300 ,200) addRectFilled(canvas ,num * 10, num * 5, 50,50, red) # convert the number to a string numStr=str(num) if num < 10: writePictureTo(canvas ,directory+"\\ frame0"+numStr+".jpg") if num >= 10: writePictureTo(canvas ,directory+"\\ frame"+numStr+".jpg") movie = makeMovieFromInitialFile(directory+"\\ frame00.jpg"); return movie

  20. A Few Frames frame00.jpg frame02.jpg frame50.jpg

  21. Making and Playing the Movie >>> rectM = makeRectMovie("c:\\ Temp \\ rect") >>> playMovie(rectM)

  22. Important cool thing: You can draw past the end of the picture! • addText, addRect, and the rest of the drawing tools will work even if you go beyond the edge of the drawing. • Drawings will clip what can’t be seen in them, so you don’t get an array out of bounds error. • This is a big deal, because it means that you don’t have to do complicated math to see when you’re past the end of the drawing. • But only for the drawing functions. • If you set pixels, you’re still on your own to stay in range.

  23. Making a tickertape def tickertape(directory,string): for num in range(1,100): #99 frames canvas = makeEmptyPicture(300,100) #Start at right, and move left addText(canvas,300-(num*10),50,string) # Now, write out the frame # Have to deal with single digit vs. double digit frame numbers differently numStr=str(num) if num < 10: writePictureTo(canvas,directory+"//frame0"+numStr+".jpg") if num >= 10: writePictureTo(canvas,directory+"//frame"+numStr+".jpg")

  24. Playing the tickertape movie

  25. Can we move more than one thing at once? Sure! def movingRectangle2(directory ): for num in range (1 ,30): #29 frames canvas = makeEmptyPicture (300 ,250) # add a filled rect moving linearly addRectFilled(canvas ,num*10,num*5, 50,50,red) # Let’s have one just moving around blueX = 100+ int (10 * sin(num)) blueY = 4*num+int (10* cos(num)) addRectFilled(canvas ,blueX ,blueY ,50,50, blue) # Now , write out the frame # Have to deal with single digit vs. double digit numStr=str(num) if num < 10: writePictureTo(canvas ,directory +"// frame0 "+ numStr +". jpg") if num >= 10: writePictureTo(canvas ,directory +"// frame "+ numStr +". jpg")

  26. Moving two things at once

  27. Moving a clip from a picture def moveHead(directory ): markF=getMediaPath("blue -mark.jpg") mark = makePicture(markF) head = clip(mark ,275 ,160 ,385 ,306) for num in range (1 ,30): #29 frames printNow("Frame number: "+str(num)) canvas = makeEmptyPicture (640 ,480) # Now , do the actual copying copy(head ,canvas ,num*10,num *5) # Now , write out the frame # Have to deal with frame # digits numStr=str(num) if num < 10: writePictureTo(canvas ,directory+"// frame0"+numStr+".jpg") if num >= 10: writePictureTo(canvas ,directory+"// frame"+numStr+".jpg") def clip(picture ,startX ,startY ,endX ,endY ): width = endX - startX + 1 height = endY - startY + 1 resPict = makeEmptyPicture(width ,height) resX = 0 for x in range(startX ,endX ): resY =0 # reset result y index for y in range(startY ,endY ): origPixel = getPixel(picture ,x,y) resPixel = getPixel(resPict ,resX ,resY) setColor(resPixel ,( getColor(origPixel ))) resY=resY + 1 resX=resX + 1 return resPict Clip() function returns part of another picture.Using general copy() function we defined earlier.

  28. Moving around Mark’s head

  29. What if we have over 100 frames? def writeFrame(num,directory,framepict): # Have to deal with single digit vs. double digit frame numbers differently framenum=str(num) if num < 10: writePictureTo(framepict,directory+"//frame00"+framenum+".jpg") if num >= 10 and num<100: writePictureTo(framepict,directory+"//frame0"+framenum+".jpg") if num >= 100: writePictureTo(framepict,directory+"//frame"+framenum+".jpg") This will make all our movie-making easier — it’s generally useful

  30. Rewriting moving Mark’s head def moveHead2(directory ): markF=getMediaPath("blue -mark.jpg") mark = makePicture(markF) face = clip(mark ,275 ,160 ,385 ,306) for num in range (1 ,30): #29 frames printNow("Frame number: "+str(num)) canvas = makeEmptyPicture (640 ,480) # Now , do the actual copying copy(face ,canvas ,num*10,num *5) # Now , write out the frame writeFrame(num ,directory ,canvas) This code is much easier to read and understand with the subfunctions.

  31. Using real photographs • Of course, we can use any real photographs we want. • We can use any of the techniques we’ve learned previously for manipulating the photographs. • Even more, we can use the techniques in new ways to explore a range of effects.

  32. Slowly making it (very) sunset • Remember this code? • What if we applied this to create frames of a movie, but slowly increased the sunset effect? def makeSunset(picture): for p in getPixels(picture): value=getBlue(p) setBlue(p,value*0.7) value=getGreen(p) setGreen(p,value*0.7)

  33. SlowSunset Just one canvas repeatedly being manipulated def slowsunset(directory): canvas = makePicture(getMediaPath("beach-smaller.jpg")) #outside the loop! for frame in range(0,100): #99 frames printNow("Frame number: "+str(frame)) makeSunset(canvas) # Now, write out the frame writeFrame(frame,directory,canvas) def makeSunset(picture): for p in getPixels(picture): value=getBlue(p) setBlue(p,value*0.99) #Just 1% decrease! value=getGreen(p) setGreen(p,value*0.99) Not showing you writeFrame() because you know how that works.

  34. SlowSunset frames

  35. Fading by background subtraction def swapbg(person, bg, newbg,threshold): for x in range(1,getWidth(person)): for y in range(1,getHeight(person)): personPixel = getPixel(person,x,y) bgpx = getPixel(bg,x,y) personColor= getColor(personPixel) bgColor = getColor(bgpx) if distance(personColor,bgColor) < threshold: bgcolor = getColor(getPixel(newbg,x,y)) setColor(personPixel, bgcolor) Remember background subtraction? One change here is that the threshold is now an input.

  36. Use the frame number as the threshold def slowfadeout(directory): bg = makePicture(getMediaPath("wall.jpg")) jungle = makePicture(getMediaPath("jungle2.jpg")) for frame in range(0,100): #99 frames canvas = makePicture(getMediaPath("wall-two-people.jpg")) printNow("Frame number: "+str(frame)) swapbg(canvas,bg,jungle,frame) # Now, write out the frame writeFrame(frame,directory,canvas)

  37. SlowFadeout

  38. Different images, with subfunctions def swapBack(pic1 , back , newBg , threshold ): for x in range(0, getWidth(pic1 )): for y in range(0, getHeight(pic1 )): p1Pixel = getPixel(pic1 ,x,y) backPixel = getPixel(back ,x,y) if (distance(getColor(p1Pixel),getColor(backPixel )) < threshold ): setColor(p1Pixel ,getColor(getPixel(newBg ,x,y))) return pic1

  39. Different images, with subfunctions def slowFadeout(directory ): origBack = makePicture(getMediaPath("bgframe.jpg")) newBack = makePicture(getMediaPath("beach.jpg")) for num in range (1 ,60): #59 frames # do this in the loop kid = makePicture(getMediaPath("kid -in -frame.jpg")) swapBack(kid ,origBack ,newBack ,num) # Now , write out the frame writeFrame(num ,directory ,kid)

  40. Cool effect!

  41. Dealing with real video • We really can’t deal with live video. • Dealing with each frame takes a lot of processing. • If you were going to process each frame as fast as it was coming in (or going out), you’d have 1/30th of a second to process each frame! • We cheat by • Saving each frame as a JPEG image • Processing the JPEG images • Convert the frames back to a movie

  42. The original kid-in-bg-seq movie

  43. Let’s have Mommy “watching” • We’ll paste Barb’s head into each frame. • We’ll use os.listdir to process all the frames of the kid sequence.

  44. MommyWatching import os def mommyWatching(directory): kidDir="C:/ip-book/mediasources/kid-in-bg-seq" barbF=getMediaPath("barbaraS.jpg") barb = makePicture(barbF) face = clip(barb ,22 ,9 ,93 ,97) num = 0 for file in os.listdir(kidDir ): if file.endswith(".jpg"): num = num + 1 printNow("Frame number: "+str(num)) framePic = makePicture(kidDir+“/"+file) # Now , do the actual copying copy(face ,framePic ,num*3,num *3) # Now , write out the frame writeFrame(num ,directory ,framePic) We process each frame, and copy Mommy’s head to the frame, just like we animated in a line before onto a blank canvas.

  45. MommyWatching

  46. Lightening a picture • I took some video of a puppet show in black light. • Very hard to see the puppets. • Your eye can pick them up, but the camera can’t. • Recall earlier discussion: Your eye can detect luminance changes that no media can replicate.

  47. Dark-fish2 sequence

  48. How I did the processing • First try, lighten every pixel. • Didn’t work. • Made all the black whiter as well as the colors • No improvement in contrast • Second try, explore under MediaTools first • Black parts are really black • Lighter parts have really low number values • So: • Look for any pixel less black than black (threshold=8) • Lighten it a couple values

  49. Lightenfish import os def lightenFish(directory): framenum = 0 for framefile in os.listdir(getMediaPath("dark-fish2")): framenum = framenum + 1 printNow("Frame: "+str(framenum)) if framefile.endswith(".jpg"): frame=makePicture(getMediaPath("dark-fish2")+"//"+framefile) for p in getPixels(frame): color = getColor(p) if distance(color,black)>8: color=makeLighter(color) color=makeLighter(color) setColor(p,color) writeFrame(framenum,directory,frame)

  50. Original sequence again

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