Joy is a tiny creative coding library in Python.
The easiest way to install it is download joy.py
and place it in your
directory. The library has no dependencies.
It can be downloaded from:
https://github.com/fossunited/joy/raw/main/joy.py
Joy uses a canvas with (0, 0)
as the center of the canvas.
By default, the size of the canvas is (300, 300)
.
The Joy
library integrates well with Jupyter environment and it is
recommended to explore Joy in a Jupyter lab.
The first thing you need to do is import the module.
from joy import *
Once the functionality in the module is imported, you can start playing with it.
Joy supports the basic shapes circle
, ellipse
, rectangle
and line
.
Let's start with a drawing a circle:
c = circle()
show(c)
By default circle will have center at (0, 0)
and radius as 100
. But
you can specify different values.
c = circle(x=50, y=50, r=50)
show(c)
The other basic types that are supported are ellipse
, rectangle
,
and line
:
s1 = circle()
s2 = ellipse()
s3 = rectangle()
s4 = line()
show(s1, s2, s3, s4)
Joy supports +
operator to join shapes.
def donut(x, y, r):
c1 = circle(x=x, y=y, r=r)
c2 = circle(x=x, y=y, r=r/2)
return c1+c2
d = donut(0, 0, 100)
show(d)
Joy supports translate
, rotate
and scale
transformations.
Transformations are applied using |
operator.
shape = circle(r=50) | translate(x=100, y=0)
show(shape)
Transformations can be chained too.
r1 = rectangle(w=200, h=200)
r2 = r1 | rotate(angle=45) | scale(1/SQRT2)
show(r1, r2)
Joy supports higher-order transformation repeat
.
The repeat
transformation applies a transformation multiple times and
combines all the resulting shapes.
For example, draw 10 circles:
c = circle(x=-100, y=0, r=50)
shape = c | repeat(10, translate(x=10, y=0)
show(shape)
Combined with rotation, it can create amusing patterns.
shape = line() | repeat(18, rotate(angle=10))
show(shape)
We could do the same with a square:
shape = rectangle(w=200, h=200) | repeat(18, rotate(angle=10))
show(shape)
or a rectangle:
shape = rectangle(w=200, h=100) | repeat(18, rotate(angle=10))
show(shape)
We can combine multiple transformations and repeat.
shape = rectangle(w=300, h=300) | repeat(72, rotate(360/72) | scale(0.92))
show(shape)
You can try the same with a circle too:
c = circle(x=100, y=0, radius=50)
shape = c | repeat(36*4, rotate(10) | scale(0.97))
show(shape)
For more information, please checkout the tutorial.
See tutorial.ipynb.
Special thanks to Amit Kapoor (@amitkaps). This library woundn't have been possible without his inputs.
The long discussions between @anandology and @amitkaps on functional programming and computational artistry (for almost over an year) and the initial experiments were some of the seeds that gave life to this library.
This repository has been released under the MIT License.