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Imagick::annotateImage

(PECL imagick 2, PECL imagick 3)

Imagick::annotateImageAnnotates an image with text

Description

public Imagick::annotateImage(
    ImagickDraw $draw_settings,
    float $x,
    float $y,
    float $angle,
    string $text
): bool

Annotates an image with text.

Parameters

draw_settings

The ImagickDraw object that contains settings for drawing the text

x

Horizontal offset in pixels to the left of text

y

Vertical offset in pixels to the baseline of text

angle

The angle at which to write the text

text

The string to draw

Return Values

Returns true on success.

Examples

Example #1 Using Imagick::annotateImage():

Annotate text on an empty image

<?php
/* Create some objects */
$image = new Imagick();
$draw = new ImagickDraw();
$pixel = new ImagickPixel( 'gray' );

/* New image */
$image->newImage(800, 75, $pixel);

/* Black text */
$draw->setFillColor('black');

/* Font properties */
$draw->setFont('Bookman-DemiItalic');
$draw->setFontSize( 30 );

/* Create text */
$image->annotateImage($draw, 10, 45, 0, 'The quick brown fox jumps over the lazy dog');

/* Give image a format */
$image->setImageFormat('png');

/* Output the image with headers */
header('Content-type: image/png');
echo
$image;

?>

See Also

add a note

User Contributed Notes 4 notes

up
9
alan at ridersite dot org
17 years ago
If ImagickDraw::setGravity ( int $gravity ) has been set, e,g; with $gravity= imagick::GRAVITY_CENTER.

Then, the x and y values offset the text from where the gravity setting would have placed it.

If the example included: $draw->setGravity (Imagick::GRAVITY_CENTER);
$image->annotateImage($draw, 10, 45, 0, 'The quick brown fox jumps over the lazy dog');

The text would be rendered to the right 10px and down 45px from the center.

Gravity constants are very useful as they can save having to calculate the placement of variable text strings and font sizes.
up
3
www dot query at gmail dot com
13 years ago
$image->annotateImage($draw, 10, 45, 0, 'The quick brown fox');

If the third parameter, the 'Y' value, is 0, the text will be invisible because the text is printed ABOVE the image - not on the image.

The solution is to start, depending on your chosen font size, with a Y value of about 40 and experiment.

[Also:]

When wishing to print some text on a photograph and make that text sufficiently contrasting to the background image, use a 4 byte code for colour and transparency.

It is the same 4 byte code using by the parameter '-undercolor' in ImageMagick's command lime instruction 'convert'.

The first 3 bytes are the RGB colour code and the fourth byte is the transparency byte.

<?php
$picin
= new Imagick($pic1);
$picin->scaleimage(800,0);
$height = $picin->getimageheight();

$draw = new ImagickDraw();
$draw->setFillColor('#ffff00');
$draw->setFont('Eurostile');
$draw->setFontSize(21);
$draw->setTextUnderColor('#ff000088');
$picin->annotateImage($draw,40,$height-10,0,"Hallo");

$picin->writeimage($pic6);
?>

The example code produces yellow text on a semi-transparent red background.

$pic1 and $pic6 were previously defined as directory/file strings.
up
1
yakuza88 at op dot pl
8 years ago
Does not work with CMYK color values and images. Only RGB.
up
0
tuxedobob
11 months ago
Note that $angle is in DEGREES and rotates CLOCKWISE. Negative numbers are allowed.
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