Justin Mayer d6e2c20044 Merge pull request #891 from AntoineVe/patch-1 | vor 7 Jahren | |
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test_data | vor 9 Jahren | |
README.md | vor 7 Jahren | |
SourceCodePro-Bold.otf | vor 8 Jahren | |
SourceCodePro-Regular.otf | vor 8 Jahren | |
__init__.py | vor 9 Jahren | |
licenses.json | vor 8 Jahren | |
photos.py | vor 7 Jahren | |
requirements.txt | vor 8 Jahren | |
test_photos.py | vor 8 Jahren |
Use Photos to add a photo or a gallery of photos to an article, or to include photos in the body text. Photos are kept separately, as an organized library of high resolution photos, and resized as needed.
The plug-in requires Pillow
: the Python Imaging Library and optionally Piexif
, whose installation are outside the scope of this document.
The plug-in resizes the referred photos, and generates thumbnails for galleries and associated photos, based on the following configuration and default values:
PHOTO_LIBRARY = "~/Pictures"
: Absolute path to the folder where the original photos are kept, organized in sub-folders.
PHOTO_GALLERY = (1024, 768, 80)
: For photos in galleries, maximum width and height, plus JPEG quality as a percentage. This would typically be the size of the photo displayed when the reader clicks a thumbnail.
PHOTO_ARTICLE = (760, 506, 80)
: For photos associated with articles, maximum width, height, and quality. The maximum size would typically depend on the needs of the theme. 760px is suitable for the theme notmyidea
.
PHOTO_THUMB = (192, 144, 60)
: For thumbnails, maximum width, height, and quality.
PHOTO_RESIZE_JOBS = 5
: Number of parallel resize jobs to be run. Defaults to 1.
PHOTO_WATERMARK = True
: Adds a watermark to all photos in articles and pages. Defaults to using your site name.
PHOTO_WATERMARK_TEXT' = SITENAME
: Allow the user to change the watermark text or remove it completely. By default it uses SourceCodePro-Bold as the font.
PHOTO_WATERMARK_IMG = ''
: Allows the user to add an image in addition to or as the only watermark. Set the variable to the location.
The following features require the piexif library
PHOTO_EXIF_KEEP = True
: Keeps the exif of the input photo.
PHOTO_EXIF_REMOVE_GPS = True
: Removes any GPS information from the files exif data.
PHOTO_EXIF_COPYRIGHT = 'COPYRIGHT'
: Attaches an author and a license to the file. Choices include:
- `COPYRIGHT`: Copyright
- `CC0`: Public Domain
- `CC-BY-NC-ND`: Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives
- `CC-BY-NC-SA`: Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike
- `CC-BY`: Creative Commons Attribution
- `CC-BY-SA`: Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike
- `CC-BY-NC`: Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial
- `CC-BY-ND`: Creative Commons Attribution-NoDerivatives
PHOTO_EXIF_COPYRIGHT_AUTHOR = 'Your Name Here'
: Adds an author name to the photo's exif and copyright statement. Defaults to AUTHOR
value from the pelicanconf.py
The plug-in automatically resizes the photos and publishes them to the following output folder:
./output/photos
WARNING: The plug-in can take hours to resize 40,000 photos, therefore, photos and thumbnails are only generated once. Clean the output folders to regenerate the resized photos again.
Maintain an organized library of high resolution photos somewhere on disk, using folders to group related images. The default path ~/Pictures
is convenient for Mac OS X users.
gallery: {photo}folder
to an article. To simplify the transition from the plug-in Gallery, the syntax gallery: {filename}folder
is also accepted.{photo}folder, {photo}folder2
. You can also add titles to your galleries. The syntax is: {photo}folder, {photo}folder2{This is a title}
. Using the following example the first gallery would have the title of the folder location and the second would have the title This is a tile.
{photo}folder/image.jpg
instead of the usual {filename}/images/image.jpg
.{lightbox}folder/image.jpg
. For use with other implementations, the gallery and caption attribute names can be set with PHOTO_LIGHTBOX_GALLERY_ATTR
and PHOTO_LIGHTBOX_CAPTION_ATTR
.image: {photo}folder/image.jpg
to an article. Use associated images to improve navigation. For compatibility, the syntax image: {filename}/images/image.jpg
is also accepted.Folders of photos may optionally have three text files, where each line describes one photo. You can use the #
to comment out a line. Generating these optional files is left as an exercise for the reader (but consider using Phil Harvey's exiftool). See below for one method of extracting exif data.
exif.txt
: Associates compact technical information with photos, typically the camera settings. For example:
best.jpg: Canon EOS 5D Mark II - 20mm f/8 1/250s ISO 100
night.jpg: Canon EOS 5D Mark II - 47mm f/8 5s ISO 100
# new.jpg: Canon EOS 5D Mark II - 47mm f/8 5s ISO 100
captions.txt
: Associates comments with photos. For example:
best.jpg: My best photo ever! How lucky of me!
night.jpg: Twilight over the dam.
# new.jpg: My new photo blog entry is not quite ready.
blacklist.txt
: Skips photos the user does not want to include. For example:
this-file-will-be-skipped.jpg
this-one-will-be-skipped-too.jpg
# but-this-file-will-NOT-be-skipped.jpg
this-one-will-be-also-skipped.jpg
Here is an example Markdown article that shows the four use cases:
title: My Article
gallery: {photo}favorite
image: {photo}favorite/best.jpg
Here are my best photos, taken with my favorite camera:
![]({photo}mybag/camera.jpg).
![]({lightbox}mybag/flash.jpg).
The default behavior of the Photos plugin removes the exif information from the file. If you would like to keep the exif information, you can install the piexif
library for python and add the following settings to keep some or all of the exif information. This feature is not a replacement for the exif.txt
feature but in addition to that feature. This feature currently only works with jpeg input files.
The plugin provides the following variables to your templates:
article.photo_image
: For articles with an associated photo, a tuple with the following information:
For example, modify the template article.html
as shown below to display the associated image before the article content:
<div class="entry-content">
{% if article.photo_image %}<img src="{{ SITEURL }}/{{ article.photo_image[1] }}" />{% endif %}
{% include 'article_infos.html' %}
{{ article.content }}
</div><!-- /.entry-content -->
article.photo_gallery
: For articles with a gallery, a list of the photos in the gallery. Each item in the list is a tuple with five elements:
exif.txt
.captions.txt
.For example, add the following to the template article.html
to add the gallery as the end of the article:
{% if article.photo_gallery %}
<div class="gallery">
{% for title, gallery in article.photo_gallery %}
<h1>{{ title }}</h1>
{% for name, photo, thumb, exif, caption in gallery %}
<a href="{{ SITEURL }}/{{ photo }}" title="{{ name }}" exif="{{ exif }}" caption="{{ caption }}"><img src="{{ SITEURL }}/{{ thumb }}"></a>
{% endfor %}
{% endfor %}
</div>
{% endif %}
For example, add the following to the template index.html
, inside the entry-content
, to display the thumbnail with a link to the article:
{% if article.photo_image %}<a href="{{ SITEURL }}/{{ article.url }}"><img src="{{ SITEURL }}/{{ article.photo_image[2] }}"
style="display: inline; float: right; margin: 2px 0 2ex 4ex;" /></a>
{% endif %}
There are several JavaScript libraries that display a list of images as a lightbox. The example below uses Magnific Popup, which allows the more complex initialization needed to display both the filename, the compact technical information, and the caption. The solution would be simpler if photos did not show any extra information.
Copy the files magnific-popup.css
and magnific-popup.js
to the root of your Pelican template.
Add the following to the template base.html
, inside the HTML head
tags:
{% if (article and article.photo_gallery) or (articles_page and articles_page.object_list[0].photo_gallery) %}
<link rel="stylesheet" href="{{ SITEURL }}/{{ THEME_STATIC_DIR }}/magnific-popup.css">
{% endif %}
Add the following to the template base.html
, before the closing HTML </body>
tag:
{% if (article and article.photo_gallery) or (articles_page and articles_page.object_list[0].photo_gallery) %}
<!-- jQuery 1.7.2+ or Zepto.js 1.0+ -->
<script src="http://ajax.googleapis.com/ajax/libs/jquery/1.9.1/jquery.min.js"></script>
<!-- Magnific Popup core JS file -->
<script src="{{ SITEURL }}/{{ THEME_STATIC_DIR }}/magnific-popup.js"></script>
<script>
$('.gallery').magnificPopup({
delegate: 'a',
type: 'image',
gallery: {
enabled: true,
navigateByImgClick: true,
preload: [1,2]
},
image: {
titleSrc: function(item) {
if (item.el.attr('caption') && item.el.attr('exif')) {
return (item.el.attr('caption').replace(/\\n/g, '<br />') +
'<small>' + item.el.attr('title') + ' - ' + item.el.attr('exif') + '</small>');
}
return item.el.attr('title') + '<small>' + item.el.attr('exif') + '</small>';
} }
});
</script>
{% endif %}
If you are using bootstrap, the following code is an example of how one could create a carousel.
{% if article.photo_gallery %}
{% for title, gallery in article.photo_gallery %}
<h1>{{ title }}</h1>
<div id="carousel-{{ loop.index }}" class="carousel slide">
<ol class="carousel-indicators">
{% for i in range(0, gallery|length) %}
<li data-target="#carousel-{{ loop.index }}" data-slide-to="{{ i }}" {% if i==0 %} class="active" {% endif %}></li>
{% endfor %}
</ol>
<div class="carousel-inner">
{% for name, photo, thumb, exif, caption in gallery %}
{% if loop.first %}
<div class="item active">
{% else %}
<div class="item">
{% endif %}
<img src="{{ SITEURL }}/{{ photo }}" exif="{{ exif }}" alt="{{ caption }}">
<div class="carousel-caption">
<h5>{{ caption }}</h5>
</div> <!-- carousel-caption -->
</div> <!-- item -->
{% endfor %}
</div> <!-- carousel-inner -->
<a class="left carousel-control" href="#carousel-{{ loop.index }}" data-slide="prev">
<span class="glyphicon glyphicon-chevron-left"></span>
</a>
<a class="right carousel-control" href="#carousel-{{ loop.index }}" data-slide="next">
<span class="glyphicon glyphicon-chevron-right"></span>
</a>
</div> <!-- closes carousel-{{ loop.index }} -->
{% endfor %}
{% endif %}
You can add the following stanza to your fab file if you are using fabric
to generate the appropriate text files for your galleries. You need to set the location of Exiftool
control files.
def photo_gallery_gen(location):
"""Create gallery metadata files."""
local_path = os.getcwd() + 'LOCATION OF YOUR EXIF CONTROL FILES'
with lcd(location):
local("exiftool -p {fmt_path}/exif.fmt . > exif.txt".format(
fmt_path=local_path))
local("exiftool -p {fmt_path}/captions.fmt . > captions.txt".format(
fmt_path=local_path))
captions.fmt
example file
$FileName: $Description
exif.fmt
example file
$FileName: $CreateDate - $Make $Model Stats:(f/$Aperture, ${ShutterSpeed}s, ISO $ISO Flash: $Flash) GPS:($GPSPosition $GPSAltitude)
pxquim.pt uses Photos and the plug-in Sub-parts to publish 600 photo galleries with 40,000 photos. Photos keeps the high-resolution photos separate from the site articles.
pxquim.com uses sub-parts to cover conferences, where it makes sense to have a sub-part for each speaker.
Gallery : Galleries are distinct entities, without the organizational capabilities of articles. Photos must be resized separately, and must be kept with the source of the blog. Gallery was the initial inspiration for Photos.
Image_process : Resize and process images in the article body in a more flexible way (based on the CSS class of the image), but without the ability to create galleries. The source photos must be kept with the source of the blog.