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Let's say you have one big image (say, a Telegram sticker) and you need to dice it into a bunch of smaller images (say, Discord emoji). GIMP can let you do that manually, but frankly so can simpler tools. GIMP also has powerful scripting support with Python (and also Scheme, but miss me with that) that can let us do that automatically.
1. Save your large image somewhere with a useful filename; this script will chuck `_1_1` and `_1_2` etc on the end of the existing filename.
2. Open that image in GIMP.
3. Go to the Filters menu, open Python-Fu, and hit Console.
4. Set up the width and height of your tiles. For 64x64 tiles, for example, type
5. Paste in this big ol' block of code and let it build your tiles and print out the text you can enter in Discord to reconstitute your original image:
There are two minor issues with actually using this code to convert a Telegram sticker into Discord emoji that I'll get to later.
I'll walk through each bit of the code segment above and explain why it's there.
We need the GIMP libraries, the Python 3 `print()` function (because as of GIMP 2.8.22 the GIMP console is still on Python 2), and some path manipulation functions.
from gimpfu import * from __future__ import print_function import os.path
We're going to crop an image with an X and Y offset and a width and height. The first step in generating the tile is telling GIMP to do the actual crop.
def crop(image, x, width, y, height): pdb.gimp_image_crop(image, width, height, x, y)
The next step is to figure out the filename for this specific tile; here we're getting an index back from the offsets and width and height.
x_idx = x / width + 1 y_idx = y / width + 1 filename = pdb.gimp_image_get_filename(image) dir, name = os.path.split(filename) root, ext = os.path.splitext(name) ext = ".png" output_root = root + "_" + str(y_idx) + "_" + str(x_idx) output_name = os.path.join(dir, output_root + ext)
Once we've got a filename, we can save. For some reason GIMP's save functions all depend on both the image and the layer, and on two copies of the filename.
layer = pdb.gimp_image_get_active_layer(image) pdb.file_png_save_defaults(image, layer, output_name, output_name)
Since the goal is to reconstitute the original image from Discord emoji, we assume that they won't be renamed. We need the Python 3 print function here to suppress any characters after the string is printed; the Python 2 `print "foo",` trick still emits a space.
print(":" + output_root + ":", end="")
We might as well delete the image from GIMP. I don't know if this actually serves an important purpose or not.
pdb.gimp_image_delete(image)
We want to grab the original filename.
image = gimp.image_list()[0] filename = pdb.gimp_image_get_filename(image)
Since we defined WIDTH and HEIGHT manually earlier, now we can loop through the image. I should probably go back in and make it grab the full image width and height, but fuck it, I don't want to.
for y in range(0, 512, WIDTH): for x in range(0, 512, HEIGHT):
I don't know if GIMP doesn't expose undo in the Python API or if I just couldn't find it, but either way we don't have undo, so we pass in a fresh copy of the image instead.
crop(pdb.gimp_file_load(filename, filename), x, WIDTH, y, HEIGHT)
Since we're building up the emoji text for Discord one row at a time, we need to end the row at the end of a row.
print()
This is just there so the newline after the `for` loop gets pasted successfully.
pass
The first issue with this approach is that Discord (at time of writing, at least) sets a total of 2.25 pixels worth of horizontal margin between emoji, so your reconstituted image will have weird stripes. It might be feasible to adjust for these in the offsets so that the spacing isn't funky, but honestly that seems like a lot of work.
The second, and more interesting, issue is that Discord has a 50 emoji limit on each server. Slicing a 512x512 image into 32x32 tiles for a full size replica would generate 256 tiles, which might work if you had Discord Nitro and six different dummy servers, but nah. Slicing into 64x64 tiles that'll be rendered at half size only makes 64 tiles, which works out nicely numerically but is still more than can fit on one server. Unless we're clever.
I'm not sure how well this generalizes, but for the sticker I'm working with, 16 of those 64 tiles are fully transparent, and therefore identical. If we could detect this when slicing, we could avoid emitting 15 of those, at which point we come in nicely with 49 tiles, one under the Discord emoji limit. But how can we detect if an image is fully transparent?
Get histogram info for the alpha channel! We can use something like this to count how many pixels aren't fully transparent:
_, _, _, _, visible_count, _ = pdb.gimp_histogram(layer, HISTOGRAM_ALPHA, 1, 255)
So our final code can detect if each tile is fully transparent before it saves and treat all fully transparent tiles as equivalent to the very first one.
from gimpfu import * from __future__ import print_function import os.path empty_tile_name = None def crop(image, x, width, y, height): global empty_tile_name pdb.gimp_image_crop(image, width, height, x, y) layer = pdb.gimp_image_get_active_layer(image) _, _, _, _, visible_count, _ = pdb.gimp_histogram(layer, HISTOGRAM_ALPHA, 1, 255) x_idx = x / width + 1 y_idx = y / width + 1 filename = pdb.gimp_image_get_filename(image) dir, name = os.path.split(filename) root, ext = os.path.splitext(name) ext = ".png" output_root = root + "_" + str(y_idx) + "_" + str(x_idx) output_name = os.path.join(dir, output_root + ext) if visible_count > 0 or empty_tile_name is None: pdb.file_png_save_defaults(image, layer, output_name, output_name) if visible_count == 0: if empty_tile_name is None: empty_tile_name = output_root else: output_root = empty_tile_name print(":" + output_root + ":", end="") pdb.gimp_image_delete(image) image = gimp.image_list()[0] filename = pdb.gimp_image_get_filename(image) for y in range(0, 512, WIDTH): for x in range(0, 512, HEIGHT): crop(pdb.gimp_file_load(filename, filename), x, WIDTH, y, HEIGHT) print() pass
The results are actually fairly impressive, all things considered:
(that sticker is by NL and of Pandora's Fox)
But of course anyone with an ounce of sense would just upload the image so this whole project was a complete waste of three hours.