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157 lines
7.2 KiB
157 lines
7.2 KiB
6 years ago
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Metadata-Version: 2.1
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Name: PyScreeze
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Version: 0.1.21
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Summary: A simple, cross-platform screenshot module for Python 2 and 3.
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Home-page: https://github.com/asweigart/pyscreeze
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Author: Al Sweigart
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Author-email: al@inventwithpython.com
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License: BSD
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Keywords: screenshot screen screencap capture scrot screencapture image
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Platform: UNKNOWN
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Classifier: Development Status :: 3 - Alpha
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Classifier: Environment :: Win32 (MS Windows)
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Classifier: Environment :: X11 Applications
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Classifier: Environment :: MacOS X
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Classifier: Intended Audience :: Developers
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Classifier: License :: OSI Approved :: BSD License
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Classifier: Operating System :: OS Independent
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Classifier: Programming Language :: Python
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Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 2
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Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 2.5
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Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 2.6
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Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 2.7
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Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 3
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Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 3.1
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Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 3.2
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Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 3.3
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Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 3.4
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Requires-Dist: Pillow
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PyScreeze
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=========
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PyScreeze is a simple, cross-platform screenshot module for Python 2 and 3.
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About
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-----
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PyScreeze can take screenshots, save them to files, and locate images within the screen. This is useful if you have a small image of, say, a button that needs to be clicked and want to locate it on the screen.
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Screenshot functionality requires the Pillow module. OS X uses the `screencapture` command, which comes with the operating system. Linux uses the `scrot` command, which can be installed by running `sudo apt-get install scrot`.
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Special Notes About Ubuntu
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==========================
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Unfortunately, Ubuntu seems to have several deficiencies with installing Pillow. PNG and JPEG support are not included with Pillow out of the box on Ubuntu. The following links have more information
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The screenshot() Function
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=========================
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Calling `screenshot()` will return an Image object (see the Pillow or PIL module documentation for details). Passing a string of a filename will save the screenshot to a file as well as return it as an Image object.
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>>> import pyscreeze
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>>> im1 = pyscreeze.screenshot()
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>>> im2 = pyscreeze.screenshot('my_screenshot.png')
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On a 1920 x 1080 screen, the `screenshot()` function takes roughly 100 milliseconds - it's not fast but it's not slow.
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There is also an optional `region` keyword argument, if you do not want a screenshot of the entire screen. You can pass a four-integer tuple of the left, top, width, and height of the region to capture:
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>>> import pyscreeze
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>>> im = pyscreeze.screenshot(region=(0,0, 300, 400))
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The Locate Functions
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====================
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You can visually locate something on the screen if you have an image file of it. You can call the `locateOnScreen('calc7key.png')` function to get the screen coordinates of the 7 button for a calculator app. The return value is a 4-integer tuple: (left, top, width, height). This tuple can be passed to `center()` to get the X and Y coordinates at the center of this region. If the image can't be found on the screen, `locateOnScreen()` returns `None`.
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>>> import pyscreeze
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>>> button7location = pyscreeze.locateOnScreen('calc7key.png')
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>>> button7location
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(1416, 562, 50, 41)
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>>> button7x, button7y = pyscreeze.center(button7location)
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>>> button7x, button7y
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(1441, 582)
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>>> pyscreeze.click(button7x, button7y) # clicks the center of where the 7 button was found
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The `locateCenterOnScreen()` function is probably the one you want to use most often:
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>>> import pyscreeze
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>>> x, y = pyscreeze.locateCenterOnScreen('calc7key.png')
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>>> pyscreeze.click(x, y)
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On a 1920 x 1080 screen, the locate function calls take about 1 or 2 seconds. This may be too slow for action video games, but works for most purposes and applications.
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If speed is important, install the optional opencv library (`pip install cv2`). The `locateAll` computation will use it if available, and take less than 1 millisecond to find all matches in a full-screen search. (This does not include the time required to capture a screenshot.)
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There are several "locate" functions. They all start looking at the top-left corner of the screen (or image) and look to the left and then down. The arguments can either be a
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- `locateOnScreen(image, grayscale=False)` - Returns (left, top, width, height) coordinate of first found instance of the `image` on the screen. Returns None if not found on the screen.
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- `locateCenterOnScreen(image, grayscale=False)` - Returns (x, y) coordinates of the center of the first found instance of the `image` on the screen. Returns None if not found on the screen.
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- `locateAllOnScreen(image, grayscale=False)` - Returns a generator that yields (left, top, width, height) tuples for where the image is found on the screen.
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- `locate(needleImage, haystackImage, grayscale=False)` - Returns (left, top, width, height) coordinate of first found instance of `needleImage` in `haystackImage`. Returns None if not found on the screen.
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- `locateAll(needleImage, haystackImage, grayscale=False)` - Returns a generator that yields (left, top, width, height) tuples for where `needleImage` is found in `haystackImage`.
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The "locate all" functions can be used in for loops or passed to `list()`:
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>>> import pyscreeze
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>>> for pos in pyscreeze.locateAllOnScreen('someButton.png')
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... print(pos)
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...
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(1101, 252, 50, 50)
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(59, 481, 50, 50)
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(1395, 640, 50, 50)
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(1838, 676, 50, 50)
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>>> list(pyscreeze.locateAllOnScreen('someButton.png'))
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[(1101, 252, 50, 50), (59, 481, 50, 50), (1395, 640, 50, 50), (1838, 676, 50, 50)]
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Grayscale Matching
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------------------
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Optionally, you can pass `grayscale=True` to the locate functions to give a slight speedup (about 30%-ish). This desaturates the color from the images and screenshots, speeding up the locating but potentially causing false-positive matches.
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>>> import pyscreeze
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>>> button7location = pyscreeze.locateOnScreen('calc7key.png', grayscale=True)
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>>> button7location
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(1416, 562, 50, 41)
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Pixel Matching
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--------------
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To obtain the RGB color of a pixel in a screenshot, use the Image object's `getpixel()` method:
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>>> import pyscreeze
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>>> im = pyscreeze.screenshot()
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>>> im.getpixel((100, 200))
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(130, 135, 144)
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Or as a single function, call the `pixel()` PyScreeze function, which is a wrapper for the previous calls:
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>>> import pyscreeze
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>>> pyscreeze.pixel(100, 200)
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(130, 135, 144)
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If you just need to verify that a single pixel matches a given pixel, call the `pixelMatchesColor()` function, passing it the X coordinate, Y coordinate, and RGB tuple of the color it represents:
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>>> import pyscreeze
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>>> pyscreeze.pixelMatchesColor(100, 200, (130, 135, 144))
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True
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>>> pyscreeze.pixelMatchesColor(100, 200, (0, 0, 0))
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False
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The optional `tolerance` keyword argument specifies how much each of the red, green, and blue values can vary while still matching:
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>>> import pyscreeze
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>>> pyscreeze.pixelMatchesColor(100, 200, (130, 135, 144))
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True
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>>> pyscreeze.pixelMatchesColor(100, 200, (140, 125, 134))
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False
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>>> pyscreeze.pixelMatchesColor(100, 200, (140, 125, 134), tolerance=10)
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True
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