3

I'm trying to "cut" a picture in half and flip both sides horizontally. See link below.

https://i.stack.imgur.com/mg9Qg.jpg

Original picture:

enter image description here

What the output needs to be:

enter image description here

What I'm getting

enter image description here

This is what I have, but all it does is flip the picture horizontally

def mirrorHorizontal(picture):
  mirrorPoint = getHeight(picture)/2
  height = getHeight(picture)
  for x in range(0, getWidth(picture)):
    for y in range(0, mirrorPoint):
      topPixel = getPixel(picture, x, y)
      bottomPixel = getPixel(picture, x, height - y - 1)
      color = getColor(topPixel)
      setColor(bottomPixel, color)

So how do I flip each side horizontally so that so that it comes out looking like the second picture?

3
  • Whatr module are you using for Picture manipulation? (What provides the getPixel, setColor andother methods? )
    – jsbueno
    Oct 23, 2012 at 2:07
  • Almost certainly JES.
    – nneonneo
    Oct 23, 2012 at 2:15
  • The logic is not quite right, but there's one thing that looks wrong from the start: you're modifying a pixel and then modifying its counterpart, which is really itself by the time Python gets there. Suppose you have two pixels, top and bottom. In one iteration, you'll modify top, assigning it bottom. Then, when you get to bottom, you try to set it to top's color, only now top is bottom. So half your picture will be unmodified. An easy way to avoid this is to create a different image with the same dimensions, and map things from your original to that. Oct 23, 2012 at 2:20

2 Answers 2

1

One approach would be to define a function for flipping part of an image horizontally:

def mirrorRowsHorizontal(picture, y_start, y_end):
    ''' Flip the rows from y_start to y_end in place. '''
    # WRITE ME!

def mirrorHorizontal(picture):
    h = getHeight(picture)
    mirrorRowsHorizontal(picture, 0, h/2)
    mirrorRowsHorizontal(picture, h/2, h)

Hopefully, that gives you a start.

Hint: You may need to swap two pixels; to do this, you'll want to use a temporary variable.

5
  • I think this suffers from the same problem I pointed out in the comments. Oct 23, 2012 at 2:22
  • 1
    I'm operating under the assumption that the picture needs to be modified in-place (which requires swapping). If OP is free to make new images, then creating a new image and filling it in will be easier.
    – nneonneo
    Oct 23, 2012 at 2:23
  • I think this would work but i need the function to take only one input, that input being a picture. Oh and I'm not really familiar with swapping pictures. I'm just trying to edit this one to what the output needs to be. Oct 23, 2012 at 2:24
  • mirrorHorizontal takes only one input. mirrorRowsHorizontal is a helper function.
    – nneonneo
    Oct 23, 2012 at 2:24
  • Never mind, I still can't figure it out. Is there another hint you could provide me with, @nneonneo? I feel dumb that I'm not figuring this out. Oct 23, 2012 at 3:19
0

One year later, I think we can give the answer :

def mirrorRowsHorizontal(picture, y_start, y_end):
    width = getWidth(picture)

    for y in range(y_start/2, y_end/2):
        for x in range(0, width):
            sourcePixel = getPixel(picture, x, y_start/2 + y)
            targetPixel = getPixel(picture, x, y_start/2 + y_end - y - 1)
            color = getColor(sourcePixel)
            setColor(sourcePixel, getColor(targetPixel))
            setColor(targetPixel, color)

def mirrorHorizontal(picture):
    h = getHeight(picture)
    mirrorRowsHorizontal(picture, 0, h/2)
    mirrorRowsHorizontal(picture, h/2, h)

Taken from vertical flip here.

Example with 3 stripes :

mirrorRowsHorizontal(picture, 0, h/3)
mirrorRowsHorizontal(picture, h/3, 2*h/3)
mirrorRowsHorizontal(picture, 2*h/3, h)

Before :

enter image description here

After :

enter image description here

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.