7

I'd like to draw a red border around an image, but can't figure out how.

I've tried to fill the image of the Hero sprite and set the colorkey to red self.image.set_colorkey(red), but that makes the image invisible.

Drawing a red rect onto the image, just filled it completely: pygame.draw.rect(self.image, red, [0, 0, width, height]).

I just want a red border that will help with collision detection in the future.

The code in main.py:

import pygame
from pygame import *
import sprites
from sprites import *
pygame.init()

width = 640
height = 480
color = (255, 255, 255) #white
x = 0
y = 0
speed = 3

screen = pygame.display.set_mode((width, height))
pygame.display.set_caption("Mushroom")
icon = pygame.image.load('icon.bmp')
pygame.display.set_icon(icon)
sprites_list = pygame.sprite.Group()

hero = Hero('mushroom.png', 48, 48)
hero.rect.x = 200;
hero.rect.y = 300;

sprites_list.add(hero)

running = True
clock = pygame.time.Clock()
while running:
    sprites_list.update()
    screen.fill((color))
    sprites_list.draw(screen)
    hero.draw(screen)
    pygame.display.flip()
    pygame.display.update()

    for event in pygame.event.get():
        if event.type == pygame.QUIT:
            running = False

    key = pygame.key.get_pressed()
    if key[pygame.K_LEFT]:
       hero.left(speed)
    if key[pygame.K_RIGHT]:
       hero.right(speed)
    if key[pygame.K_UP]:
       hero.up(speed)
    if key[pygame.K_DOWN]:
       hero.down(speed)

    clock.tick(60)

The code in sprites.py:

import pygame
from pygame import *

red = (255, 0, 0)

class Hero(pygame.sprite.Sprite):
    def __init__(self, color, width, height):

        super().__init__()

        self.image = pygame.image.load('mushroom.png')
        self.image = pygame.Surface((width, height))
        self.image.fill(red)
        self.image.set_colorkey(red)

        pygame.draw.rect(self.image, red, [0, 0, width, height])
        self.rect = self.image.get_rect()

    def draw(self, screen):
        screen.blit(self.image, self.rect)

    def right(self, pixels):
        self.rect.x += pixels
    def left(self, pixels):
        self.rect.x -= pixels
    def up(self, pixels):
        self.rect.y -= pixels
    def down(self, pixels):
        self.rect.y += pixels
4
  • 1
    It's not really clear what you want to do. Why do you fill the image self.image.fill(red) and then set the colorkey self.image.set_colorkey(red)? That makes the image invisible. Are you trying to make the background of the 'mushroom.png' image transparent? Or do you want to draw a red border around the image?
    – skrx
    Oct 14, 2017 at 8:53
  • 1
    Yes, i want to draw a red border around the image to make a collision check in future. Image don't display, but a red rectangle is displayed.
    – Yeoha I
    Oct 14, 2017 at 9:23
  • 1
    Could you show us your mushroom.png file? Also, if you always want a red rectangle around your sprite, there should be no need to replace self.image with a new pygame.Surface and lose all of your image data that you just loaded in. Oct 14, 2017 at 15:55
  • @YeohaI I've rephrased the question to help future readers. Let me know if it looks okay.
    – skrx
    Oct 14, 2017 at 22:05

2 Answers 2

3

You can pass a width argument to pygame.draw.rect().

Changing the line

pygame.draw.rect(self.image, red, [0, 0, width, height])

to

pygame.draw.rect(self.image, red, [0, 0, width, height], 1)

should do what you're looking for!

EDIT: I realize this post is old, but this was an issue I was having, and the current top answer didn't help. I found this solution, and hope it can help others too!

1

You have two choices:

  1. Draw a red, non-filled rectangle onto the mushroom image/surface.
  2. Draw the rect each frame in the draw method.

If you want a non-filled rect, you have to pass an int as the last argument (the line width) to pygame.draw.rect.

import pygame


pygame.init()

white = (255, 255, 255)
red = (255, 0, 0)

# The original
hero_img = pygame.Surface((48, 48), pygame.SRCALPHA)
pygame.draw.circle(hero_img, (30, 90, 170), (24, 24), 20)
# ---Solution 1---
# You could create a copy of the original image and
# then draw the rect onto it.
hero_img_with_border = hero_img.copy()
# Draw the red border. Pass an int as the last argument (width)
# to draw a non-filled rect. For 2 pixel linewidth the rect has
# to be one pixel smaller.
pygame.draw.rect(hero_img_with_border, red, (0, 0, 47, 47), 2)


class Hero(pygame.sprite.Sprite):

    def __init__(self, position):
        super().__init__()
        self.image = hero_img
        self.rect = self.image.get_rect(center=position)
        self.speed = 3

    def draw(self, screen):
        # ---Solution 2---
        # Just draw the non-filled rect here.
        pygame.draw.rect(screen, red, self.rect, 2)

    def right(self):
        self.rect.x += self.speed
    def left(self):
        self.rect.x -= self.speed
    def up(self):
        self.rect.y -= self.speed
    def down(self):
        self.rect.y += self.speed


screen = pygame.display.set_mode((640, 480))

sprites_list = pygame.sprite.Group()
# You can pass the coords and change the rect in the __init__ method.
hero = Hero((200, 300))
sprites_list.add(hero)

running = True
clock = pygame.time.Clock()

while running:
    for event in pygame.event.get():
        if event.type == pygame.QUIT:
            running = False

    key = pygame.key.get_pressed()
    if key[pygame.K_LEFT]:
       hero.left()
    if key[pygame.K_RIGHT]:
       hero.right()
    if key[pygame.K_UP]:
       hero.up()
    if key[pygame.K_DOWN]:
       hero.down()

    sprites_list.update()

    screen.fill(white)
    sprites_list.draw(screen)
    # If you use solution 1, you don't need the draw method, since
    # sprites_list.draw blits the image already.
    hero.draw(screen)
    screen.blit(hero_img, (100, 100))

    pygame.display.flip()
    clock.tick(60)

I've changed a few more things: The speed could be an attribute of the sprite and you can pass a tuple with the coordinates to the __init__ method and then pass it to get_rect as the center or topleft argument.

self.image.get_rect(center=position)

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.