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The Fx Special Effects Image Operator

Use the Fx special effects image operator to apply a mathematical expression to an image or image channels. Use Fx to:

The expression can be simple:

$magick> convert -size 64x64 xc:black -channel blue -fx "1/2" fx_navy.png

Here, we convert a black to a navy blue image:

black ==> navy

Or the expression can be complex:

$magick> convert rose.jpg \
-fx "(1.0/(1.0+exp(10.0*(0.5-u)))-0.006693)*1.0092503" \
rose-sigmoidal.png

This expression results in a high contrast version of the image:

rose ==> rose-sigmoidal

The expression can include variable assignments. Assignments, in most cases, reduce the complexity of an expression and permit some operations that might not be possible any other way. For example, lets create a radial gradient:

$magick> convert -size 70x70 xc: \
-fx "Xi=i-w/2; Yj=j-h/2; 1.2*(0.5-hypot(Xi,Yj)/70.0)+0.5" \
radial-gradient.png

The command above returns this image:

radial-gradient

See Using FX, The Special Effects Image Operator for more examples.

The next section discusses the Fx expression language.

The Anatomy of an Fx Expression

The Fx Expression Language

The formal Fx expression language is defined here:

numbers:
integer, floating point, or scientfic notation (+/- required, e.g. 3.81469e-06)
constants:
e, Epsilon, QuantumRange, QuantumScale, Opaque, Pi, Transparent
Fx operators (in order of precedence):
^ (power), *, /, % (modulo), +, -, <<, >>, <, <=, >, >=, ==, !=, & (bitwise AND), | (bitwise OR), && (logical AND), || (logical OR), ~ (logical NOT), ?: (ternary conditional)
math functions:
abs(), acos(), alt(), asin(), atan(), atan2(), ceil(), cos(), cosh(), debug(), exp(), floor(), hypot(), int(), ln(), log(), logtwo(), max(), min(), mod(), pow(), rand(), round(), sign(), sin(), sinh(), sqrt(), tan(), tanh()
channel functions:
channel(r,g,b,a), channel(c,m,y,k,a)
color names:
red, cyan, black, etc.
color functions:
rgb(), rgba(), cmyk(), cmyka(), hsl(), hsla()
color hex values:
#ccc, #cbfed0, #b9e1cc00
symbols:
s = current image in sequence t = scene number of current image in sequence u = first image in sequence v = second image in sequence n = number of images in sequence i = column offset j = row offset p = pixel to use (absolute or relative to current pixel) w = width of this image h = height of this image z = channel depth r = red value (from RGBA), of a specific or current pixel g = green '' b = blue '' a = alpha '' o = opacity '' c = cyan value of CMYK color of pixel y = yellow '' m = magenta '' k = black '' intensity = pixel intensity hue = pixel hue saturation = pixel saturation lightness = pixel lightness luminance = pixel luminance page.width = page width page.height = page height page.x = page x offset page.y = page y offset resolution.x = x resolution resolution.y = y resolution depth = image depth minima = image minima maxima = image maxima mean = image mean standard_deviation = image standard deviation kurtosis = image kurtosis skewness = image skewness (add a channel specifier to compute a statistic for that channel, e.g. depth.r)

The Fx Expression

An Fx expression may include any combination of the following:

  • x ^ y: exponentiation (xy)
  • ( ... ): grouping
  • x * y: multiplication (the asterisk * is optional, for example, 2u or 2(x+y) are acceptable)
  • x / y: division
  • x % y: modulo
  • x + y: addition
  • x - y: subtraction
  • x << y: left shift
  • x >> y: right shift
  • x < y: boolean relation, return value 1.0 if x < y, otherwise 0.0
  • x <= y: boolean relation, return value 1.0 if x <= y, otherwise 0.0
  • x > y: boolean relation, return value 1.0 if x > y, otherwise 0.0
  • x >= y: boolean relation, return value 1.0 if x >= y, otherwise 0.0
  • x == y: boolean relation, return value 1.0 if x == y, otherwise 0.0
  • x != y: boolean relation, return value 1.0 if x != y, otherwise 0.0
  • x & y: binary AND
  • x | y: binary OR
  • x && y: logical AND connective, return value 1.0 if x > 0 and y > 0, otherwise 0.0
  • x || y: logical OR connective (inclusive), return value 1.0 if x > 0 or y > 0 (or both), otherwise 0.0
  • ~x: logical NOT operator, return value 1.0 if not x > 0, otherwise 0.0
  • +x: unary plus, return 1.0*value
  • -x: unary minus, return -1.0*value
  • x ? y : z: ternary conditional expression, return value y if x != 0, otherwise z; only one ternary conditional permitted per statement
  • x = y: assignment; assignment variables are restricted to letter combinations only (e.g. Xi not X1)
  • x ; y: statement separator
  • pi: constant (3.141659...)
  • e: constant (2.71828...)
  • QuantumRange: constant maximum pixel value (255 for Q8, 65535 for Q16)
  • QuantumScale: constant 1.0/QuantumRange
  • intensity: pixel intensity; equivalent to 0.299*red+0.587*green+0.114*blue
  • hue: pixel hue
  • saturation: pixel saturation
  • lightness: pixel lightness; equivalent to 0.5*max(red,green,blue) + 0.5*min(red,green,blue)
  • luminance: pixel luminance; equivalent to 0.2126*red + 0.7152*green + 0.0722*blue
  • red, green, blue, etc.: color names
  • #ccc, #cbfed0, #b9e1cc00, etc.: color hex values
  • rgb(), rgba(), cmyk(), cmyka(), hsl(), hsla(): color functions
  • s, t, u, v, n, i, j, w, h, z, r, g, b, a, o, c, y, m, k: symbols
  • abs(x): absolute value function
  • acos(x): arc cosine function
  • alt(x): sign alternation function (return 1.0 if int(x) is even, -1.0 if int(x) is odd)
  • asin(x): arc sine function
  • atan(x): arc tangent function
  • atan2(y,x): arc tangent function of two variables
  • ceil(x): smallest integral value not less than argument
  • channel(r,g,b,a): select numeric argument based on current channel
  • channel(c,m,y,k,a): select numeric argument based on current channel
  • cos(x): cosine function
  • cosh(x): hyperbolic cosine function
  • debug(x): print x (useful for debugging your expression)
  • exp(x): natural exponential function (ex)
  • floor(x): largest integral value not greater than argument
  • hypot(x,y): the square root of x2+y2
  • int(x): greatest integer function (return greatest integer less than or equal to x)
  • ln(x): natural logarithm function
  • log(x): logarithm base 10
  • logtwo(x): logarithm base 2
  • ln(x): natural logarithm
  • max(x, y): maximum of x and y
  • min(x, y): minimum of x and y
  • mod(x, y): floating-point remainder function
  • pow(x,y): power function (xy)
  • rand(): value uniformly distributed over the interval [0.0, 1.0) with a 2 to the 128th-1 period
  • round(): round to integral value, regardless of rounding direction
  • sign(x): return -1.0 if x is less than 0.0 otherwise 1.0
  • sin(x): sine function
  • sinh(x): hyperbolic sine function
  • sqrt(x): square root function
  • tan(x): tangent function
  • tanh(x): hyperbolic tangent function

The expression semantics include these rules:

  • symbols are case insensitive
  • only one ternary conditional (e.g. x ? y : z) per statement
  • statements are assignments or the final expression to return
  • an assignment starts a statement, it is not an operator
  • assignments to built-ins do not throw an exception and have no effect; e.g. r=3.0; r returns the pixel red color value, not 3.0

Source Images

The symbols u and v refer to the first and second images, respectively, in the current image sequence. Refer to a particular image in a sequence by appending its index to any image reference (usually u), with a zero index for the beginning of the sequence. A negative index counts from the end. For example, u[0] is the first image in the sequence, u[2] is the third, u[-1] is the last image, and u[t] is the current image. The current image can also be referenced by s. If the sequence number exceeds the length of the sequence, the count is wrapped. Thus in a 3-image sequence, u[-1], u[2], and u[5] all refer to the same (third) image.

As an example, we form an image by averaging the first image and third images:

$magick> convert image1.jpg image2.jpg image3.jpg -fx "(u+u[2])/2.0" image.jpg

By default, the image to which p, r, g, b, a, etc., are applied is the first image u in the image list, which may also be referenced using s.

It is important to note the special role played by the first image. This is the only image in the image sequence that is modified, any other images being used only for their data. As an illustrative example, comsider the following, and note that the setting -channel red instructs -fx to modify only the red channel; nothing in the green or blue channels will change. It is instructive to ponder why the result is not symmetric.

$magick> convert -channel red logo: -flop logo: -resize "20%" -fx "(u+v)/2" image.jpg

logo-sm-flop.png logo-sm.png ==> logo-sm-fx.png

Accessing Pixels

All color values are normalized to the range of 0.0 to 1.0. The alpha channel ranges from 0.0 (fully transparent) to 1.0 (fully opaque).

The pixels are processed one at a time, but a different pixel of an image can be specified using a pixel index represented by p. For example,

   p[-1].g      green value of pixel to the immediate left of the current pixel
   p[-1,-1].r   red value of the pixel diagonally left and up from current pixel

To specify an absolute position, use braces, rather than brackets.

  p{0,0}.r   red value of the pixel in the upper left corner of the image
  p{12,34}.b   blue pixel value at column number 12, row 34 of the image

Integer values of the position retrieve the color of the pixel referenced, while non-integer position values return a blended color according to the current -interpolate setting.

A position outside the boundary of the image retrieves a value dictated by the -virtual-pixel option setting.

Apply an Expression to Select Image Channels

Use the -channel setting to specify the output channel of the result. If no output channel is given, the result is set over all channels except the opacity channel. For example, to replace the red channel of alpha.png with the average of the green channels from the images alpha.png and beta.png, use:

$magick> convert alpha.png beta.png -channel red -fx "(u.g+v.g)/2" gamma.png

Results

The -fx operator evaluates the given expression for each channel (set by -channel) of each pixel in the first image (u) in the sequence. The computed values are temporarily stored in a copy (clone) of that first image until all the pixels have been processed, after which this single new image replaces the list of images in the current image sequence. As such, in the previous example the updated version of alpha.png replaces both of the original images, alpha.png and beta.png, before being saved as gamma.png.

The current image s is set to the first image in the sequence (u), and t to its index, 0. The symbols i and j reference the current pixel being processed.

For use with -format, the value-escape %[fx: ] is evaluated just once for each image in the current image sequence. As each image in the sequence is being evaluated, s and t successively refer to the current image and its index, while i and j are set to zero, and the current channel set to red (-channel is ignored). An example:

$magick> convert xc:'rgb(25%,50%,75%)' rose: -colorspace rgb \
-format 'Red channel of NW corner of image # %[fx:t] is %[fx: s]' info:
Red channel of NW corner of image # 0 is 0.250004
Red channel of NW corner of image # 1 is 0.188235

The color-escape %[pixel: ] is evaluated once per image and per color channel in that image (-channel is ignored), The values generated are then converted into a color string (a named color or hex color value). The symbols i and j are set to zero, and s and t refer to each successively current image and index.