User:Tom
Project (WORK IN PROGRESS)
I ran into a couple of Gifs that visualised how certain sorting algorithms worked. Normally I don’t understand algorithms, but these visualisations made it so easy and insightful to understand what is going on. Besides that I think it’s cool to see an algorithm at work like this, I also think it has some artistic value. You could call it glitch art (glitch art:——————)
It is a code creating a new kind of image by rearranging the original. This results in an image made anonymous. Or maybe more like a vague memory, where everything is still there but over time you start to forget what it looks like. This creates a new memory, a distorted version of the original.
What is Pixel Sorting?
Pixel Sorting is done with a program called Processing. It takes the pixels in a digital image and places them into a semblance of order. Pixel sorting was made popular by an artist of the name Kim Asendorf. He began sorting by developing a code in Processing.
Examples from artists/reddit
Experiment
CODE!
This is a modified version of the code written bij Kim Asendorf. It is written in Processing language, and requires a folder called ‘data’ in the same location as the .pde processing file.
\usepackage{listings}
\begin{lstlisting}
PImage img; PImage sorted; int index = 0;
void setup() {
size(800, 400);
img = loadImage("afbeelding.jpg"); sorted = createImage(img.width, img.height, RGB); sorted = img.get();
}
void draw() {
println(frameRate);
sorted.loadPixels();
// Selection sort! for (int y = 0; y < sorted.height; y++) {
float record = -1; int selectedPixel = index;
for (int x = index; x < sorted.width; x++) { int loc = y * sorted.width + x; color pix = sorted.pixels[loc]; float b = brightness(pix); if (b > record) { selectedPixel = loc; record = b; } } // Swap selectedPixel with i color temp = sorted.pixels[y * sorted.width + index]; sorted.pixels[y * sorted.width + index] = sorted.pixels[selectedPixel]; sorted.pixels[selectedPixel] = temp; } if (index < sorted.width -1) { index++; } else { save("sorted.jpg"); frameRate(0); }
sorted.updatePixels();
background(0); image(img, 0, 0); image(sorted, 400, 0);
}
\end{lstlisting}
The code results in a pixel sorting visualisation:
GIF MAKEN