For the past week or so I’ve been working on an embedded domain-specific language for rendering simple diagrams with Haskell, and I’m excited to actually release version 0.1 today! You can now find it on Hackage. Version 0.1 is still fairly primitive, and there are a bunch more planned features, but you can already use it to create some pretty pictures. Here are a few examples.

We’ll start with a basic ‘hello world’ type diagram: a two-by-five rectangle, no frills:

module Main where import Graphics.Rendering.Diagrams main = renderToPng "hello.png" 100 100 (rect 2 5)

OK, not too exciting, but at least it was easy. Here’s another silly example that shows off a few more available features:

module Main where import Graphics.Rendering.Diagrams shapes :: Diagram shapes = hcat [ fc blue $ circle 10 , (fc goldenrod . lc green . lw 3 $ poly 5 10) ## (fc red . rotate (1/10) $ rect 4 4) , fc grey . lw 0 . scaleY 3 $ circle 5 ] main = renderToPng "shapes.png" 200 200 shapes

Hopefully, this example is fairly self-explanatory. We can alter the appearance of diagrams by applying functions to them like fc (fill color), lc (line color), lw (line width), rotate, and scaleY. We can superimpose two diagrams with ##. And we can lay out a list of diagrams horizontally with hcat. There are many other combinators along similar lines, with various options for distributing and aligning subdiagrams.

Now for a couple cooler examples. How about a Sierpinski triangle?

module Main where import Graphics.Rendering.Diagrams import Graphics.Rendering.Diagrams.Types import qualified Graphics.Rendering.Cairo as C import Graphics.Rendering.Diagrams.Shapes (draw) data EqTri = EqTri deriving Show instance ShapeClass EqTri where shapeSize _ = (2, sqrt 3) renderShape _ = do c $ C.moveTo 1 s c $ C.lineTo 0 (-s) c $ C.lineTo (-1) s c $ C.closePath draw where s = sqrt 3 / 2 sierpinski :: Int -> Diagram sierpinski 0 = fc black $ lw 0 $ shape EqTri sierpinski n = vcatA hcenter [ s , s <> s] where s = sierpinski (n-1) main = renderToPng "sierpinski.png" 300 300 (sierpinski 6)

This example illustrates a couple key points. One is that the library is easy to extend with new shapes. The built-in poly function is too general to provide a nice equilateral triangle for use in making a sierpinski triangle (its bounding box is too large, which would lead to ugly spaces in the diagram), so we can define our own shape just by making an instance of ShapeClass, and using the Cairo library to draw a path defining the shape. This is probably not the best way to accomplish this particular task — future versions of the diagrams library will include easier ways — but it’s a nice example of how easy it is to extend the basic library functionality.

The other key point is how much power we get for free from the fact that this is an embedded DSL. We can use the full power of Haskell to define a recursive function for computing sierpinski triangle diagrams.

For a final example, here are some nice Ford circles:

module Main where import Graphics.Rendering.Diagrams import Data.Ratio import System.Random (<+>) :: Rational -> Rational -> Rational r1 <+> r2 = (numerator r1 + numerator r2) % (denominator r1 + denominator r2) farey :: Integer -> [Rational] farey 0 = [0%1, 1%1] farey n = insertMediants (farey (n-1)) insertMediants :: [Rational] -> [Rational] insertMediants [] = [] insertMediants [x] = [x] insertMediants (x:y:zs) = x : (x <+> y) : insertMediants (y:zs) fordCircles :: Integer -> [Diagram] fordCircles n = map toCircle (filter ((<= n) . denominator) $ farey n) toCircle r = translateX r' $ circle (1 / (2 * d'^2)) where r' = fromRational r d' = fromIntegral (denominator r) dia :: [Color] -> Diagram dia colors = view (0,-1/2) (1,0) $ unionA hcenter bottom $ zipWith fc colors (fordCircles 20) randomColors :: [Double] -> [Color] randomColors (r:g:b:ds) = rgb r g b : randomColors ds main :: IO () main = do g <- newStdGen let rs = randoms g renderToPng "ford.png" 400 205 (dia $ randomColors rs)

Plans for future versions of the library include:

text objects

settable backgrounds and better support for transparency

support for line join style and dashing

more primitive shapes: special triangles, ellipses, bezier curves, lines, arrows…

more layouts: grid, tree, circle…

constraint-based placement of objects, e.g. to connect diagrams with arrows

more output modes: ps, svg, pdf

and more!

If this looks interesting to you, I hope you’ll download the library and play around with it! (Note that it does require the Cairo bindings, which are packaged as part of gtk2hs, which is unfortunately not yet Cabalized.) I would be happy to receive any and all feedback, including feature suggestions, bug reports, and pretty pictures. If you’re interested in contributing code, the darcs repository can be found at http://code.haskell.org/diagrams/.

Enjoy!