Book Image

Processing 2: Creative Coding Hotshot

By : Nikolaus Gradwohl
Book Image

Processing 2: Creative Coding Hotshot

By: Nikolaus Gradwohl

Overview of this book

Processing makes it convenient for developers, artists, and designers to create their own projects easily and efficiently. Processing offers you a platform for expressing your ideas and engaging audiences in new ways. This book teaches you everything you need to know to explore new frontiers in animation and interactivity with the help of Processing."Processing 2: Creative Coding Hotshot' will present you with nine exciting projects that will take you beyond the basics and show you how you can make your programs see, hear, and even feel! With these projects, you will also learn how to build your own hardware controllers and integrate devices such as a Kinect senor board in your Processing sketches.Processing is an exciting programming environment for programmers and visual artists alike that makes it easier to create interactive programs.Through nine complete projects, "Processing 2: Creative Coding Hotshot' will help you explore the exciting possibilities that this open source language provides. The topics we will cover range from creating robot - actors performing Shakespeare's "Romeo and Juliet", to generating objects for 3D printing, and you will learn how to run your processing sketches nearly anywhere from a desktop computer to a browser or a mobile device.
Table of Contents (16 chapters)
Processing 2: Creative Coding Hotshot
Credits
About the Author
About the Reviewers
www.PacktPub.com
Preface
Index

Reading a logfile


The first task for our current mission is to take the logfile of an Apache web server and extract the interesting parts. We are going to use regular expressions to split the logfiles' lines and we are fetching the IP address and the timestamp. We will also create a new class to store the data we have extracted.

Engage Thrusters

Let's start with parsing our logfile:

  1. Create a new sketch and add the setup() and draw() methods.

    void setup() {
    }
    
    void draw() {
    }
  2. Now we add the logfile we want to visualize by dropping it on the sketch window or adding it using the Sketch | Add File ... menu.

  3. In the setup() method, we read the file into an array of strings.

    void setup() {
      size(700,350);
      String[] log = loadStrings( "access.log" );
     }
  4. Add a new tab by clicking on the little arrow icon and selecting New Tab. We name it LogRow and create a new class to store the IP address and the timestamp of each record.

    class LogRow {
      String ip;
      String timestamp;
      
      public  LogRow( String ip,...