Imagine you need to apply a 90 degree rotation to a single image. So the rotation should be applied to one specific Media
and not to all media linked to the given $newsItem
.
When adding an image to the medialibrary, you can use withManipulations
to set any media specific manipulations.
Here's a quick example:
$newsItem
->addMedia($pathToFile)
->withManipulations([
'thumb' => ['orientation' => '90'],
);
The package will regenerate all files (conversions) using the saved manipulation as the first manipulation when creating each derived image.
You can also apply media specific manipulations to an existing Media
instance.
$mediaItems = $newsItem->getMedia('images');
$mediaItems[0]->manipulations = [
'thumb' => ['orientation' => '90'],
];
$mediaItems[0]->save();
First the rotation will be applied for this specific $mediaItem
, then the other manipulations you specified in the thumb
conversion.
Of course you can also set media specific manipulations for multiple conversions in one go:
$newsItem
->addMedia($pathToFile)
->withManipulations([
'thumb' => ['orientation' => '90'],
'otherConversion' => ['orientation' => '90'],
);
Lets take the example again of this one image $mediaItem
that needs to be rotated and was linked to $newsItem
. Imagine we have a lot of conversions for all the media: thumb
, small
for web, cmyk
for print in full resolution.
Having to add all these manipulation keys with orientation 90
would be a pain.
You can avoid this pain by using a wildcard. Manipulations of the wildcard will be added to each conversion of the media.
Here's an example:
$newsItem
->addMedia($pathToFile)
->withManipulations([
'*' => ['orientation' => '90'],
);
You can also combine wildcard manipulations with one for a specific collection. The wildcard manipulations will always be performed before the collection specific ones.
$newsItem
->addMedia($pathToFile)
->withManipulations([
'*' => ['orientation' => '90'],
'thumb' => ['filter' => 'greyscale'],
);