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Building a Pictionary App

Related spaces: https://huggingface.co/spaces/nateraw/quickdraw Tags: SKETCHPAD, LABELS, LIVE

Introduction

How well can an algorithm guess what you’re drawing? A few years ago, Google released the Quick Draw dataset, which contains drawings made by humans of a variety of every objects. Researchers have used this dataset to train models to guess Pictionary-style drawings.

Such models are perfect to use with Gradio’s sketchpad input, so in this tutorial we will build a Pictionary web application using Gradio. We will be able to build the whole web application in Python, and will look like this (try drawing something!):

Let’s get started! This guide covers how to build a pictionary app (step-by-step):

  1. Set up the Sketch Recognition Model
  2. Define a predict function
  3. Create a Gradio Interface

Prerequisites

Make sure you have the gradio Python package already installed. To use the pretrained sketchpad model, also install torch.

1. Set up the Sketch Recognition Model

First, you will need a sketch recognition model. Since many researchers have already trained their own models on the Quick Draw dataset, we will use a pretrained model in this tutorial. Our model is a light 1.5 MB model trained by Nate Raw, that you can download here.

If you are interested, here is the code that was used to train the model. We will simply load the pretrained model in PyTorch, as follows:

import torch
from torch import nn

model = nn.Sequential(
    nn.Conv2d(1, 32, 3, padding='same'),
    nn.ReLU(),
    nn.MaxPool2d(2),
    nn.Conv2d(32, 64, 3, padding='same'),
    nn.ReLU(),
    nn.MaxPool2d(2),
    nn.Conv2d(64, 128, 3, padding='same'),
    nn.ReLU(),
    nn.MaxPool2d(2),
    nn.Flatten(),
    nn.Linear(1152, 256),
    nn.ReLU(),
    nn.Linear(256, len(LABELS)),
)
state_dict = torch.load('pytorch_model.bin',    map_location='cpu')
model.load_state_dict(state_dict, strict=False)
model.eval()

2. Define a predict function

Next, you will need to define a function that takes in the user input, which in this case is a sketched image, and returns the prediction. The prediction should be returned as a dictionary whose keys are class name and values are confidence probabilities. We will load the class names from this text file.

In the case of our pretrained model, it will look like this:

from pathlib import Path

LABELS = Path('class_names.txt').read_text().splitlines()

def predict(img):
    x = torch.tensor(img, dtype=torch.float32).unsqueeze(0).unsqueeze(0) / 255.
    with torch.no_grad():
        out = model(x)
    probabilities = torch.nn.functional.softmax(out[0], dim=0)
    values, indices = torch.topk(probabilities, 5)
    confidences = {LABELS[i]: v.item() for i, v in zip(indices, values)}
    return confidences

Let’s break this down. The function takes one parameters:

  • img: the input image as a numpy array

Then, the function converts the image to a PyTorch tensor, passes it through the model, and returns:

  • confidences: the top five predictions, as a dictionary whose keys are class labels and whose values are confidence probabilities

3. Create a Gradio Interface

Now that we have our predictive function set up, we can create a Gradio Interface around it.

In this case, the input component is a sketchpad. To create a sketchpad input, we can use the convenient string shortcut, "sketchpad" which creates a canvas for a user to draw on and handles the preprocessing to convert that to a numpy array.

The output component will be a "label", which displays the top labels in a nice form.

Finally, we’ll add one more parameter, setting live=True, which allows our interface to run in real time, adjusting its predictions every time a user draws on the sketchpad. The code for Gradio looks like this:

import gradio as gr

gr.Interface(fn=predict, 
             inputs="sketchpad",
             outputs="label",
             live=True).launch()

This produces the following interface, which you can try right here in your browser (try drawing something, like a “snake” or a “laptop”):


And you’re done! That’s all the code you need to build a Pictionary-style guessing app. Have fun and try to find some edge cases 🧐