Chapter 16. Graphics
You have been learning about a lot of the basic elements of computer programming: input and output, variables, decisions, loops, lists, functions, objects, and modules. I hope you have enjoyed filling up your brain with all this stuff! Now it’s time to start having a bit more fun with programming and Python.
In this chapter, you’ll learn how to draw things on the screen, like lines, shapes, colors, and even a bit of animation. This will help us make some games and other programs in the next few chapters.
Getting graphics (and sound) to work on your computer can be a little complicated. It involves the operating system, your graphics card, and a lot of low-level code that we don’t really want to worry about for now. So we’re going to use a Python module called Pygame to help make things a bit simpler.

Pygame lets you create graphics and the other things you need to make games work on different computers and operating systems, without having to know all the messy details of each system. Pygame is free, and a version of Pygame comes with this book. It should be installed if you used the book’s installer to install Python. If not, you’ll have to install it separately. You can get it from the Pygame web site, www.pygame.org.
Pygame also needs some help from another module called Numeric. Numeric is also installed by the book’s installer, and if you don’t have it, you can get it at the Pygame web site.