The turtle module provides turtle graphics primitives, in both object-oriented and procedure-oriented ways. Because it uses Tkinter for the underlying graphics, it needs a version of Python installed with Tk support.
turtle.fillcolor()
This method is used to return or set the fillcolor. If turtleshape is a polygon, the interior of that polygon is drawn with the newly set fillcolor.
Syntax : turtle.fillcolor(*args)
Parameters:
- fillcolor() : Return the current fillcolor as color specification string, possibly in hex-number format.
- fillcolor(colorstring) : It is a Tk color specification string, such as “red” or “yellow”.
- fillcolor((r, g, b)) : A tuple of r, g, and b, which represent, an RGB color, and each of r, g, and b are in the range 0 to colormode
- fillcolor(r, g, b) : r, g, and b represent an RGB color, and each of r, g, and b are in the range 0 to colormode.
Below is the implementation of the above method with some examples :
Example 1 :
Python3
# importing package import turtle # set turtle turtle.shape( "turtle" ) turtle.turtlesize( 3 , 3 , 1 ) # check by default value print (turtle.fillcolor()) # set blue color turtle.fillcolor( "blue" ) # check fillcolor value print (turtle.fillcolor()) |
Output :
black blue
Example 2 :
Python3
# importing package import turtle # method to draw a star def star(): for i in range ( 5 ): turtle.forward( 60 ) turtle.right( 144 ) # method to set position # and fill color in star def draw(x,y,col): turtle.up() turtle.setpos(x,y) turtle.down() turtle.fillcolor(col) turtle.begin_fill() star() turtle.end_fill() # Driver Code draw( - 100 , 0 , "red" ) draw( - 50 , 0 , "yellow" ) draw( 0 , 0 , "blue" ) draw( 50 , 0 , "green" ) # hide the turtle turtle.hideturtle() |
Output :