X-Git-Url: https://git.saurik.com/wxWidgets.git/blobdiff_plain/397f14ce524d02bef903c3f186f1554e630467c2..8f974c520a8733158591891458fda10fae4c3950:/docs/latex/book/chap_images.tex diff --git a/docs/latex/book/chap_images.tex b/docs/latex/book/chap_images.tex index 2670f46bcc..5c57ab77c0 100644 --- a/docs/latex/book/chap_images.tex +++ b/docs/latex/book/chap_images.tex @@ -3,5 +3,60 @@ \setheader{{\it CHAPTER \thechapter: IMAGES AND BITMAPS}}{}{}{}{}{{\it CHAPTER \thechapter: IMAGES AND BITMAPS}}% \setfooter{\thepage}{}{}{}{}{\thepage}% -wxImage and wxBitmap unravelled. +\section{The basics of images and bitmaps} + +Both wxImage and wxBitmap represent what would commonly be referred as +a photo with a given number of pixels - in contrast to a drawing consisting +of a collection of lines, curves, circles, squares etc. + +The difference between a wxImage and a wxBitmap is that wxImage is a +platform and screen independent representation of an image - every +pixel is always represented by three bytes, one for red, one for green +and one for blue, thus yielding the classical RGB acronym. Due to the +simplicity of wxImage, you will do all kinds of image manipulation +with this class, this includes loading images in various formats +such as GIF, TIFF or JPEG (these and some more are supported by wxWindows +without further work), analyizing the image in terms of colour usage etc +and applying filters to the image for higher-level manipulation, such +as blurring, sharpening etc. + +The problem with wxImage is that you cannot draw it, i.e. its destiny +is to live its shadow life in memory, without ever being seen by man. +If you ever want to draw an image to screen, you have to convert it +to a wxBitmap first, typically, this will look like this: + +\begin{verbatim} + wxImage image( 200, 200 ); + wxBitmap bitmap( image.ConvertToBitmap() ); + + wxClientDC dc( this ) + dc.DrawBitmap( bitmap ); +\end{verbatim} + +Note, that such as image conversion is an extremely expensive operation +and you are very well advised to avoid having to call this routine +more than absolutely required. In practice, you should not do this +in a paint event handler, for instance. + +There is one more thing you can do with a wxBitmap: you can draw into +it like you would do with a window. All you need to do is set up a +proper device context (DC) for it and ensure that you clean up the +DC correctly afterwards: + +\begin{verbatim} + wxBitmap bitmap( 200, 200 ); + + wxMemoryDC dc; + dc.SelectObject( bitmap ); + + dc.SetPen( *wxBLACK_PEN ); + dc.DrawLine( 0, 0, 199, 199 ); + + dc.SelectObject( wxNullBitmap ); +\end{verbatim} + +\section{wxImage built-in features} + +You can save it, load it, get access to it, assign it a mask colour, +turn it around, mirror it.