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Java equivalent of JavaScript's Canvas getImageData

开发者 https://www.devze.com 2023-02-09 01:05 出处:网络
I\'m porting a HTML5\'s Canvas sample to Java, so far so good, until i get on this function call : Canvas.getContext(\'2d\').getImageData(0, 0, 100, 100).data

I'm porting a HTML5's Canvas sample to Java, so far so good, until i get on this function call :

Canvas.getContext('2d').getImageData(0, 0, 100, 100).data

I googled for a while and found this page of the canvas specification

http://www.whatwg.org/specs/web-apps/current-work/multipage/the-canvas-element.html#pixel-manipulation

After reading it, I created this function below :

public int[] getImageDataPort(BufferedImage image) {
    int width = image.getWidth();
    int height = image.getHeight();

    int[] ret = new int[width * height * 4];

    int idx = 0;
    for (int y = 0; y < height; y++) {
        for (int x = 0; x < width; x++) {
            int color = image.getRGB(x, y);

            ret[idx++] = getRed(color);
            ret[idx++] = getGreen(color);
            ret[idx++] = getBlue(color);
            ret[idx++] = getAlpha(color);
        }
    }
    return ret;
}

public int getRed(int color) {
    return (color >> 16) & 0xFF;
}

public int getGreen(int color) {
    return (color >> 8) & 0xFF;
}

public int getBlue(int color) {
    return (color >> 0) & 0xFF;
}

public int getAlpha(int color) {
    return (color >> 24) & 0xff;
}

There is any class on Java G开发者_如何学Goraphics API that has this function built-in or i should use the one that i had created?


I think the closest thing you'll find in the standard Java API is the Raster class. You can get hold of a WritableRaster (used for low-level image manipulation) through BufferedImage.getRaster. The Raster class then provides methods such as getSamples which fills an int[] with image data.


Thanks aioobe, i've looked at the WritableRaster class and found the getPixels function which does exactly what i needed, the final result is :

public int[] getImageDataPort(BufferedImage image) {
    int width = image.getWidth();
    int height = image.getHeight();

    int[] ret = null;

    ret = image.getRaster().getPixels(0, 0, width, height, ret);

    return ret;
}

The only problem that may happen is when the image.getType isn't a type that supports alpha in comparison with the code of the question, resulting in a smaller int[] ret, but one can simply convert the image type with :

public BufferedImage convertType(BufferedImage image,int type){
    BufferedImage ret = new BufferedImage(image.getWidth(), image.getHeight(), type);
    ColorConvertOp xformOp = new ColorConvertOp(null);
    xformOp.filter(image, ret);
    return ret;
}


Try

ByteArrayOutputStream baos = new ByteArrayOutputStream();
ImageIO.write(bi, "jpg", baos);

where bi - BufferendImage

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