The QImage class provides a hardware-independent pixmap representation with direct access to the pixel data. More...
#include <qimage.h>
It is one of the two classes Qt provides for dealing with images, the other being QPixmap. QImage is designed and optimized for I/O and for direct pixel access/manipulation, QPixmap is designed and optimized for drawing. There are (slow) functions to convert between QImage and QPixmap; QPixmap::convertToImage() and QPixmap::convertFromImage().
An image has the parameters width, height and depth (bits per pixel, bpp), a color table and the actual pixels. QImage supports 1-bpp, 8-bpp and 32-bpp image data. 1-bpp and 8-bpp images use a color lookup table; the pixel value is a color table index.
32-bpp images encode an RGB value in 24 bits and ignore the color table. The most significant byte is used for the alpha buffer.
An entry in the color table is an RGB triplet encoded as uint.
Use
the qRed, qGreen and qBlue functions (qcolor.h) to access the
components, and qRgb to make an RGB triplet (see the QColor class
documentation).
1-bpp (monochrome) images have a color table with maximum 2 colors. There are two different formats; big endian (MSB first) or little endian (LSB first) bit order. To access a single bit, you will have to do some bitshifts:
QImage image; // sets bit at (x,y) to 1 if ( image.bitOrder() == QImage::LittleEndian ) *(image.scanLine(y) + (x >> 3)) |= 1 << (x & 7); else *(image.scanLine(y) + (x >> 3)) |= 1 << (7 -(x & 7));
If this looks complicated, it might be a good idea to convert the 1-bpp image to an 8-bpp image using convertDepth().
8-bpp images are much easier to work with than 1-bpp images because they have a single byte per pixel:
QImage image; // set entry 19 in the color table to yellow image.setColor( 19, qRgb(255,255,0) ); // set 8 bit pixel at (x,y) to value yellow (in color table) *(image.scanLine(y) + x) = 19;
32-bpp images ignore the color table, instead each pixel contains the RGB triplet. 24 bits contain the RGB value and the most significant byte is reserved for the alpha buffer.
QImage image; // sets 32 bit pixel at (x,y) to yellow. uint *p = (uint *)image.scanLine(y) + x; *p = qRgb(255,255,0);
The scanlines are 32-bit aligned for all depths.
The QImage class uses explicit sharing, similar to that of QArray.
See also QImageIO, QPixmap and Shared Classes
Examples: qtimage/qtimage.cpp qmag/qmag.cpp desktop/desktop.cpp
The current values are:
IgnoreEndian
- does not matter. Useful for some operations
that are independent of endianness
BigEndian
- network byte order, like on SPARC and Motorola CPUs.
LittleEndian
- PC/Alpha byte order.
Constructs a null image.
See also isNull().
Constructs an image from array, which must be in a supported image format image.
See also loadFromData().
Constructs an image with size size pixels, depth depth bits, numColors and bitOrder endianness.
Constructs an image from loading fileName and an optional format.
See also load().
Constructs a shallow copy of image.
Constructs an image from xpm, which must be a valid XPM image.
Errors are silently ignored.
Note that it's possible to squeeze the XPM variable a little bit by using an unusual declaration:
static const char * const start_xpm[]={ "16 15 8 1", "a c #cec6bd", ....
The extra const
makes the entire definition read-only, which is
slightly more efficient e.g. when the code is in a shared library,
and ROMable when the application is to be stored in ROM.
In order to use that sort of declaration, you must cast the variable
back to const char **
Constructs an image with w width, h height, depth bits per pixel, numColors colors and bit order bitOrder.
Using this constructor is the same as first constructing a null image and then calling the create() function.
See also create().
Constructs an image that uses an existing memory buffer. The buffer must remain valid for the life of the QImage. The image will not delete the buffer at destruction.
If colortable is 0, a color table sufficient for numColors will be allocated (and destructed later).
Destructs the image and cleans up.
Returns TRUE if all the colors in the image are shades of gray, that is their R, G, and B components are equal. This function is slow for large 16-bit and 32-bit images.
Returns the bit order for the image.
If it is a 1-bpp image, this function returns either QImage::BigEndian or QImage::LittleEndian.
If it is not a 1-bpp image, this function returns QImage::IgnoreEndian.
See also depth().
Returns a pointer to the first pixel data. Equivalent to scanLine(0).
See also scanLine().
Returns the number of bytes per image scanline. This is equivalent to numBytes()/height().
Returns the color in the color table at index i.
A color value is an RGB triplet. Use the qRed(), qGreen() and qBlue() functions (defined in qcolor.h) to get the color value components.
See also setColor() and QColor.
Returns a pointer to the color table.
Converts the bit order of the image to bitOrder and returns the converted image.
Returns *this
if the bitOrder is equal to the image bit order, or a
null image if this image cannot be converted.
See also bitOrder() and systemBitOrder().
Converts the depth (bpp) of the image to depth and returns the converted image. The original image is left undisturbed.
The depth argument must be 1, 8, 16 or 32.
See QPixmap::convertFromImage for a description of the conversion_flags argument.
Returns *this
if depth is equal to the image depth, or a null
image if this image cannot be converted.
See also depth() and isNull().
This is an overloaded member function, provided for convenience. It differs from the above function only in what argument(s) it accepts.
Note: currently no closest-color search is made. If colors are found that are not in the palette, the palette may not be used at all. This result should not be considered valid, as it may change in future implementations.
Currently inefficient for non 32-bit images.
Returns a deep copy of the image.
Returns a deep copy of a sub-area of the image.
The returned image is always w by h pixels is size. If the area is beyond this image, the pixels are filled with pixel 0.
See also bitBlt().
This is an overloaded member function, provided for convenience. It differs from the above function only in what argument(s) it accepts.
Sets the image width, height, depth, number of colors and bit order. Returns TRUE if successful, or FALSE if the parameters are incorrect or if memory cannot be allocated.
The width and height is limited to 32767. depth must be 1, 8 or 32. If depth is 1, then bitOrder must be set to either QImage::LittleEndian or QImage::BigEndian. For other depths, bitOrder must be QImage::IgnoreEndian.
This function allocates a color table and a buffer for the image data. The image data is not initialized.
The image buffer is allocated as a single block that consists of a table of scanline pointers (jumpTable()) and the image data (bits()).
See also width(), height(), depth(), numColors(), bitOrder(), jumpTable(), scanLine(), bits(), bytesPerLine() and numBytes().
This is an overloaded member function, provided for convenience. It differs from the above function only in what argument(s) it accepts.
Builds and returns a 1-bpp mask from the alpha buffer in this image. Returns a null image if alpha buffer mode is disabled.
See QPixmap::convertFromImage for a description of the conversion_flags argument.
The returned image has little-endian bit order, which you can convert to big-endianness using convertBitOrder().
Creates and returns a 1-bpp heuristic mask for this image. It works by selecting a color from one of the corners, then chipping away pixels of that color, starting at all the edges.
The four corners vote over which color is to be masked away. In case of a draw (this generally means that this function is not applicable to the image) the voting results are undocumented.
The returned image has little-endian bit order, which you can convert to big-endianness using convertBitOrder().
This function disregards the alpha buffer.
Returns the depth of the image.
The image depth is the number of bits used to encode a single pixel, also called bits per pixel (bpp) or bit planes of an image.
The supported depths are 1, 8, 16 and 32.
Detaches from shared image data and makes sure that this image is the only one referring the data.
If multiple images share common data, this image makes a copy of the data and detaches itself from the sharing mechanism. Nothing is done if there is just a single reference.
Returns the number of pixels that fit horizontally in a physical meter. This and dotsPerMeterY() define the intended scale and aspect ratio of the image.
See also setDotsPerMeterX().
Returns the number of pixels that fit vertically in a physical meter. This and dotsPerMeterX() define the intended scale and aspect ratio of the image.
See also setDotsPerMeterY().
Fills the entire image with the pixel value pixel.
If the depth of this image is 1, only the lowest bit is used. If you say fill(0), fill(2) etc., the image is filled with 0s. If you say fill(1), fill(3) etc., the image is filled with 1s. If the depth is 8, the lowest 8 bits are used.
If the depth is 32 and the image has no alpha buffer, the pixel value is written to each pixel in the image. If the image has an alpha buffer, only the 24 RGB bits are set and the upper 8 bits (alpha value) are left unchanged.
Returns TRUE if alpha buffer mode is enabled, otherwise FALSE.
See also setAlphaBuffer().
Returns the height of the image.
See also width(), size() and rect().
[static]
Returns a string that specifies the image format of the file fileName, or null if the file cannot be read or if the format cannot be recognized.
The QImageIO documentation lists the guaranteed supported image formats, or use the QImage::inputFormats() QImage::outputFormats() to get lists that include installed formats.
[static]
Returns a list of image formats which are supported for image input.
[static]
Returns a list of image formats which are supported for image input.
See also inputFormatList().
Inverts all pixel values in the image.
For 32 bit (24 RGB + alpha buffer) images, set invertAlpha to FALSE if you want the alpha bits to be unchanged, otherwise they are inverted too.
Returns TRUE if the image is allGray(), and if the image is 32-bpp or a 256-color 8-bpp image for which color(i) is QRgb(i,i,i).
Returns TRUE if it is a null image.
A null image has all parameters set to zero and no allocated data.
Examples: qtimage/qtimage.cpp
Returns a pointer to the scanline pointer table.
This is the beginning of the data block for the image.
Loads an image from the file fileName. Returns TRUE if successful, or FALSE if the image could not be loaded.
If format is specified, the loader attempts to read the image using the specified format. If format is not specified (default), the loader reads a few bytes from the header to guess the file format.
The QImageIO documentation lists the supported image formats and explains how to add extra formats.
See also loadFromData(), save(), imageFormat(), QPixmap::load() and QImageIO.
Loads an image from the binary data in buf (len bytes). Returns TRUE if successful, or FALSE if the image could not be loaded.
If format is specified, the loader attempts to read the image using the specified format. If format is not specified (default), the loader reads a few bytes from the header to guess the file format.
The QImageIO documentation lists the supported image formats and explains how to add extra formats.
See also load(), save(), imageFormat(), QPixmap::loadFromData() and QImageIO.
This is an overloaded member function, provided for convenience. It differs from the above function only in what argument(s) it accepts.
Loads from a QByteArray.
Returns a QImage which is a vertically mirrored copy of this image. The original QImage is left unchanged.
Returns the image mirrored in the horizontal and/or vertical direction.
See also smoothScale().
Returns the number of bytes occupied by the image data.
See also bytesPerLine().
Returns the size of the color table for the image.
Notice that numColors() returns 0 for 16-bpp and 32-bpp images, since these images do not use color tables, but instead encode pixel values as RGB triplets.
Returns the number of pixels by which the image is intended to by offset by when positioning relative to other images.
Returns TRUE if this image and i have different contents, and FALSE if they they have the same. This can be slow. Of course, this function returns quickly if e.g. the two images' widths are different.
See also operator=().
Sets the image bits to the pixmap contents and returns a reference to the image.
If the image shares data with other images, it will first dereference the shared data.
Makes a call to QPixmap::convertToImage().
Assigns a shallow copy of image to this image and returns a reference to this image.
See also copy().
Returns TRUE if this image and i have the same contents, and FALSE if they differ. This can be slow. Of course, this function returns quickly if e.g. the two images' widths are different.
See also operator=().
[static]
Returns a list of image formats which are supported for image output.
[static]
Returns a list of image formats which are supported for image output.
See also QImage::outputFormatList().
Returns the actual color of the pixel at the given coordinates.
If (x,y) is not on the image, the results are undefined.
See also setPixel(), qRed(), qGreen() and qBlue().
Examples: qmag/qmag.cpp
Returns the pixel index at the given coordinates.
If (x,y) is not valid, or if the image is not a paletted image (depth() > 8), the results are undefined.
Returns the enclosing rectangle (0,0,width(),height()) of the image.
See also width(), height() and size().
Resets all image parameters and deallocates the image data.
Examples: qtimage/qtimage.cpp
Saves the image to the file fileName, using the image file format format and default quality settings. Returns TRUE if successful, or FALSE if the image could not be saved.
See also load(), loadFromData(), imageFormat(), QPixmap::save() and QImageIO.
Saves the image to the file fileName, using the image file format format and a quality factor quality. quality must be in the range [0,100] or -1. Specify 0 to obtain small compressed files, 100 for large uncompressed files and -1 to use the default settings. Returns TRUE if successful, or FALSE if the image could not be saved.
See also load(), loadFromData(), imageFormat(), QPixmap::save() and QImageIO.
Returns a pointer to the pixel data at the i'th scanline.
The scanline data is aligned on a 32-bit boundary.
Warning: If you are accessing 32-bpp image data, cast the returned
pointer to QRgb*
(QRgb has a 32 bit size) and use it to read/write
the pixel value. You cannot use the uchar*
pointer directly, because
the pixel format depends on the byte order on the underlying
platform. Hint: use qRed() and friends (qcolor.h)
to access the pixels.
Warning: If you are accessing 16-bpp image data, you have to handle endianness yourself for now.
See also bits().
Examples: desktop/desktop.cpp
Enables alpha buffer mode if enable is TRUE, otherwise disables it. The default setting is disabled.
An 8-bpp image has 8 bit pixels. A pixel is an index into the color table, which contains 32-bit color values. In a 32-bpp image, the 32 bit pixels are the color values.
This 32 bit value is encoded as follows: The lower 24 bits are used for the red, green and blue components. The upper 8 bits contain the alpha component.
The alpha component specifies the transparency of a pixel. 0 means completely transparent and 255 means opaque. The alpha component is ignored if you do not enable alpha buffer mode.
The alpha buffer is used to set a mask when a QImage is translated to a QPixmap.
See also hasAlphaBuffer() and createAlphaMask().
Sets a color in the color table at index i to c.
A color value is an RGB triplet. Use the qRgb function (defined in qcolor.h) to make RGB triplets.
See also color().
Examples: desktop/desktop.cpp
Sets the value returned by dotsPerMeterX() to x.
Sets the value returned by dotsPerMeterY() to y.
Resizes the color table to numColors colors.
If the color table is expanded, then all new colors will be set to black (RGB 0,0,0).
See also color() and setColor().
Sets the value returned by offset() to p.
Sets the pixel index or color at the given coordinates.
If (x,y) is not valid, or if the image is a paletted image (depth() <= 8) and index_or_rgb >= numColors(), the results are undefined.
Records s for the keyword key. The key should be a portable keyword recognizable by other software - some suggested values can be found in the PNG specification. s can be any text. lang should specify the language code (see RFC 1766) or 0.
Note that no QImageIO handlers currently read or write this data. In an upcoming Qt version, PNG I/O will do so.
Returns the size of the image.
See also width(), height() and rect().
Returns a copy of the image smoothly scaled to width by height pixels. For 32-bpp images, and 1-bpp/8-bpp color images, the result will be 32-bpp, while all-gray images (including black-and-white 1-bpp) will produce 8-bit grayscale images with the palette spanning 256 grays from black to white.
This function uses code based on pnmscale.c by Jef Poskanzer.
pnmscale.c - read a portable anymap and scale it
Copyright (C) 1989, 1991 by Jef Poskanzer.
Permission to use, copy, modify, and distribute this software and its documentation for any purpose and without fee is hereby granted, provided that the above copyright notice appear in all copies and that both that copyright notice and this permission notice appear in supporting documentation. This software is provided "as is" without express or implied warranty.
See also mirror().
Returns a QImage where the values of the red and blue components of all pixels have been swapped, effectively converting a RGB image to a BGR image. The original QImage is left unchanged.
[static]
Determines the bit order of the display hardware. Returns QImage::LittleEndian (LSB first) or QImage::BigEndian (MSB first).
[static]
Determines the host computer byte order. Returns QImage::LittleEndian (LSB first) or QImage::BigEndian (MSB first).
Returns the string recorded for the keyword and language kl, or in a default language if lang is 0.
Returns the string recorded for the keyword key in language lang, or in a default language if lang is 0.
Returns the keywords for which some texts are recorded.
See also textList(), text(), setText() and textLanguages().
Returns the language identifiers for which some texts are recorded.
See also textList(), text(), setText() and textKeys().
Returns a list of QImageTextKeyLang objects which enumerate all the texts key/languaage pairs set by setText() for this image.
Tests if the ( x, y ) is a valid coordinate in the image.
Examples: qmag/qmag.cpp
Returns the width of the image.
See also height(), size() and rect().
Writes an image to the stream as a PNG image.
See also QImage::save() and Format of the QDataStream operators
Reads an image from the stream.
See also QImage::load() and Format of the QDataStream operators
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