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I have some C# code that is doing key-color replacement based on hue. On my local machine, it's executing perfectly. However when I push it up to the server it replaces "some" but not all of the colors. It's like it's just deciding not to run part of the code.

The images are lossless PNGs - they are intact on the server. Is this some kind of threading issue? My code is not threaded here (beyond what the webserver does), but has anyone ever seen anything similar happen?

It might also help if I mention that this code is compiled in a separate library project and then referenced from an MVC3 application.

Thanks, and here is the code sample:

private void _ReplaceImageColor(Image img, Color baseColor, Color newColor)
{
    Bitmap bmp = (Bitmap)img;
    double baseHue = baseColor.GetHue();
    for (int x = 0; x < bmp.Width; x++)
    {
        for (int y = 0; y < bmp.Height; y++)
        {
            double pixelHue, pixelSat, pixelVal;
            ColorProcessor.ColorToHSV(bmp.GetPixel(x, y), out pixelHue, out pixelSat, out pixelVal);
            if (pixelHue == baseHue)
            {
                Color setColor = ColorProcessor.ColorFromHSV(newColor.GetHue(), pixelSat, pixelVal);
                bmp.SetPixel(x, y, setColor);
            }
        }
    }
}

Here's the methods from ColorProcessor since people asked...

public static void ColorToHSV(Color color, out double hue, out double saturation, out double value)
{
    int max = Math.Max(color.R, Math.Max(color.G, color.B));
    int min = Math.Min(color.R, Math.Min(color.G, color.B));

    hue = color.GetHue();
    saturation = (max == 0) ? 0 : 1d - (1d * min / max);
    value = max / 255d;
}

public static Color ColorFromHSV(double hue, double saturation, double value)
{
    int hi = Convert.ToInt32(Math.Floor(hue / 60)) % 6;
    double f = hue / 60 - Math.Floor(hue / 60);

    value = value * 255;
    int v = Convert.ToInt32(Math.Max(value, 0));
    int p = Convert.ToInt32(Math.Max(value * (1 - saturation), 0));
    int q = Convert.ToInt32(Math.Max(value * (1 - f * saturation), 0));
    int t = Convert.ToInt32(Math.Max(value * (1 - (1 - f) * saturation), 0));

    if (hi == 0)
        return Color.FromArgb(255, v, t, p);
    else if (hi == 1)
        return Color.FromArgb(255, q, v, p);
    else if (hi == 2)
        return Color.FromArgb(255, p, v, t);
    else if (hi == 3)
        return Color.FromArgb(255, p, q, v);
    else if (hi == 4)
        return Color.FromArgb(255, t, p, v);
    else
        return Color.FromArgb(255, v, p, q);
}
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  • 2
    What is ColorProcessor from? May 29, 2012 at 22:32
  • You need to do some more investigation first. Can you create a test of data to use on both and narrow it down a single datum that fails. Then investigate for exceptions in the code? May 29, 2012 at 22:34
  • 3
    I think this is worth mentioning here: read the Caution box in this link to the System.Drawing namespace on MSDN: msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/xs6ftd89
    – BeemerGuy
    May 29, 2012 at 22:34
  • Sorry, ColorProcessor is another class I have to manage a bunch of other color tasks for this project. If you need code from there I will post it. Here I am just converting RGB to HSV values for color matching based on hue.
    – jocull
    May 29, 2012 at 22:36
  • Thanks Beemer, it's not a .NET service, it's just an MVC3 application. I've done this dozens of times, but this is the first time anything weird has happened. Preet - Everything is working fine except for on the server some of the key coloring is skipped. It happens the same way every time.
    – jocull
    May 29, 2012 at 22:38

1 Answer 1

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You might want to check very carefully that your dll references are the same on the server as on the dev machine. Hanselman had an article on that very thing recently: Confirm Your Expectations and Version Numbers in Production Environments

Also, since it is behaving differently on debug versus release mode check that it is using the same bitness in the build to eliminate that potential variation (e.g. x86) which can manifest on floating point numbers.

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  • The versions all seem the same now, but this just happened on my local machine when building in release mode... what does that mean?
    – jocull
    May 30, 2012 at 0:29
  • That sounds like a Heisenbug, where it behaves differently depending on the environment. Those are very hard to troubleshoot. Make sure you are nailing down the bitness in the build to eliminate that potential variation (e.g. x86). Also check out this: stackoverflow.com/questions/4787082/…
    – Turnkey
    May 30, 2012 at 0:43
  • Hell! I bet you are right. This is dealing with doubles (HSV) and I should've known that the floating points would get to me... I will look into that.
    – jocull
    May 30, 2012 at 3:45
  • That was the issue, thank you. The .NET compiler should just throw a warning when using == on floating points...
    – jocull
    May 30, 2012 at 4:05
  • No problem, glad you got that difficult one solved. I'll amend the answer to include the other details from the comments.
    – Turnkey
    May 30, 2012 at 12:57

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