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I've coded my game for 320x480 and I figure that the easiest way to support multiple resolutions is to scale the end image. What are your thoughts on this? Would it be cpu efficient to do it this way?

I have all my images placed in the mdpi folder, I'll have it drawn unscaled on the screen onto a buffer, then scale it to fit the screen. all the user inputs will be scaled as well.

I have these 2 questions: -How do you draw a bitmap without android automatically scaling it -How do you scale a bitmap?

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I have stumbled upon the same problem a number of times in my projects and each time due to lack of time (and laziness) I would be satisfied with a less than optimum solution. But recently I found some time to crack down this particular issue. Here is my solution and I hope it helps you as well.

Bitmap scaleWithAspectRatio(Bitmap image)
        {
            int imaheVerticalAspectRatio,imageHorizontalAspectRatio;
            float bestFitScalingFactor=0;
            float percesionValue=(float) 0.2;

            //getAspect Ratio of Image
            int imageHeight=(int) (Math.ceil((double) image.getHeight()/100)*100);
            int imageWidth=(int) (Math.ceil((double) image.getWidth()/100)*100);
            int GCD=BigInteger.valueOf(imageHeight).gcd(BigInteger.valueOf(imageWidth)).intValue();
            imaheVerticalAspectRatio=imageHeight/GCD;
            imageHorizontalAspectRatio=imageWidth/GCD;
            Log.i("scaleDownLargeImageWIthAspectRatio","Image Dimensions(W:H): "+imageWidth+":"+imageHeight);
            Log.i("scaleDownLargeImageWIthAspectRatio","Image AspectRatio(W:H): "+imageHorizontalAspectRatio+":"+imaheVerticalAspectRatio);

            //getContainer Dimensions
            int displayWidth = getWindowManager().getDefaultDisplay().getWidth();
            int displayHeight = getWindowManager().getDefaultDisplay().getHeight();
           //I wanted to show the image to fit the entire device, as a best case. So my ccontainer dimensions were displayWidth & displayHeight. For your case, you will need to fetch container dimensions at run time or you can pass static values to these two parameters 

            int leftMargin = 0;
            int rightMargin = 0;
            int topMargin = 0;
            int bottomMargin = 0;
            int containerWidth = displayWidth - (leftMargin + rightMargin);
            int containerHeight = displayHeight - (topMargin + bottomMargin);
            Log.i("scaleDownLargeImageWIthAspectRatio","Container dimensions(W:H): "+containerWidth+":"+containerHeight);

            //iterate to get bestFitScaleFactor per constraints
            while((imageHorizontalAspectRatio*bestFitScalingFactor <= containerWidth) && 
                    (imaheVerticalAspectRatio*bestFitScalingFactor<= containerHeight))
            {
                bestFitScalingFactor+=percesionValue;
            }

            //return bestFit bitmap
            int bestFitHeight=(int) (imaheVerticalAspectRatio*bestFitScalingFactor);
            int bestFitWidth=(int) (imageHorizontalAspectRatio*bestFitScalingFactor);
            Log.i("scaleDownLargeImageWIthAspectRatio","bestFitScalingFactor: "+bestFitScalingFactor);
            Log.i("scaleDownLargeImageWIthAspectRatio","bestFitOutPutDimesions(W:H): "+bestFitWidth+":"+bestFitHeight);
            image=Bitmap.createScaledBitmap(image, bestFitWidth,bestFitHeight, true);

            //Position the bitmap centre of the container
            int leftPadding=(containerWidth-image.getWidth())/2;
            int topPadding=(containerHeight-image.getHeight())/2;
            Bitmap backDrop=Bitmap.createBitmap(containerWidth, containerHeight, Bitmap.Config.RGB_565);
            Canvas can = new Canvas(backDrop);
            can.drawBitmap(image, leftPadding, topPadding, null);

            return backDrop;
        }
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  • I think there is a mistake in your (int) (Math.ceil((double) image.getHeight()/100)*100); lines. The way you have it here will just always round up to the next factor of 100 which will cause many images to NOT retain proper aspect ratio.
    – Dave
    Apr 17, 2014 at 17:01
  • Did you implement and run this piece?What was the result it fetched you?There is a reason behind this round up and that is to get a GCD. concider getting GCD of 1542 and 1477 to that of 1500 and 1400. Apr 18, 2014 at 4:01
  • When I tried this code as-is, it tended to create square images rather than maintaining proper aspect. After changing those lines, it seemed to fix the problem. It wasn't really a good fit in general for my particular needs, so I am no longer using it, but that was my experience when I tried.
    – Dave
    Apr 18, 2014 at 19:10
  • @Dave Can you please share what you are using to scale your images now? May be the reference you share here might help me and some others down the line. Apr 21, 2014 at 6:24
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I am working on a game and I have targeted 1280x800 and I've made all of the images to match that resolution. The very first time I launch the game I scale all of the images down to match the current resolution and use the scaled images to actually draw the game. If you are using a SurfaceView then you shouldn't have problems with scaling images when you draw them. Just to be 100% sure I keep my images in the raw directory and load them from there.

To do the initial scaling of the bitmap you just need to use the BitmapFactory.Options when you decode the bitmap to tell it what density it's targeted for and what density it's actually going to be displayed on.

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  • I've never thought about playing images in the raw folder before. That might come in handy.
    – tyuo9980
    Sep 19, 2012 at 21:39

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