I am equally unsure I am on the right track with an answer, so just kindly ignore or say, rather than downvote me if my interpretation of your querstion is in the wrong way
like your question!
You can serve an image from PHP rather than from a file - I mean you can have PHP dynamically create an image and serve it rather than having to have a file in your webserver's filesystem and having to refer to it by name in the src
field of an <image>
tag in your HTML.
So, instead of
<image src="....jpg" alt="..." size="...">
you can use
<img src="/php/thumb.php?param1=$col¶m2=$ref"/>
which causes the PHP script at `/php/thumb.php" to be called when the page is rendered. In that script, you can dynamically create the image (using extra parameters if you wish) like this:
<?php
header("Content-type: image/jpeg");
$p1 = $_GET['param1'];
$p2 = $_GET['param2'];
$src = imagecreatefromstring(SOMESTRING);
$dst = imagecreatetruecolor($width,$height);
imagecopyresampled($dst,$src,0,0,0,0,$width,$height,$size[0],$size[1]);
imagedestroy($src);
imagejpeg($dst);
imagedestroy($dst);
?>
I have omitted some code after the first 3 lines so you just see the technique rather than all the gory details of my code. The actual lines you are interested in are:
header(...image/jpeg);
which tells the browser what type of stuff is coming - i.e. an image, and
imagejpeg();
which actually sends the stream of JPEG data to the browser.
raw binary data
? From where? What format? I mean a JPEG is binary? Do you mean the first byte is the top left red pixel, the second is the green and the third is the blue?\x00
\x00\x00\xff\xe1\x00"Exif\x00\x00MM\x00...' etc. Currently I open a file called "foo.jpg" write to it then save it to a resource file on my side and access the file in the <img> src tag later to display on the page.