There are overloads of Graphics.DrawImage
that take an array of three points used to define a parallelogram for the destination, such as:
Remarks
The destPoints parameter specifies
three points of a parallelogram. The
three Point structures represent the
upper-left, upper-right, and
lower-left corners of the
parallelogram. The fourth point is
extrapolated from the first three to
form a parallelogram.
The image represented by the image
parameter is scaled and sheared to fit
the shape of the parallelogram
specified by the destPoints
parameters.
There is also an article on MSDN describing the use of this method: How to: Rotate, Reflect, and Skew Images, with the following code example. Unfortunately, the example complicates the issue by also skewing the image.
Point[] destinationPoints = {
new Point(200, 20), // destination for upper-left point of original
new Point(110, 100), // destination for upper-right point of original
new Point(250, 30)}; // destination for lower-left point of original
Image image = new Bitmap("Stripes.bmp");
// Draw the image unaltered with its upper-left corner at (0, 0).
e.Graphics.DrawImage(image, 0, 0);
// Draw the image mapped to the parallelogram.
e.Graphics.DrawImage(image, destinationPoints);
The main differences compared to using the Graphics.Transform
property are:
- This method does not allow you to specify the rotation angle in degrees -- you have to use some simple trigonometry to derive the points.
- This transformation applies only to the specific image.
- Good if you only need to draw one rotated image and everything else is non-rotated since you don't have to reset
Graphics.Transform
afterward.
- Bad if you want to rotate several things together (i.e., rotate the "camera").