35

So here's where I've made it so far. I am using a UIImage captured from the camera and can crop the center square when in landscape. For some reason this doesn't translate to portrait mode as expected. I'll post my code and logs just for reference.

Code:

CGRect squareRect = CGRectMake(offsetX, offsetY, newWidth, newHeight);
CGImageRef imageRef = CGImageCreateWithImageInRect([image CGImage], squareRect);
image = [UIImage imageWithCGImage:imageRef scale:1 orientation:image.imageOrientation];

Portrait results (not square):

original image size: {1536, 2048}, with orientation: 3
squareRect: {{0, 256}, {1536, 1536}}
new image size: {1280, 1536}, with orientation: 3 <--- not expected

Landscape results (square):

original image size: {2048, 1536}, with orientation: 1
squareRect: {{256, 0}, {1536, 1536}}
new image size: {1536, 1536}, with orientation: 1

Is this a bug within CGImageCreateWithImageInRect() or am I missing something here?

19 Answers 19

28

I think here would be the perfect solution!
It is NOT good idea to crop image basis on the toSize's size. It will look weird when the image resolution (size) is very large.
Following code will crop the image as per the toSize's ratio.
Improved from @BlackRider's answer.

- (UIImage *)imageByCroppingImage:(UIImage *)image toSize:(CGSize)size
{
    double newCropWidth, newCropHeight;

    //=== To crop more efficently =====//
    if(image.size.width < image.size.height){
         if (image.size.width < size.width) {
                 newCropWidth = size.width;
          }
          else {
                 newCropWidth = image.size.width;
          }
          newCropHeight = (newCropWidth * size.height)/size.width;
    } else {
          if (image.size.height < size.height) {
                newCropHeight = size.height;
          }
          else {
                newCropHeight = image.size.height;
          }
          newCropWidth = (newCropHeight * size.width)/size.height;
    }
    //==============================//

    double x = image.size.width/2.0 - newCropWidth/2.0;
    double y = image.size.height/2.0 - newCropHeight/2.0;

    CGRect cropRect = CGRectMake(x, y, newCropWidth, newCropHeight);
    CGImageRef imageRef = CGImageCreateWithImageInRect([image CGImage], cropRect);

    UIImage *cropped = [UIImage imageWithCGImage:imageRef];
    CGImageRelease(imageRef);

    return cropped;
}
5
  • 2
    THIS is the best solution. Jan 8, 2016 at 11:13
  • 2
    Best ever solution! Works well. Thanks. (Y)
    – iGatiTech
    May 18, 2016 at 4:17
  • Thanks! However, this code's logic for setting newCropWidth and newCropHeight is incorrect if size.height is greater than size.width.
    – VinceFior
    May 12, 2018 at 22:58
  • @VinceFior It would be good if you can explain a bit more how it's incorrect! (It would be easy to understand with an example). Thanks! May 14, 2018 at 7:35
  • Sure. Example: size is (5, 10) and image.size is (8, 10). The code goes into the if case and into the nested else case, yielding newCropWidth = 8 and newCropHeight = 16, or (8, 16). The aspect ratio is correct, but the scale matches the larger dimension of the input image instead of the desired size.
    – VinceFior
    May 26, 2018 at 21:30
28

Based on the checked answer by Elmundo and its swift version by Imbrue, here is the same solution that automatically calculates the size of the image's center (taking orientation into account), and with error consideration:

func cropImageToSquare(image: UIImage) -> UIImage? {
    var imageHeight = image.size.height
    var imageWidth = image.size.width

    if imageHeight > imageWidth {
        imageHeight = imageWidth
    }
    else {
        imageWidth = imageHeight
    }

    let size = CGSize(width: imageWidth, height: imageHeight)

    let refWidth : CGFloat = CGFloat(CGImageGetWidth(image.CGImage))
    let refHeight : CGFloat = CGFloat(CGImageGetHeight(image.CGImage))

    let x = (refWidth - size.width) / 2
    let y = (refHeight - size.height) / 2

    let cropRect = CGRectMake(x, y, size.height, size.width)
    if let imageRef = CGImageCreateWithImageInRect(image.CGImage, cropRect) {
        return UIImage(CGImage: imageRef, scale: 0, orientation: image.imageOrientation)
    }

   return nil
}

Swift 3 version

func cropImageToSquare(image: UIImage) -> UIImage? {
    var imageHeight = image.size.height
    var imageWidth = image.size.width

    if imageHeight > imageWidth {
        imageHeight = imageWidth
    }
    else {
        imageWidth = imageHeight
    }

    let size = CGSize(width: imageWidth, height: imageHeight)

    let refWidth : CGFloat = CGFloat(image.cgImage!.width)
    let refHeight : CGFloat = CGFloat(image.cgImage!.height)

    let x = (refWidth - size.width) / 2
    let y = (refHeight - size.height) / 2

    let cropRect = CGRect(x: x, y: y, width: size.height, height: size.width)
    if let imageRef = image.cgImage!.cropping(to: cropRect) {
        return UIImage(cgImage: imageRef, scale: 0, orientation: image.imageOrientation)
    }

    return nil
}
3
  • 1
    Top! Amazing answer!
    – fabdurso
    Aug 11, 2020 at 18:03
  • Great Answer! I tried this in iOS 14.3, Swift 5+ and it works.
    – Vijayendra
    Jan 20, 2021 at 15:14
  • let cropRect = CGRect(x: x, y: y, width: size.height, height: size.width) - width and height are misplaced, is this intentional? Looks like final image appear to be rotated because of this ..
    – grep
    Mar 19, 2021 at 10:48
25

This works with different orientations. Both portrait and landscape orientations works correctly.

- (UIImage *)imageByCroppingImage:(UIImage *)image toSize:(CGSize)size
{
    // not equivalent to image.size (which depends on the imageOrientation)!
    double refWidth = CGImageGetWidth(image.CGImage);
    double refHeight = CGImageGetHeight(image.CGImage);

    double x = (refWidth - size.width) / 2.0;
    double y = (refHeight - size.height) / 2.0;

    CGRect cropRect = CGRectMake(x, y, size.height, size.width);
    CGImageRef imageRef = CGImageCreateWithImageInRect([image CGImage], cropRect);

    UIImage *cropped = [UIImage imageWithCGImage:imageRef scale:0.0 orientation:self.imageOrientation];
    CGImageRelease(imageRef);

    return cropped;
}
1
  • I haven't tested this, but I'm going to take your word that it works better than BlackRider's answer. I ended up finding a solution to this quite a while later on a different project and never posted my answer here. Although I forgot what my solution was, I do remember that it was a mess :)
    – Uxonith
    Jan 6, 2015 at 17:14
13

Try something like this:

- (UIImage *)imageByCroppingImage:(UIImage *)image toSize:(CGSize)size
{
    double x = (image.size.width - size.width) / 2.0;
    double y = (image.size.height - size.height) / 2.0;

    CGRect cropRect = CGRectMake(x, y, size.height, size.width);
    CGImageRef imageRef = CGImageCreateWithImageInRect([image CGImage], cropRect);

    UIImage *cropped = [UIImage imageWithCGImage:imageRef];
    CGImageRelease(imageRef);

    return cropped;
}

As you see, I don't specify orientation in the call to UIImage imageWithCGImage:. I wonder if that's the problem in your code.

1
  • I thought that worked at first, but it turns out that I had removed my offsetX and offsetY for a bit while testing your code. I still get the same results, only the orientation is incorrect.
    – Uxonith
    Jan 7, 2013 at 22:04
8

There is the swift version for the checked solution:

private func imageByCroppingImage(image: UIImage, size: CGSize) -> UIImage {
    var refWidth = CGFloat(CGImageGetWidth(image.CGImage))
    var refHeight = CGFloat(CGImageGetHeight(image.CGImage))
        
    var x = (refWidth - size.width) / 2
    var y = (refHeight - size.height) / 2
        
    let cropRect = CGRectMake(x, y, size.height, size.width)
    let imageRef = CGImageCreateWithImageInRect(image.CGImage, cropRect)
        
    let cropped = UIImage(CGImage: imageRef, scale: 0, orientation: image.imageOrientation)!
        
    return cropped
}
6

Swift 5

extension UIImage {

    var squared: UIImage? {
        guard let cgImage = cgImage else {
            return nil
        }

        let length = min(cgImage.width, cgImage.height)

        let x = cgImage.width / 2 - length / 2
        let y = cgImage.height / 2 - length / 2
        let cropRect = CGRect(x: x, y: y, width: length, height: length)

        guard let croppedCGImage = cgImage.cropping(to: cropRect) else {
            return nil
        }

        return UIImage(cgImage: croppedCGImage, scale: scale, orientation: imageOrientation)
    }
}
5

improved from @Elmundo's answer

+(UIImage *)getCenterMaxSquareImageByCroppingImage:(UIImage *)image withOrientation:(UIImageOrientation)imageOrientation

{
    CGSize centerSquareSize;
    double oriImgWid = CGImageGetWidth(image.CGImage);
    double oriImgHgt = CGImageGetHeight(image.CGImage);
    NSLog(@"oriImgWid==[%.1f], oriImgHgt==[%.1f]", oriImgWid, oriImgHgt);
    if(oriImgHgt <= oriImgWid) {
        centerSquareSize.width = oriImgHgt;
        centerSquareSize.height = oriImgHgt;
    }else {
        centerSquareSize.width = oriImgWid;
        centerSquareSize.height = oriImgWid;
    }

    NSLog(@"squareWid==[%.1f], squareHgt==[%.1f]", centerSquareSize.width, centerSquareSize.height);

    double x = (oriImgWid - centerSquareSize.width) / 2.0;
    double y = (oriImgHgt - centerSquareSize.height) / 2.0;
    NSLog(@"x==[%.1f], x==[%.1f]", x, y);

    CGRect cropRect = CGRectMake(x, y, centerSquareSize.height, centerSquareSize.width);
    CGImageRef imageRef = CGImageCreateWithImageInRect([image CGImage], cropRect);

    UIImage *cropped = [UIImage imageWithCGImage:imageRef scale:0.0 orientation:imageOrientation];
    CGImageRelease(imageRef);


    return cropped;
}
0
5

Swift 3

    let refWidth : CGFloat = CGFloat(image.cgImage!.width)
    let refHeight : CGFloat = CGFloat(image.cgImage!.height)

    let x = (refWidth - size.width) / 2
    let y = (refHeight - size.height) / 2

    let cropRect = CGRect(x: x, y: y, width: size.width, height: size.height)
    let imageRef = image.cgImage!.cropping(to: cropRect)

    let cropped : UIImage = UIImage(cgImage: imageRef!, scale: 0, orientation: image.imageOrientation)


    return cropped
2
  • 2
    Could you please add some explanation (about what OP is doing wrong) to your answer instead of just a code dump?
    – PeeHaa
    Sep 15, 2016 at 15:44
  • 1
    Or rather, please explain how your answer improves upon the existing ones. Why is yours (in some situations / for some people) better than theirs? Sep 15, 2016 at 16:04
5

Swift 2 using UIImage Extension

extension UIImage
{    
    func imageByCroppingImage(size : CGSize) -> UIImage
    {
        let refWidth : CGFloat = CGFloat(CGImageGetWidth(self.CGImage))
        let refHeight : CGFloat = CGFloat(CGImageGetHeight(self.CGImage))

        let x = (refWidth - size.width) / 2
        let y = (refHeight - size.height) / 2

        let cropRect = CGRectMake(x, y, size.width, size.height)
        let imageRef = CGImageCreateWithImageInRect(self.CGImage, cropRect)

        let cropped : UIImage = UIImage(CGImage: imageRef!, scale: 0, orientation: self.imageOrientation)


        return cropped
    }
}
5

This is based on @Alonzo's Swift 3 answer above, with the code simplified and streamlined to make it more understandable and concise. It also bails out if the image is already square.

extension UIImage {
    func square() -> UIImage? {
        if size.width == size.height {
            return self
        }

        let cropWidth = min(size.width, size.height)

        let cropRect = CGRect(
            x: (size.width - cropWidth) * scale / 2.0,
            y: (size.height - cropWidth) * scale / 2.0,
            width: cropWidth * scale,
            height: cropWidth * scale
        )

        guard let imageRef = cgImage?.cropping(to: cropRect) else {
            return nil
        }

        return UIImage(cgImage: imageRef, scale: scale, orientation: imageOrientation)
    }
}
4
  • Good changes @mixel
    – phatmann
    May 21, 2018 at 22:13
  • Does't centre the image in portrait mode.
    – zeeshan
    May 28, 2020 at 18:38
  • Can you be more specific @zeeshan?
    – phatmann
    May 31, 2020 at 14:48
  • when a photo is taken in portrait mode, this code does crop it fine, but not from the centre. So if your face was in the centre of the image, in the cropped image it would have your left ear (right of the image) cut off and too much empty space on the left. When taken in landscape mode, then it does crop it from the centre. I can't attach sample images here. But I was able to find another code which works fine. @phatmann
    – zeeshan
    Jun 1, 2020 at 15:14
4

This is an old question, but none of the answers are really correct (even the accepted answer). The important thing to understand is that UIImageOrientation (image.imageOrientation) is actually correct, but it's definition of UP and our definition of UP are different. For us, UP is the top of the device (where the power button is). For UIImageOrientation, UP is the side opposite of the volume control buttons. So if the device takes a picture with the volume controls down, this is UIImageOrientationUp. If you take a picture in portrait mode (with the home button down), this is UIImageOrientationLeft.

So you can calculate the center in portrait, then you can apply the following transform to the image so that the crop is in the correct place.

- (UIImage *)cropImage:(UIImage*)image toRect:(CGRect)rect {
    CGFloat (^rad)(CGFloat) = ^CGFloat(CGFloat deg) {
        return deg / 180.0f * (CGFloat) M_PI;
    };

    // determine the orientation of the image and apply a transformation to the crop rectangle to shift it to the correct position
    CGAffineTransform rectTransform;
    switch (image.imageOrientation) {
        case UIImageOrientationLeft:
            rectTransform = CGAffineTransformTranslate(CGAffineTransformMakeRotation(rad(90)), 0, -image.size.height);
            break;
        case UIImageOrientationRight:
            rectTransform = CGAffineTransformTranslate(CGAffineTransformMakeRotation(rad(-90)), -image.size.width, 0);
            break;
        case UIImageOrientationDown:
            rectTransform = CGAffineTransformTranslate(CGAffineTransformMakeRotation(rad(-180)), -image.size.width, -image.size.height);
            break;
        default:
            rectTransform = CGAffineTransformIdentity;
    };

    // adjust the transformation scale based on the image scale
    rectTransform = CGAffineTransformScale(rectTransform, image.scale, image.scale);

    // apply the transformation to the rect to create a new, shifted rect
    CGRect transformedCropSquare = CGRectApplyAffineTransform(rect, rectTransform);
    // use the rect to crop the image
    CGImageRef imageRef = CGImageCreateWithImageInRect(image.CGImage, transformedCropSquare);
    // create a new UIImage and set the scale and orientation appropriately
    UIImage *result = [UIImage imageWithCGImage:imageRef scale:image.scale orientation:image.imageOrientation];
    // memory cleanup
    CGImageRelease(imageRef);

    return result;
}

This code shifts the crop square so that it is in the correct relative position.

2

Cleanest version for Swift 5.

func cropImage() -> UIImage? {
    let size = min(self.size.width, self.size.height)
    UIGraphicsBeginImageContextWithOptions(CGSize(width: size, height: size), true, 1.0)
    defer { UIGraphicsEndImageContext() }
    self.draw(in: CGRect(x: (size - self.size.width) / 2.0,
                          y: (size - self.size.height) / 2.0,
                          width: self.size.width,
                          height: self.size.height))
    return UIGraphicsGetImageFromCurrentImageContext()
}
1
  • Some of the other answers were cropping in far too much. This one actually worked for me, where all I wanted to do was trim the image to a square. Oct 12, 2023 at 12:11
1

Xamarin:

UIImage ImageByCroppingImage(UIImage image, CGSize size)
{
    double newCropWidth, newCropHeight;

    if (image.Size.Width < image.Size.Height)
    {
        newCropWidth = image.Size.Width < size.Width ? size.Width : image.Size.Width;
        newCropHeight = (newCropWidth * size.Height) / size.Width;
    }
    else
    {
        newCropHeight = image.Size.Height < size.Height ? size.Height : image.Size.Height;
        newCropWidth = (newCropHeight * size.Width) / size.Height;
    }

    double x = image.Size.Width / 2.0 - newCropWidth / 2.0;
    double y = image.Size.Height / 2.0 - newCropHeight / 2.0;

    CGRect cropRect = new CGRect(x, y, newCropWidth, newCropHeight);
    var imageRef = image.CGImage.WithImageInRect(cropRect);

    var cropped = new UIImage(imageRef);

    return cropped;
}
1

what about getting help from UIImageView

+ (UIImage *)laodSquareImage:(UIImage *)image withDiameter:(CGFloat)diameter  
{
    CGRect frame = CGRectMake(0.0f, 0.0f, diameter, diameter);
    UIImageView *imageView = [[UIImageView alloc] initWithFrame:frame];
    imageView.contentMode = UIViewContentModeScaleAspectFill;
    imageView.clipsToBounds = YES;
    imageView.image = image;
    CALayer *layer = imageView.layer;


    layer.masksToBounds = YES;
    UIGraphicsBeginImageContextWithOptions(imageView.bounds.size,NO, [UIScreen mainScreen].scale);
    CGContextRef context = UIGraphicsGetCurrentContext();
    [layer renderInContext:context];


    UIImage *roundedImage = UIGraphicsGetImageFromCurrentImageContext();
    UIGraphicsEndImageContext();

    return roundedImage;
}

And you can also make the image circle by adding just a line.

layer.cornerRadius =MAX( imageView.frame.size.height,imageView.frame.size.width)/2;
1
  • Will this actually take the full image or the lower res sample from the view width? Mar 14, 2018 at 23:12
1

there are already many solution, but i wanna post mine:

  extension UIImage {

    var cgImageWidth: Int { return cgImage?.width ?? 0 }
    var cgImageheight: Int { return cgImage?.height ?? 0 }
    var blance: CGFloat { return min(size.width, size.height)}
    var blanceSize: CGSize { return CGSize(width: blance, height: blance) }
    var blanceRect: CGRect { return CGRect(origin: .zero, size: blanceSize) }

    var roundedImage: UIImage? {
        UIGraphicsBeginImageContextWithOptions(blanceSize, false, scale)
        defer { UIGraphicsEndImageContext() }
        guard let cgImage = cgImage?.cropping(to: CGRect(origin: CGPoint(x: max(0, CGFloat(cgImageWidth) - blance)/2.0, y: max(0, CGFloat(cgImageheight) - blance)/2.0), size: blanceSize)) else { return nil }
        UIBezierPath(ovalIn: blanceRect).addClip()

        UIImage(cgImage: cgImage, scale: 1.0, orientation: self.imageOrientation).draw(in: blanceRect)
        return UIGraphicsGetImageFromCurrentImageContext()
    }

}
1

Here is the Swift 5 version of cropping the image according to given size from center.

extension UIImage {

     func imageByCroppingImage(size : CGSize) -> UIImage{
        let refWidth : CGFloat = CGFloat(self.cgImage!.width)
        let refHeight : CGFloat = CGFloat(self.cgImage!.height)
        let x = (refWidth - size.width) / 2
        let y = (refHeight - size.height) / 2
        let cropRect = CGRect(x: x, y: y, width: size.width, height: size.height)
        let imageRef = self.cgImage!.cropping(to: cropRect)
        let cropped : UIImage = UIImage(cgImage: imageRef!, scale: 0, orientation: self.imageOrientation)
        return cropped
    }
    }
1
  • This one worked wonderfully. I had to change that CGImage to width and height Int though. Oct 29, 2023 at 15:36
0

Solution based on Swift 2 extension. Improvised from @Geoffrey and @Nirav Dangi. Note that we set newCropWidth and newCropHeight to image's width or height when they are lesser than the given width or height.

extension UIImage {
    func imageByCroppingImage(size: CGSize) -> UIImage {
        let newCropWidth, newCropHeight : CGFloat;

        if(self.size.width < self.size.height) {
            if (self.size.width < size.width) {
                newCropWidth = self.size.width;
            }
            else {
                newCropWidth = size.width;
            }
            newCropHeight = (newCropWidth * size.height)/size.width;
        } else {
            if (self.size.height < size.height) {
                newCropHeight = self.size.height;
            }
            else {
                newCropHeight = size.height;
            }
            newCropWidth = (newCropHeight * size.width)/size.height;
        }

        let x = self.size.width / 2 - newCropWidth / 2;
        let y = self.size.height / 2 - newCropHeight / 2;

        let cropRect = CGRectMake(x, y, newCropWidth, newCropHeight);
        let imageRef = CGImageCreateWithImageInRect(self.CGImage, cropRect);

        let croppedImage : UIImage = UIImage(CGImage: imageRef!, scale: 0, orientation: self.imageOrientation);

        return croppedImage;
    }
}
0

i'm dealing with the following

    extension UIImage {

    var cgImageWidth: Int { return cgImage?.width ?? 0 }
    var cgImageheight: Int { return cgImage?.height ?? 0 }
    var blance: CGFloat { return min(size.width, size.height)}
    var blanceSize: CGSize { return CGSize(width: blance, height: blance) }
    var blanceRect: CGRect { return CGRect(origin: .zero, size: blanceSize) }

    var roundedImage: UIImage? {
        UIGraphicsBeginImageContextWithOptions(blanceSize, false, scale)
        defer { UIGraphicsEndImageContext() }
        guard let cgImage = cgImage?.cropping(to: CGRect(origin: CGPoint(x: max(0, CGFloat(cgImageWidth) - blance)/2.0, y: max(0, CGFloat(cgImageheight) - blance)/2.0), size: blanceSize)) else { return nil }
        UIBezierPath(ovalIn: blanceRect).addClip()

        UIImage(cgImage: cgImage, scale: 1.0, orientation: self.imageOrientation).draw(in: blanceRect)
        return UIGraphicsGetImageFromCurrentImageContext()
    }

}
-3

I was able to accomplish it with something like this:

   UIImage *thisImage = [[UIImage alloc] initWithContentsOfFile:imagePath];
                double x = (thisImage.size.width )/2.0;
                double y = (thisImage.size.height)/2.0;
                mediaImage = [self imageByCropping:thisImage toRect:CGRectMake(x, y, 60, 60)];
                [thisImage release];

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