6

I have used the code from http://www.codeproject.com/Tips/552141/Csharp-Image-resize-convert-and-save to resize images programmatically. However, that project uses the System.Drawing libraries, which are not available to Windows 10 applications.

I have tried using the BitmapImage class from Windows.UI.Xaml.Media.Imaging instead, but it does not seem to offer the functionality that was found in System.Drawing..

Has anyone had any luck being able to resize (scale down) images in Windows 10? My application will be processing images from multiple sources, in different formats/sizes, and I am trying to resize the actual images to save space, rather than just letting the application size it to fit the Image in which it is being displayed.

EDIT

I have modified the code from the above mentioned link, and have a hack which works for my specific need. Here it is:

public static BitmapImage ResizedImage(BitmapImage sourceImage, int maxWidth, int maxHeight)
{
    var origHeight = sourceImage.PixelHeight;
    var origWidth = sourceImage.PixelWidth;
    var ratioX = maxWidth/(float) origWidth;
    var ratioY = maxHeight/(float) origHeight;
    var ratio = Math.Min(ratioX, ratioY);
    var newHeight = (int) (origHeight * ratio);
    var newWidth = (int) (origWidth * ratio);

    sourceImage.DecodePixelWidth = newWidth;
    sourceImage.DecodePixelHeight = newHeight;

    return sourceImage;
}

This way seems to work, but ideally rather than modifying the original BitmapImage, I would like to create a new/copy of it to modify and return instead.

Here is a shot of it in action: screenshot of resized image

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  • Misleading title, OP. You have a way of resizing the image, what you really want to do is create a copy of the original image, resize the copy, then return the copy. Mar 15, 2016 at 20:42
  • @BrianDriscoll I posted the question before the edit. The edit added the code for resizing the original image. I would have posted it as an answer, but it hasn't been long enough yet. But I do like the new title. Thanks.
    – dub stylee
    Mar 15, 2016 at 21:01
  • Are you able to just create a constant of the image? Or a private property you can just reference the original copy of the image and use the same function?
    – aguertin
    Mar 15, 2016 at 22:36
  • Since I don't need to keep the original image data intact, it is ok the way it is now. I am just thinking for future generalization, I may want to return a copy of the original BitmapImage rather than modifying the original.
    – dub stylee
    Mar 15, 2016 at 23:02

1 Answer 1

8

I may want to return a copy of the original BitmapImage rather than modifying the original.

There is no good method to directly copy a BitmapImage, but we can reuse StorageFile for several times.

If you just want to select a picture, show it and in the meanwhile show the re-sized picture of original one, you can pass the StorageFile as parameter like this:

public static async Task<BitmapImage> ResizedImage(StorageFile ImageFile, int maxWidth, int maxHeight)
{
    IRandomAccessStream inputstream = await ImageFile.OpenReadAsync();
    BitmapImage sourceImage = new BitmapImage();
    sourceImage.SetSource(inputstream);
    var origHeight = sourceImage.PixelHeight;
    var origWidth = sourceImage.PixelWidth;
    var ratioX = maxWidth / (float)origWidth;
    var ratioY = maxHeight / (float)origHeight;
    var ratio = Math.Min(ratioX, ratioY);
    var newHeight = (int)(origHeight * ratio);
    var newWidth = (int)(origWidth * ratio);

    sourceImage.DecodePixelWidth = newWidth;
    sourceImage.DecodePixelHeight = newHeight;

    return sourceImage;
}

In this scenario you just need to call this task and show the re-sized image like this:

smallImage.Source = await ResizedImage(file, 250, 250);

If you want to keep the BitmapImage parameter due to some reasons (like the sourceImage might be a modified bitmap but not directly loaded from file), and you want to re-size this new picture to another one, you will need to save the re-sized picture as a file at first, then open this file and re-size it again.

3
  • This is excellent, thank you Grace. Is there a way to get the BitmapImage or the IRandomAccessStream into a WriteableBitmap or RenderTargetBitmap for encoding into a base64 string? I am able to do the StorageFile directly, but since the resized image is not a StorageFile, I need to get it back into a different data type for encoding.
    – dub stylee
    Mar 16, 2016 at 14:00
  • I ended up changing the whole process to using a WriteableBitmap instead of a BitmapImage so that I have the image in the necessary format for encoding to base64. I still have to create a BitmapImage inside the ResizedImage function to get the original dimensions, but at least it works :)
    – dub stylee
    Mar 16, 2016 at 17:02
  • @dubstylee, you are doing it in the right way, I can't find way to convert BitmapImage to 64base string. To get IRandomAccessStream to WriteableBitmap, you can use BitmapDecoder, but I think you have already know this.
    – Grace Feng
    Mar 17, 2016 at 5:14

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