I'm sure there are loads of optimal ways to do this.
As @Groo points out perfectly in the comments section, one could use for instance the LockBits method to write and read pixel colors to and from a Bitmap
instance.
Going even further, one could use the graphics card of the computer to do the actual computations.
Furthermore, the method Color ToGrayscaleColor(Color color)
which turns a color into its
grayscale version is not optically correct. There is a set of ratios which actually need to be applied to the color component strengths. I just used 1, 1, 1 ratios. That's accceptable for me and probably horrible for an artist or a scientist.
In the comments section, @plinth was very nice to point out to this question you should look at, if you want to make an anatomically correct conversion: Converting RGB to grayscale/intensity
Just wanted to share this really easy to understand and implement solution:
First a little helper to turn a Color into it's grayscale version:
public static Color ToGrayscaleColor(Color color) {
var level = (byte)((color.R + color.G + color.B) / 3);
var result = Color.FromArgb(level, level, level);
return result;
}
Then for the color bitmap to grayscale bitmap conversion:
public static Bitmap ToGrayscale(Bitmap bitmap) {
var result = new Bitmap(bitmap.Width, bitmap.Height);
for (int x = 0; x < bitmap.Width; x++)
for (int y = 0; y < bitmap.Height; y++) {
var grayColor = ToGrayscaleColor(bitmap.GetPixel(x, y));
result.SetPixel(x, y, grayColor);
}
return result;
}
The doubles part is quite easy. The Bitmap
object is a memory representation of the actual image which you can use in various operations. The colordepth and image format details are only the concern of loading and saving instances of Bitmap
onto streams or files. We needn't care about those at this point:
public static double[,] FromGrayscaleToDoubles(Bitmap bitmap) {
var result = new double[bitmap.Width, bitmap.Height];
for (int x = 0; x < bitmap.Width; x++)
for (int y = 0; y < bitmap.Height; y++)
result[x, y] = (double)bitmap.GetPixel(x, y).R / 255;
return result;
}
And turning a double array back into a grayscale image:
public static Bitmap FromDoublesToGrayscal(double[,] doubles) {
var result = new Bitmap(doubles.GetLength(0), doubles.GetLength(1));
for (int x = 0; x < result.Width; x++)
for (int y = 0; y < result.Height; y++) {
int level = (int)Math.Round(doubles[x, y] * 255);
if (level > 255) level = 255; // just to be sure
if (level < 0) level = 0; // just to be sure
result.SetPixel(x, y, Color.FromArgb(level, level, level));
}
return result;
}
The following lines:
if (level > 255) level = 255; // just to be sure
level < 0) level = 0; // just to be sure
are really there in case you operate on the doubles and you want to allow room for little mistakes.