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I want to extract the R,G and B values of the pixels of an image. I do it in two ways.

File img_file = new File("../foo.png");
BufferedImage img = ImageIO.read(img_file);

1st method(which works fine):

img.getRaster().getPixel(i, j, rgb);

2nd method(which throws new IllegalArgumentException("More than one component per pixel"))

red = img.getColorModel().getRed(img.getRGB(i, j));

What is the reason for this behaviour?

2 Answers 2

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Normally when I want to extract RGB from a BufferedImage I do something like this:

File img_file = new File("../foo.png");
BufferedImage img = ImageIO.read(img_file);

Color color = new Color(img.getRGB(i,j));
int red = color.getRed();
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Based on the JavaDocs

An IllegalArgumentException is thrown if pixel values for this ColorModel are not conveniently representable as a single int

It would suggest that the underlying color model is representable by a single int value

You may also want to take a look at this answer for some more details

Typically, you would simply take the int packed pixel from the image and use Color to generate a Color representation and then extract the values from there...

First, get the int packed value of the pixel at x/y...

int pixel = img.getRGB(i, j);

Use this to construct a Color object...

Color color = new Color(pixel, true); // True if you care about the alpha value...

Extract the R, G, B values...

int red = color.getRed();
int green = color.getGreen();
int blue = color.getBlue();

Now you could simply do some bit maths, but this is simpler and is more readable - IMHO

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  • thanks for the response. but how do you determine whether the color model is representable by a single int value?
    – Rayhunter
    Feb 10, 2014 at 1:50
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    Personally, I'd be checking to see if it's an instanceof ComponentColorModel, IndexColorModel or PackedColorModel, but you could also test what getNumColorComponents, getNumComponents and getPixelSize return... Feb 10, 2014 at 1:56
  • @Rayhunter, BufferedImage only supports up to 32-bit types so all pixels will fit in a Java int (see supported types docs.oracle.com/javase/7/docs/api/java/awt/image/…)
    – Jason
    Feb 10, 2014 at 2:05
  • I've just noticed that int pxl = img.getRGB(i, j); returns -1, which is wierd, at least for me.
    – Rayhunter
    Feb 10, 2014 at 2:09
  • @Rayhunter Nope, this perfectly normal and has to with how the packed int deals with/allows overflow. Remember the int value a packed series of byte Feb 10, 2014 at 2:10

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