6

This is a follow up question on Save image to file keeping aspect ration in a WPF app

I know howto scale the image, but how do I expand the canvas size, to ensure the image still has the requested width and height. In this example its 250x250 but its dynamic.

I have created this illustration to show what I'm trying to accomplice. alt text

I can't find any way of expanding the canvas of an BitmapImage, nor a way to create an in memory image in the correct size, with a transparent background, and then merging the two images together.

3 Answers 3

7
+50

CroppedBitmap doesn't seem to support adding space around an image so instead you can create a transparent image the correct size using WriteableBitmap. If the input is smaller than the target size this method will enlarge it, but that is easy to alter.

public static BitmapSource FitImage(BitmapSource input, int width, int height)
{
    if (input.PixelWidth == width && input.PixelHeight == height)
        return input;

    if(input.Format != PixelFormats.Bgra32 || input.Format != PixelFormats.Pbgra32)
        input = new FormatConvertedBitmap(input, PixelFormats.Bgra32, null, 0);

    //Use the same scale for x and y to keep aspect ratio.
    double scale = Math.Min((double)width / input.PixelWidth, height / (double)input.PixelHeight);

    int x = (int)Math.Round((width - (input.PixelWidth * scale))/2);
    int y = (int)Math.Round((height - (input.PixelHeight * scale))/2);


    var scaled = new TransformedBitmap(input, new ScaleTransform(scale, scale));
    var stride = scaled.PixelWidth * (scaled.Format.BitsPerPixel / 8);

    var result = new WriteableBitmap(width, height, input.DpiX, input.DpiY, input.Format,null);

    var data = new byte[scaled.PixelHeight * stride];
    scaled.CopyPixels(data, stride, 0);
    result.WritePixels(new Int32Rect(0,0,scaled.PixelWidth,scaled.PixelHeight), data, stride,x,y);
    return result;
}

If you are already rendering content using RenderTargetBitmap you could wrap it in a ViewBox to do the scaling but if you're just working with normal images I'd use the above method.

9
  • @Kris This sounds very promising. I'm new to these methods. Can you tell me the difference between BitmapSource and BitmapFrame? I am using BitmapFrame to resize my image.
    – mrtsherman
    Apr 1, 2011 at 14:22
  • @Kris Okay I see that BitmapFrame is child of BitmapSource. So should be able to adapt code to work. Trying myself right now.
    – mrtsherman
    Apr 1, 2011 at 14:28
  • The main use for BitmapFrame is because some image formats like gif can have multiple frames it also ties it to a decoder and provides a thumbnail, for a better explanation see stackoverflow.com/questions/155391/…
    – Kris
    Apr 1, 2011 at 14:50
  • @Kris +50 Thank-you. Sorted it out. Your function is great and can be copied verbatim. I use was using PostedFile.InputStream converted to a BitmapFrame. Because BitmapFrame is a child of BitmapSource it is properly parsed, but the return object is a BitmapSource instead of BitmapFrame. To save this I had to convert it back to a BitmapFrame using BitmapFrame.Create(myBitmapSource). This seems inefficient. Is there a better way?
    – mrtsherman
    Apr 1, 2011 at 14:55
  • 1
    Edit- my initial comment was whacked. I was so excited about getting an answer. Your function is great and can be copied verbatim. In my case I was processing images from a form upload. This gave me myFile.PostedFile.InputStream which can be converted to a BitmapFrame by calling ReadBitmapFrame(myFile). This can then be passed directly into your function for processing. Unfortunately the output of your function is BitmapSource which I couldn't figure out how to save using encoder.Save. So I converted BitmapSource back into a frame using BitmapFrame.Create().
    – mrtsherman
    Apr 1, 2011 at 15:03
0

You should be able to set the Stretch property to Uniform.

3
  • How about saving the image from the canvas that it's on?
    – Joel Lucsy
    Jan 13, 2011 at 18:46
  • Any chance you could create a small example to illustrate this? As you can we in my previous question, I'm not using a canvas, but loads the image into a BitmapImage and then loads it into a TransformedBitmap to scale it down, but that just don't give the right output size.
    – gulbaek
    Jan 14, 2011 at 10:20
  • You could try something like this: social.msdn.microsoft.com/forums/en-US/wpf/thread/…
    – Joel Lucsy
    Jan 14, 2011 at 13:46
0

Just some code in case others are trying to postprocess files from a form upload.

if (file.PostedFile != null)
{
    //write the new file to disk
    string cachePath = String.Format("{0}temp\\", Request.PhysicalApplicationPath);
    string photoPath = String.Format("{0}temp.png", cachePath);                
    if (!Directory.Exists(cachePath))
{
   Directory.CreateDirectory(cachePath);
}    

file.PostedFile.SaveAs(photoPath);

//resize the new file and save it to disk               
BitmapSource banana = FitImage(ReadBitmapFrame(file.PostedFile.InputStream), 640, 480);
PngBitmapEncoder encoder = new PngBitmapEncoder();
encoder.Frames.Add(BitmapFrame.Create(banana));
FileStream pngStream = new FileStream(cachePath + "test.png", FileMode.Create);
encoder.Save(pngStream);
pngStream.Close();

//set a couple images on page to the newly uploaded and newly processed files
image.Src = "temp/temp.png";
image.Visible = true;
image2.Src = "temp/test.png"; 


   image2.Visible = true;
}

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