A bitmap has a backing scale, which is the number of pixels that correspond to a drawing unit for the bitmap, either when the bitmap is used as a target for drawing or when the bitmap is drawn into another context. For example, on Mac OS when the main monitor is in Retina mode, make-screen-bitmap returns a bitmap whose backing scale is 2.0. On Windows and Unix, the backing scale of a screen bitmap corresponds to the system-wide text scale (see Screen Resolution and Text Scaling). A monochrome bitmap always has a backing scale of 1.0.
A bitmap is convertible to 'png-bytes through the file/convertible protocol.
constructor
(make-object bitmap% width height [ monochrome? alpha? backing-scale]) → (is-a?/c bitmap%) width : exact-positive-integer? height : exact-positive-integer? monochrome? : any/c = #f alpha? : any/c = #f backing-scale : (>/c 0.0) = 1.0
(make-object bitmap% in [ kind bg-color complain-on-failure? backing-scale save-data-from-file?]) → (is-a?/c bitmap%) in : (or/c path-string? input-port?)
kind :
(or/c 'unknown 'unknown/mask 'unknown/alpha 'gif 'gif/mask 'gif/alpha 'jpeg 'jpeg/alpha 'png 'png/mask 'png/alpha 'xbm 'xbm/alpha 'xpm 'xpm/alpha 'bmp 'bmp/alpha) = 'unknown bg-color : (or/c (is-a?/c color%) #f) = #f complain-on-failure? : any/c = #f backing-scale : (>/c 0.0) = 1.0 save-data-from-file? : any/c = #f (make-object bitmap% bits width height) → (is-a?/c bitmap%) bits : bytes? width : exact-positive-integer? height : exact-positive-integer?
When width and height are provided: Creates a new bitmap. If monochrome? is true, the bitmap is monochrome; if monochrome? is #f and alpha? is true, the bitmap has an alpha channel; otherwise, the bitmap is color without an alpha channel. The backing-scale argument sets the bitmap’s backing scale, and it must be 1.0 if monochrome is true. The initial content of the bitmap is “empty”: all white, and with zero alpha in the case of a bitmap with an alpha channel.
When in is provided: Creates a bitmap from a file format, where kind specifies the format. See load-file for details. The backing-scale argument sets the bitmap’s backing scale, so that the bitmap’s size (as reported by get-width and get-height) is the ceiling of the bitmap’s size from in divided by backing-scale; the backing scale must be 1.0 if the bitmap is monochrome or loaded with a mask.
When a bits byte string is provided: Creates a monochrome bitmap from an array of bit values, where each byte in bits specifies eight bits, and padding bits are added so that each bitmap line starts on a character boundary. A 1 bit value indicates black, and 0 indicates white. If width times height is larger than 8 times the length of bits, an exn:fail:contract exception is raised.
See get-data-from-file for information on save-data-from-file?
Changed in version 1.1 of package draw-lib: Added the backing-scale
optional arguments.
Changed in version 1.17: Added save-data-from-file?
method
(send a-bitmap get-argb-pixels x y width height pixels [ just-alpha? pre-multiplied? #:unscaled? unscaled?]) → void? x : exact-nonnegative-integer? y : exact-nonnegative-integer? width : exact-nonnegative-integer? height : exact-nonnegative-integer? pixels : (and/c bytes? (not/c immutable?)) just-alpha? : any/c = #f pre-multiplied? : any/c = #f unscaled? : any/c = #f
If the bitmap has a backing scale other than 1.0 and unscaled? is true, then the result corresponds to the bitmap’s pixels ignoring the backing scale. In that case, x, y, width, and height are effectively in pixels instead of drawing units.
Changed in version 1.1 of package draw-lib: Added the #:unscaled? optional argument.
method
(send a-bitmap get-backing-scale) → (>/c 0.0)
Added in version 1.1 of package draw-lib.
method
(send a-bitmap get-data-from-file)
→
(or/c (vector/c (or/c 'unknown 'unknown/mask 'unknown/alpha 'gif 'gif/mask 'gif/alpha 'jpeg 'jpeg/alpha 'png 'png/mask 'png/alpha 'xbm 'xbm/alpha 'xpm 'xpm/alpha 'bmp 'bmp/alpha) (or/c (is-a?/c color%) #f) (and/c bytes? immutable?) #:immutable? #t) #f)
Added in version 1.17 of package draw-lib.
method
(send a-bitmap get-depth) → exact-nonnegative-integer?
method
(send a-bitmap get-handle) → cpointer?
method
(send a-bitmap get-height) → exact-positive-integer?
method
(send a-bitmap get-loaded-mask) → (or/c (is-a?/c bitmap%) #f)
When a GIF file is loaded with 'gif/mask or 'unknown/mask and the file contains a transparent “color,” a mask bitmap is generated to identify the transparent pixels. The mask bitmap is monochrome, with white pixels where the loaded bitmap is transparent and black pixels everywhere else.
When a PNG file is loaded with 'png/mask or 'unknown/mask and the file contains a mask or alpha channel, a mask bitmap is generated to identify the mask or alpha channel. If the file contains a mask or an alpha channel with only extreme values, the mask bitmap is monochrome, otherwise it is grayscale (representing the alpha channel inverted).
When an XPM file is loaded with 'xpm/mask or 'unknown/mask, a mask bitmap is generated to indicate which pixels are set.
When 'unknown/alpha and similar modes are used to load a bitmap, transparency information is instead represented by an alpha channel, not by a mask bitmap.
Unlike an alpha channel, the mask bitmap is not used automatically by drawing routines. The mask bitmap can be extracted and supplied explicitly as a mask (e.g., as the sixth argument to draw-bitmap). The mask bitmap is used by save-file when saving a bitmap as 'png if the mask has the same dimensions as the saved bitmap. The mask bitmap is also used automatically when the bitmap is a control label.
method
(send a-bitmap get-width) → exact-positive-integer?
method
(send a-bitmap has-alpha-channel?) → boolean?
method
(send a-bitmap load-file in [ kind bg-color complain-on-failure? #:save-data-from-file? save-data-from-file?]) → boolean? in : (or/c path-string? input-port?)
kind :
(or/c 'unknown 'unknown/mask 'unknown/alpha 'gif 'gif/mask 'gif/alpha 'jpeg 'jpeg/alpha 'png 'png/mask 'png/alpha 'xbm 'xbm/alpha 'xpm 'xpm/alpha 'bmp 'bmp/alpha) = 'unknown bg-color : (or/c (is-a?/c color%) #f) = #f complain-on-failure? : any/c = #f save-data-from-file? : any/c = #f
The kind argument specifies the file’s format:
'unknown —
examine the file to determine its format; creates either a monochrome or color bitmap without an alpha channel 'unknown/mask —
like 'unknown, but see get-loaded-mask 'unknown/alpha —
like 'unknown, but if the bitmap is color, it has an alpha channel, and transparency in the image file is recorded in the alpha channel 'gif/mask —
like 'gif, but see get-loaded-mask 'gif/alpha —
like 'gif, but with an alpha channel 'jpeg/alpha —
like 'jpeg, but with an alpha channel 'png —
load a PNG bitmap file, creating a color or monochrome bitmap 'png/mask —
like 'png, but see get-loaded-mask 'png/alpha —
like 'png, but always color and with an alpha channel 'xbm —
load an X bitmap (XBM) file; creates a monochrome bitmap 'xbm/alpha —
like 'xbm, but creates a color bitmap with an alpha channel 'xpm/alpha —
like 'xpm, but with an alpha channel 'bmp —
load a Windows bitmap (BMP) file, creating a color bitmap 'bmp/alpha —
like 'bmp, but with an alpha channel
An XBM image is always loaded as a monochrome bitmap. A 1-bit grayscale PNG without a mask or alpha channel is also loaded as a monochrome bitmap. An image in any other format is always loaded as a color bitmap.
For PNG and BMP loading, if bg-color is not #f, then it is combined with the file’s alpha channel or mask (if any) while loading the image; in this case, no separate mask bitmap is generated and the alpha channel fills the bitmap, even if 'unknown/mask, 'png/mask is specified for the format. If the format is specified as 'unknown or 'png and bg-color is not specified, the PNG file is consulted for a background color to use for loading, and white is used if no background color is indicated in the file.
In all PNG-loading modes, gamma correction is applied when the file provides a gamma value, otherwise gamma correction is not applied. The current display’s gamma factor is determined by the SCREEN_GAMMA environment variable if it is defined. If the preference and environment variable are both undefined, a platform-specific default is used.
After a bitmap is created, load-file can be used only if the bitmap’s backing scale is 1.0.
See get-data-from-file for information on save-data-from-file?
Changed in version 1.17 of package draw-lib: Added save-data-from-file?
method
(send a-bitmap make-dc) → (is-a?/c bitmap-dc%)
method
(send a-bitmap save-file name kind [ quality #:unscaled? unscaled?]) → boolean? name : (or/c path-string? output-port?) kind : (or/c 'png 'jpeg 'xbm 'xpm 'bmp) quality : (integer-in 0 100) = 75 unscaled? : any/c = #f
The kind argument determined the type of file that is created, one of:
'bmp —
save a Windows bitmap file
The quality argument is used only for saving as 'jpeg, in which case it specifies the trade-off between image precision (high quality matches the content of the bitmap% object more precisely) and size (low quality is smaller).
When saving as 'png, if get-loaded-mask returns a bitmap of the same size as this one, a grayscale version is included in the PNG file as the alpha channel.
A monochrome bitmap saved as 'png without a mask bitmap produces a 1-bit grayscale PNG file (which, when read with load-file, creates a monochrome bitmap% object.)
If the bitmap has a backing scale other than 1.0, then it is effectively converted to a single pixel per drawing unit before saving unless unscaled? is true.
Changed in version 1.1 of package draw-lib: Added the #:unscaled? optional argument.
method
(send a-bitmap set-argb-pixels x y width height pixels [ just-alpha? pre-multiplied? #:unscaled? unscaled?]) → void? x : real? y : real? width : exact-nonnegative-integer? height : exact-nonnegative-integer? pixels : bytes? just-alpha? : any/c = #f pre-multiplied? : any/c = #f unscaled? : any/c = #f
If the bitmap has a backing scale other than 1.0 and unscaled? is true, then pixel values are installed ignoring the backing scale. In that case, x, y, width, and height are effectively in pixels instead of drawing units.
Changed in version 1.1 of package draw-lib: Added the #:unscaled? optional argument.
method
(send a-bitmap set-loaded-mask mask) → void?
mask : (is-a?/c bitmap%)