// // Copyright 2005-2007 Adobe Systems Incorporated // // Distributed under the Boost Software License, Version 1.0 // See accompanying file LICENSE_1_0.txt or copy at // http://www.boost.org/LICENSE_1_0.txt // #include #include // This test file demonstrates how to use packed pixel formats in GIL. // A "packed" pixel is a pixel whose channels are bit ranges. // Here we create an RGB image whose pixel has 16-bits, such as: // bits [0..6] are the blue channel // bits [7..13] are the green channel // bits [14..15] are the red channel // We read a regular 8-bit RGB image, convert it to packed BGR772, convert it back to 8-bit RGB and save it to a file. // Since the red channel is only two bits the color loss should be observable in the result // // This test file also demonstrates how to use bit-aligned images - these are images whose pixels themselves are not byte aligned. // For example, an rgb222 image has a pixel whose size is 6 bits. Bit-aligned images are more complicated than packed images. They // require a special proxy class to represent pixel reference and pixel iterator (packed images use C++ reference and C pointer respectively). // The alignment parameter in the constructor of bit-aligned images is in bit units. For example, if you want your bit-aligned image to have 4-byte // alignment of its rows use alignment of 32, not 4. // // To demonstrate that image view transformations work on packed images, we save the result transposed. using namespace boost; using namespace boost::gil; int main() { bgr8_image_t img; read_image("test.jpg",img, jpeg_tag{}); //////////////////////////////// // define a bgr772 image. It is a "packed" image - its channels are not byte-aligned, but its pixels are. //////////////////////////////// using bgr772_image_t = packed_image3_type::type; bgr772_image_t bgr772_img(img.dimensions()); copy_and_convert_pixels(const_view(img),view(bgr772_img)); // Save the result. JPEG I/O does not support the packed pixel format, so convert it back to 8-bit RGB write_view("out-packed_pixel_bgr772.jpg",color_converted_view(transposed_view(const_view(bgr772_img))), jpeg_tag{}); //////////////////////////////// // define a gray1 image (one-bit per pixel). It is a "bit-aligned" image - its pixels are not byte aligned. //////////////////////////////// using gray1_image_t = bit_aligned_image1_type<1, gray_layout_t>::type; gray1_image_t gray1_img(img.dimensions()); copy_and_convert_pixels(const_view(img),view(gray1_img)); // Save the result. JPEG I/O does not support the packed pixel format, so convert it back to 8-bit RGB write_view("out-packed_pixel_gray1.jpg",color_converted_view(transposed_view(const_view(gray1_img))), jpeg_tag{}); return 0; }