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Image resizing and displaying in a JPanel or a JLabel without loss of quality

I'm developing a java program to capture employee images at the time of registration using a webcam. I can obtain the picture without any problem, and save it in my C: drive but upon retrieval of the image only a part of the image is displayed on the label. Is there a way of re sizing the JPEG before saving it? or before displaying it? like shrinking it without a quality loss....

Thankz a lot Cheerz! :)!

okay guys... here goes:- I have commented the code in the way I have used them.

//This method will capture the image from the interface and save it under the unique employee ID
public String captureImage(int picId){

    FrameGrabbingControl ControlFG = (FrameGrabbingControl)

    broadcast.getControl("javax.media.control.FrameGrabbingControl");

    Buffer buffer = ControlFG.grabFrame();

    BufferToImage image = new BufferToImage((VideoFormat)buffer.getFormat());

    img = image.createImage(buffer);

    path="c:\\employee"+picId+".jpg";

    saveJPG(img,path);//method will save the image

    return path;

}

 public void saveJPG(Image img, String s){***//method will save the image***

    System.out.println(s);

    BufferedImage bi = new BufferedImage(img.getWidth(null), img.getHeight(null),

    BufferedImage.TYPE_INT_RGB);

    Graphics2D g2 = bi.createGraphics();

    g2.drawImage(img,null,null);

    FileOutputStream out = null;
    try{

    out = new FileOutputStream(s);

    }
    catch (java.io.FileNotFoundException io){

    System.out.println("File Not Found");
    }

    JPEGImageEncoder encoder = JPEGCodec.createJPEGEncoder(out);

    JPEGEncodeParam param = encoder.getDefaultJPEGEncodeParam(bi);

    param.setQuality(0.5f,false);

    encoder.setJPEGEncodeParam(param);

    try
    {
    encoder.encode(bi);
    out.close();
    }

    catch (java.io.IOException io)
    {
    System.out.println("IOException");
    }
    }

maybe I can scale the image while saving.. so that I can retrieve the scaled image..

like image 682
Dilshan Ranaweera Avatar asked Sep 30 '12 09:09

Dilshan Ranaweera


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1 Answers

Of course you can resize the image there are many different ways like Image#getScaledInstance(int width,int height,int hints), but this has its perils.

The main problem being:

Image.getScaledInstance() does not return a finished, scaled image. It leaves much of the scaling work for a later time when the image pixels are used.

I would not recommend using it but here is a nice example.

Alternatively you can use this method:

import javax.swing.ImageIcon;
import java.awt.image.BufferedImage;
import java.awt.Image;
import java.awt.Color;
import java.awt.Graphics2D;
import java.io.File;
import javax.imageio.ImageIO;
import java.awt.RenderingHints;

public class ImgUtils {

public BufferedImage scaleImage(int WIDTH, int HEIGHT, String filename) {
    BufferedImage bi = null;
    try {
        ImageIcon ii = new ImageIcon(filename);//path to image
        bi = new BufferedImage(WIDTH, HEIGHT, BufferedImage.TYPE_INT_RGB);
        Graphics2D g2d = (Graphics2D) bi.createGraphics();
        g2d.addRenderingHints(new RenderingHints(RenderingHints.KEY_RENDERING,RenderingHints.VALUE_RENDER_QUALITY));
        g2d.drawImage(ii.getImage(), 0, 0, WIDTH, HEIGHT, null);
    } catch (Exception e) {
        e.printStackTrace();
        return null;
    }
    return bi;
}

}

you'd use it like:

final BufferedImage img=new ImgUtils().scaleImage(200,200,"c:/test.jpg");
//create label with image as background
JLabel label=new JLabel(new ImageIcon((Image)img));

UPDATE:

Here is a small example I made:

enter image description here

import java.awt.BorderLayout;
import java.awt.Graphics2D;
import java.awt.Image;
import java.awt.RenderingHints;
import java.awt.image.BufferedImage;
import javax.swing.ImageIcon;
import javax.swing.JFrame;
import javax.swing.JLabel;
import javax.swing.SwingUtilities;

public class JavaApplication117 {

    //change this to your own
    static String filename="c:/test.jpg";

    public static void main(String[] args) {
        SwingUtilities.invokeLater(new Runnable() {

            @Override
            public void run() {
                new JavaApplication117().createAndShowUI();
            }
        });
    }

    private void createAndShowUI() {
        JFrame frame = new JFrame("Test");
        frame.setDefaultCloseOperation(JFrame.EXIT_ON_CLOSE);

        initComponents(frame);

        frame.setResizable(false);
        frame.pack();
        frame.setVisible(true);
    }

    private void initComponents(JFrame frame) {
        final BufferedImage img = new ImgUtils().scaleImage(200, 200, filename);
        //create label with image as background
        JLabel label = new JLabel(new ImageIcon((Image) img));

        frame.getContentPane().add(label, BorderLayout.CENTER);
    }
}

class ImgUtils {

    public BufferedImage scaleImage(int WIDTH, int HEIGHT, String filename) {
        BufferedImage bi = null;
        try {
            ImageIcon ii = new ImageIcon(filename);//path to image
            bi = new BufferedImage(WIDTH, HEIGHT, BufferedImage.TYPE_INT_RGB);
            Graphics2D g2d = (Graphics2D) bi.createGraphics();
            g2d.addRenderingHints(new RenderingHints(RenderingHints.KEY_RENDERING, RenderingHints.VALUE_RENDER_QUALITY));
            g2d.drawImage(ii.getImage(), 0, 0, WIDTH, HEIGHT, null);
        } catch (Exception e) {
            e.printStackTrace();
            return null;
        }
        return bi;
    }
}

References:

  • resizing image java getScaledInstance
like image 99
David Kroukamp Avatar answered Sep 25 '22 18:09

David Kroukamp