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Image manipulation

I need the easy to learn & fast method for generating image from background image, texts and after that saving as JPEG fo开发者_JS百科rmat.

What you can suggest? Any library or tutorial on this? Important criteria is simpleness.


in .Net 3.5/4 you can also use WPF/Media.Imaging as an alternative to GDI+

First create a DrawingVisual and a DrawingContext:

DrawingVisual visual = new DrawingVisual();
DrawingContext dc = visual.RenderOpen();

Then draw stuff on it:

dc.DrawRectangle(...);
dc.DrawText(...);
etc...

Make sure you close it:

 dc.Close();

The great thing about WPF is everything in the GUI is actually a visual too, so if you prefer you don't have to use the code above to draw programatically, you can actually build up your visual in xaml on a window and then just render that straight to the RenderTargetBitmap.

Once you have built your visual you can render it to a file using an encoder (.Net has encoders for Jpeg, Png, Bmp, Gif, Tiff and Wmp).

// Create a render target to render your visual onto. The '96' values are the dpi's, you can set this as required.
RenderTargetBitmap frame = new RenderTargetBitmap((int)visual.ContentBounds.Width, (int)visual.ContentBounds.Height, 96, 96, PixelFormats.Pbgra32);
frame.Render(visual);

// Now encode the rendered target into Jpeg and output to a file.
JpegBitmapEncoder jpeg = new JpegBitmapEncoder();
jpeg.Frames.Add(BitmapFrame.Create(frame));
using (Stream fs = File.Create(@"c:\filename.jpg"))
{
    jpeg.Save(fs);
}

There are some good MS Tutorials on Drawing Objects and WPF Graphics Rendering.


I usually do this using GDI+. There are lots of tutorials on this on the net, but basically what you need to do is something like this:

using(Image image = new Bitmap(Width, Height))
using (Graphics g = Graphics.FromImage(image)) {
  g.Draw....
  g.Draw....
  image.Save(filename, ImageFormat.Jpeg);
}

The calls to Draw.... you can draw primitives, images, text and so forth.

Also remember that is text looks jagged, you have methods on the Graphics object to smooth this out. In this case g.TextRenderingHint = TextRenderingHint.AntiAlias;

There are also other options to make it look better, if you feel it is jagged. The default settings is geared more towards performance than quality, so if you want high quality you need to set this yourself. g.SmoothingMode set to for example HighQuality will make your round primitives look much smoother than the default configuration.

It's really easy to use, and to make the final image look like you want it to, so give it a try!


Instead of good old GDI+ you can use the more modern (and often faster) System.Windows.Media.Imaging APIs.


GDI+ and the System.Drawing namespace are what is required to do what you want. A basic example is below but there are many resources on the net detailing more advanced features:

using(Bitmap myBitmap = new Bitmap("C:\\backgroundImage.jpg"))
using(Graphics g = Graphics.FromImage(myBitmap))
{
   g.DrawString("Text", new Font("Arial", 10), Brushes.White, new PointF(0, 0));
   myBitmap.Save("C:\\newImage.jpg");
}
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