BITMAPHANDLE

The BITMAPHANDLE structure serves as a working area for image manipulation and conversion. LEADTOOLS functions use this structure as a bitmap handle for accessing the image in memory and for maintaining the characteristics of the image.

Note:

Fields intended for internal use, such as the pointer to the bitmap, are omitted from the table. If necessary, you can refer to the LTKRN.H header file, which describes the entire structure.

 

Member

Data Type

Description

uStructSize

L_UINT

Size of this structure in bytes, for versioning. Use the sizeof() macro to calculate this value.

Width

L_INT

Image width in pixels.

Height

L_INT

Image height in pixels.

BitsPerPixel

L_INT

Number of bits per pixel.

BytesPerLine

L_UINT

Bytes per line, rounded upward to the nearest multiple of four.

Flags.Allocated

L_BITFIELD

TRUE if the bitmap is allocated.

Flags.ConventionalMemory

L_BITFIELD

TRUE if the bitmap is allocated using conventional memory.

Flags. DiskMemory

L_BITFIELD

TRUE if the bitmap is allocated using LEAD's own virtual memory.

Flags.LockedMemory

L_BITFIELD

TRUE if the bitmap memory is locked down.

Flags.Progressive

L_BITFIELD

TRUE if an image is being loaded from a progressive JPEG file.

Flags.Tiled

L_BOOL

TRUE if the bitmap is a tiled bitmap.

Flags.WaitUserInput

L_BITFIELD

TRUE if the animation playback waits for user input.

Flags.Transparency

L_BITFIELD

TRUE if the animation playback uses transparency.

Flags.Compressed

L_BITFIELD

TRUE if the current bitmap is in 1-bit RLE-compressed format. For information about this format, refer to Speeding Up 1-Bit Documents.

Flags.Signed

L_BITFIELD

TRUE if the pixel values in the bitmap are signed.

Flags.SuperCompressed

L_BITFIELD

TRUE if the bitmap is in super compressed format. The bitmap can be 24-bit or 1-bit. For more information, refer to Super Compressed Bitmaps.

Flags.UseLUT

L_BITFIELD

TRUE if the LUT is used in all image processing functions, including save. FALSE if the LUT is used only when painting. If this is FALSE, the LUT is ignored when an image processing function is applied or when a file is saved.

nColors

L_INT

Number of colors (256 or less) that the bitmap has. If the image has more than 256 colors, this value is zero.

pPalette

L_RGBQUAD*

Array of palette colors.

ViewPerspective

L_INT

Where the beginning of the image is stored. Valid values are TOP_LEFT, BOTTOM_LEFT, TOP_RIGHT, BOTTOM_RIGHT, TOP_LEFT90, and TOP_LEFT270. For descriptions, refer to Accounting for View Perspective.

Order

L_INT

Color order of the bitmap. Possible values are ORDER_RGB, ORDER_BGR, ORDER_GRAY and ORDER_ROMM.

Size

L_UINT32

Deprecated, use the Size64 member.

Size64

L_UINT64

Size of the bitmap image data, in bytes..

DitheringMethod

L_UINT

Dithering method (referenced by some functions). For possible values, refer to the L_DefaultDithering function.

XResolution

L_INT

Horizontal resolution, in dots per inch. Some file formats save this value in the file header.

YResolution

L_INT

Vertical resolution, in dots per inch. Some file formats save this value in the file header.

Left

L_INT

Left offset for animation playback.

Top

L_INT

Top offset for animation playback, based on a TOP_LEFT view perspective.

Delay

L_UINT32

Animation playback delay in milliseconds (ms).

Background

COLORREF

Background color for animation playback. You can specify a COLORREF value, such as the return value of the Windows RGB macro, or you can use the PALETTEINDEX macro to specify a palette color.

Transparency

COLORREF

Transparent color for animation playback. You can specify a COLORREF value, such as the return value of the Windows RGB macro, or you can use the PALETTEINDEX macro to specify a palette color.

DisposalMethod

L_UINT

Animation playback disposal method. For possible values, refer to Animation Disposal Methods.

LowBit

L_INT

Value indicating the low bit used for window leveling. 0 <= nLowBit <= nHighBit <= (11 for 12-bit grayscale or 15 for 16-bit grayscale). A value of -1 will be treated as 0.

HighBit

L_INT

Value indicating the high bit used for window leveling. 0 <= nLowBit <= nHighBit <= (11 for 12-bit grayscale or 15 for 16-bit grayscale). A value of -1 will be treated as BitsPerPixel -1.

MinVal

L_INT32

Minimum grayscale value. For every value between 0 and MinVal, Black (RGB(0,0,0)) will be used. For values between MinVal and MaxVal, the gray value to be displayed is calculated by : gray = (index - MinVal) * 255 / (MaxVal - MinVal).(See * below)

MaxVal

L_UINT

Maximum grayscale value. For every value larger than MaxVal, White (RGB(255,255,255)) will be used. For values between MinVal and MaxVal, the gray value to be displayed is calculated by : gray = (index - MinVal) * 255 / (MaxVal - MinVal). (See * below)

 

* index is the intensity value of the pixel. If the intensity value is > MaxVal, the color will be White. If the intensity value is < MinVal, the color will be Black. For those intensity values between MinVal and MaxVal, the above equation is used to determine the color, with index equal to the intensity value.

Comments

pBITMAPHANDLE is a pointer to a BITMAPHANDLE structure. Generally, where a function parameter type is pBITMAPHANDLE, you can declare a BITMAPHANDLE variable, update the structure's fields, and pass the variable's address in the parameter. Declaring a pBITMAPHANDLE variable is necessary only if your program requires a pointer.

Some functions which take this structure as a parameter require that the structure be initialized prior to the function call. You must set the uStructSize member to the total size, in bytes, of the structure. Use the sizeof() macro to calculate this value. Functions that do not require the structure be initialized will take the total size of the structure, in bytes, as an additional function parameter.

In most cases, the values of fields in the BITMAPHANDLE structure are maintained by LEADTOOLS functions.

Note: A 16-bpp image may be color or grayscale. If you are working with a 16-bit grayscale image, explicitly set BITMAPHANDLE.Order to ORDER_GRAY. By default, the Order for a 16-bit image will be set to ORDER_BGR.

Please note that tiled bitmaps will have Flags.ConventionalMemory set, since the bitmap is allocated in conventional memory. To determine whether a bitmap is "regular memory", do the following:

if (!pBitmap->Flags.Compressed && !pBitmap->Flags.Tiled)
{
   // regular bitmap. It is not compressed and it is not tiled.
}

Support for super compressing bitmaps is available in the Document and Medical Imaging toolkits.