Available in LEADTOOLS Imaging Pro, Vector, Document, and Medical Imaging toolkits. |
L_RotateBitmap
#include "l_bitmap.h"
L_LTKRN_API L_INT L_RotateBitmap(pBitmap, nAngle, uFlags, crFill)
pBITMAPHANDLE pBitmap; |
/* pointer to the bitmap handle */ |
L_INT nAngle; |
/* hundredths of degrees to rotate (+/-) */ |
L_UINT uFlags; |
/* resize flag */ |
L_COLORREF crFill; |
/* background fill color */ |
Rotates a bitmap by the number of degrees specified.
Parameter |
Description |
|
pBitmap |
Pointer to the bitmap handle referencing the bitmap to be changed. |
|
nAngle |
Hundredths of degrees to rotate (+/-). This can be a number from 0 to 36,000. A positive value will rotate the image in a clockwise rotation, while a negative value will rotate the image in a counter-clockwise rotation. |
|
uFlags |
Flag to keep the resulting image the same size as the original image or to resize according to the rotation direction specified. Valid values are: |
|
|
Value |
Meaning |
|
ROTATE_RESIZE |
[0x0001] Size resulting image as needed. |
|
ROTATE_RESAMPLE |
[0x0002] Perform bilinear interpolation when rotating. |
|
ROTATE_BICUBIC |
[0x0004] Perform bicubic interpolation when rotating. |
|
0 |
Do not resize the image. Crop it. |
crFill |
The background fill color. 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. |
Returns
SUCCESS |
The function was successful. |
< 1 |
An error occurred. Refer to Return Codes. |
Comments
This function has the following features:
It uses the center of the image as the center of rotation.
It can rotate the image clockwise or counterclockwise up to 360 degrees in 1-degree increments.
It can resize the image to accommodate the rotated height and width, or it can retain the original height and width, cropping the bitmap as necessary.
It uses crFill as the background color to fill any new area created by the rotation.
To update a status bar or detect a user interrupt during execution of this function, refer to L_SetStatusCallback.
ROTATE_RESAMPLE and ROTATE_BICUBIC can be combined with ROTATE_RESIZE, but they can not be combined with each other. Therefore, you can pass ROTATE_RESAMPLE|ROTATE_RESIZE, but not ROTATE_RESAMPLE|ROTATE_BICUBIC.
If ROTATE_RESIZE is set, then the image is resized. Otherwise, the image is cropped.
Interpolation can be done while rotating certain images. This produces superior output, eliminating the jaggedness occurring when rotating images at angles that are not multiple of 90. (ie when nAngle is not a multiple of 9000).
The only images that are interpolated are:
8-bit grayscale images (for best results, all gray values should be in the bitmaps palette). If the rotation doesnt give the expected results, you can call L_GrayScaleBitmap(pBitmap, 8) to change the bitmap into a proper grayscale bitmap.
12-bit and 16-bit grayscale bitmaps that dont have a palette. Grayscale bitmaps can have a palette if they have been loaded from certain DICOM images or if the L_WindowLevel function has been called. Call L_GrayScaleBitmap(pBitmap, 12) or L_GrayScaleBitmap(pBitmap, 16) if L_RotateBitmap doesnt seem to do any interpolation during the rotation.
16-bit color images
24-bit, 32-bit, 48-bit and 64-bit color images
For the other images, L_RotateBitmap ignores the resampling flags and the rotate is performed without interpolation.
Required DLLs and Libraries
LTKRN For a listing of the exact DLLs and Libraries needed, based on the toolkit version, refer to Files To Be Included With Your Application. |
Platforms
Win32, x64, Mobile.
See Also
Example
For complete sample code, refer to the FEATURE1 example. This example loads a bitmap and rotates it.
L_INT RotateBitmapExample(L_VOID) { L_INT nRet; BITMAPHANDLE LeadBitmap; /* Bitmap handle to hold the loaded image. */ /* Load the bitmap, keeping the bits per pixel of the file */ nRet = L_LoadBitmap (MAKE_IMAGE_PATH(TEXT("IMAGE1.CMP")), &LeadBitmap, sizeof(BITMAPHANDLE), 0, ORDER_BGR, NULL, NULL); if(nRet != SUCCESS) return nRet; /* Rotate the bitmap 45 degrees counterclockwise, increasing the size as necessary */ nRet = L_RotateBitmap(&LeadBitmap, -4500, ROTATE_RESIZE, RGB(255, 0, 0) ); if(nRet != SUCCESS) return nRet; nRet = L_SaveBitmap(MAKE_IMAGE_PATH(TEXT("Result.BMP")), &LeadBitmap, FILE_BMP, 24, 0, NULL); if(nRet != SUCCESS) return nRet; if(LeadBitmap.Flags.Allocated) L_FreeBitmap(&LeadBitmap); return SUCCESS; }