LEADTOOLS Image Processing includes over 200 functions, some of which are typically found only in high performance end-user programs such as Adobe PhotoShop®. The image processing functions are separated into four categories: Transforms, Filters, Color Conversion and Drawing. Additionally, LEADTOOLS image processing functions support regions of interest, allowing only a specified region of an image to be processed.
Key Features:
Change the appearance of the image in a bitmap
- Define the bitmap as a display surface where you can use Windows graphics device interface (GDI) functions for drawing or adding text.
- Automatically straighten (deskew) a 1-bit image.
- Remove specks (despeckle) a 1-bit image.
- Automatically trim a bitmap to remove blank space around the edges.
- Rotate the image. (Angles can be precise to 100th of a degree.)
- Do fast rotation in 90-degree increments.
- Rotate JPEG or CMP compressed images in 90 degree increments or flip them without loss of quality.
- Shear the image in the fashion of a parallelogram. (Angles are precise to 100th of a degree.)
- Change the orientation by flipping the image horizontally or vertically.
Adjust colors and intensities:
- Change brightness using a flat scale.
- Change brightness using gamma correction.
- Change contrast using a flat scale.
- Change contrast using a multi-scale.
- Stretch the range of intensities.
- Remap intensities using a lookup table.
- Create look up tables based on points on a curve or a mathematical function.
- Invert colors.
- Change hue of the entire image or just a range of colors.
- Change saturation.
- Histogram equalize and histogram contrast.
- Fill with a specified color.
- Get and put colors of individual pixels.
- Color balancing.
- Load CMYK TIFF files and keep the data in memory as CMYK.
Apply conversions:
- Halftone for display or printing.
- Sharpen or blur.
- Posterize, specifying the number of color planes.
- Mosaic, specifying the tile size.
- Emboss, specifying the lighting direction.
- Soften an image using an average filter.
- Reduce noise using a median or Gaussian filter.
- Add noise in any or all color planes.
- Picturize with a list of images or a single image.
Apply filters to:
Use medical imaging processing functions to:
- Create Kaufmann regions. The created regions can be used to determine the Kaufmann ratio, which is the size of the corpus callosum divided by the size of the brain sphere.
- Extract individual slices from a radiographic scanned film.
Apply image optimization to:
- an image buffer in memory
- an entire directory of images, saving the optimized images to another directory
Optimize the following formats using the Image Optimizer DLL functions:
- JPEG File (FILE_JPEG).
- JPEG 411 File (FILE_JPEG_411).
- JPEG 422 File (FILE_JPEG_422).
- EXIF JPEG 4:1:1 File (FILE_EXIF_JPEG_411).
- EXIF JPEG 4:2:2 File (FILE_EXIF_JPEG_422).
- GIF File (FILE_GIF).
- PNG File (FILE_PNG).
- BMP Without RLE Compression File (FILE_BMP).
- BMP With RLE Compression File (FILE_BMP_RLE).
Use low-level functions to change parts of an image:
- Get and put rows of image data.
- Get and put parts of rows.
- Get and put the colors of individual pixels.
- Process a region within a bitmap
Supported Environments
The toolkit comes in Win32, x64 and WinRT editions that can support development of software applications for any of the following environments:
- Windows 8
- Windows 7
- Windows Vista
- Windows XP
- Windows 2000
- Windows 2000 Server and newer
- Windows Phone 8
- Windows Phone 7
Supported Environments
The toolkit comes in Win32 and x64 editions that can support development of software applications for any of the following environments:
- Windows 7
- Windows Vista
- Windows XP
- Windows 2000
- Windows 2000 Server and newer
- Windows Phone 7
See Also