Leadtools Namespace > RasterMemoryThreshold Structure : ConventionalBuffers Property |
public int ConventionalBuffers {get; set;}
'Declaration Public Property ConventionalBuffers As Integer
'Usage Dim instance As RasterMemoryThreshold Dim value As Integer instance.ConventionalBuffers = value value = instance.ConventionalBuffers
public int ConventionalBuffers {get; set;}
get_ConventionalBuffers();
set_ConventionalBuffers(value);
Object.defineProperty('ConventionalBuffers');
ConventionalBuffers is used when working with tiled images which have disk tiles. The swap buffers will greatly improve the access to these disk tiles.
If the ConventionalBuffers value is > 0, ConventionalBuffers indicates the number of swap buffers.
If the ConventionalBuffers value is < 0, -ConventionalBuffers indicates the percentage of the total of disk tiles. For example, -50 means the number of buffers is half of the disk tiles will be used.
If the ConventionalBuffers value is 0, no swap buffers will be used. This uses the least amount of memory.
It is useful to have more than one swap buffer when you have an algorithm that constantly reads data going up and down. Usually, the data is read in one direction (from top to bottom or bottom to top) - in this case, one swap buffer will be enough. Also, if you only view a certain portion of the image, you might benefit from having enough swap buffers to cache the visible portion of the image (or the image's region).
The buffers are dynamic: when data is being read/written to a disk tile, a cache buffer is created (if permitted and there is enough memory). If the maximum number of cache buffers for that image has been reached, the cache buffer for the last used tile will be deleted and used for the new tile.