How to get pixel color at location from UIimage scaled within a UIimageView
Asked Answered
B

3

2

I'm currently using this technique to get the color of a pixel in a UIimage. (on Ios)

- (UIColor*) getPixelColorAtLocation:(CGPoint)point {
UIColor* color = nil;
CGImageRef inImage = self.image.CGImage;
// Create off screen bitmap context to draw the image into. Format ARGB is 4 bytes for each pixel: Alpa, Red, Green, Blue
CGContextRef cgctx = [self createARGBBitmapContextFromImage:inImage];
if (cgctx == NULL) { return nil; /* error */ }

size_t w = CGImageGetWidth(inImage);
size_t h = CGImageGetHeight(inImage);
CGRect rect = {{0,0},{w,h}}; 

// Draw the image to the bitmap context. Once we draw, the memory 
// allocated for the context for rendering will then contain the 
// raw image data in the specified color space.
CGContextDrawImage(cgctx, rect, inImage); 

// Now we can get a pointer to the image data associated with the bitmap
// context.
unsigned char* data = CGBitmapContextGetData (cgctx);
if (data != NULL) {
    //offset locates the pixel in the data from x,y. 
    //4 for 4 bytes of data per pixel, w is width of one row of data.
    int offset = 4*((w*round(point.y))+round(point.x));
    int alpha =  data[offset]; 
    int red = data[offset+1]; 
    int green = data[offset+2]; 
    int blue = data[offset+3]; 
    NSLog(@"offset: %i colors: RGB A %i %i %i  %i",offset,red,green,blue,alpha);
    color = [UIColor colorWithRed:(red/255.0f) green:(green/255.0f) blue:(blue/255.0f) alpha:(alpha/255.0f)];
}

// When finished, release the context
CGContextRelease(cgctx); 
// Free image data memory for the context
if (data) { free(data); }
return color;

}

As illustrated here;

http://www.markj.net/iphone-uiimage-pixel-color/

it works quite well, but when working with images larger than the UIImageView it fails. I tried adding an image and changing the scaling mode to fit the view. How would I modify the code to so that it would still be able to sample the pixel color with a scaled image.

Bebop answered 18/5, 2012 at 19:19 Comment(1)
Sounds like you need to calculate the offset of CGPoint and it to the x and y values.Ira
M
2

try this for swift3

func getPixelColor(image: UIImage, x: Int, y: Int, width: CGFloat) -> UIColor 
{

    let pixelData = CGDataProviderCopyData(CGImageGetDataProvider(image.CGImage))
    let data: UnsafePointer<UInt8> = CFDataGetBytePtr(pixelData)

    let pixelInfo: Int = ((Int(width) * y) + x) * 4

    let r = CGFloat(data[pixelInfo]) / CGFloat(255.0)
    let g = CGFloat(data[pixelInfo+1]) / CGFloat(255.0)
    let b = CGFloat(data[pixelInfo+2]) / CGFloat(255.0)
    let a = CGFloat(data[pixelInfo+3]) / CGFloat(255.0)

    return UIColor(red: r, green: g, blue: b, alpha: a)
}
Muster answered 22/6, 2016 at 10:30 Comment(0)
C
0

Here's a pointer:

0x3A28213A //sorry, I couldn't resist the joke

For real now: after going through the comments on the page at markj.net, a certain James has suggested to make the following changes:

size_t w = CGImageGetWidth(inImage); //Written by Mark
size_t h = CGImageGetHeight(inImage); //Written by Mark
float xscale = w / self.frame.size.width;
float yscale = h / self.frame.size.height;
point.x = point.x * xscale;
point.y = point.y * yscale;

(thanks to http://www.markj.net/iphone-uiimage-pixel-color/comment-page-1/#comment-2159)

This didn't actually work for me... Not that I did much testing, and I'm not the world's greatest programmer (yet)...

My solution was to scale the UIImageView in such a way that each pixel of the image in it was the same size as a standard CGPoint on the screen, then I took my color like normal (using getPixelColorAtLocation:(CGPoint)point) , then I scaled the image back to the size I wanted.

Hope this helps!

Creolized answered 30/8, 2012 at 9:40 Comment(0)
I
-1

Use the UIImageView Layer:

- (UIColor*) getPixelColorAtLocation:(CGPoint)point {
    UIColor* color = nil;

    UIGraphicsBeginImageContext(self.frame.size);
    CGContextRef cgctx = UIGraphicsGetCurrentContext();
    if (cgctx == NULL) { return nil; /* error */ }

    [self.layer renderInContext:cgctx];

    unsigned char* data = CGBitmapContextGetData (cgctx);
    /*
    ...
    */
    UIGraphicsEndImageContext();
    return color;
}
Isidor answered 30/8, 2012 at 10:7 Comment(2)
@keyur bhalodiya did you include the part from the question-code which i kept blank in my answer?Isidor
I found some alternate way for my problemFlorencio

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