Android how to scale an image with BitmapFactory Options
Asked Answered
M

3

22

I want to decode an image from the SD card with BitmapFactory.decodeFile(path, options).
I also want images that are larger than 2048x2048 pixels to be scaled down to at most 2048x2048 (maintaining the proportions).
I could do this manually after getting the bitmap, but that would require allocating a large amount of bytes in addition to the ones already allocated.
How should i set up my BitmapFactory.Options object to get that effect?
Thanks

Middleclass answered 20/2, 2012 at 12:17 Comment(1)
Possible duplicate of Resize a large bitmap file to scaled output file on AndroidCommando
B
13

Use BitmapFactory.Options.inSampleSize when you first load your image to get the size as close as possible to your target size, then use Bitmap.createScaledBitmap to scale to the exact size you want.

There's some code for this in this answer.

Bucephalus answered 20/2, 2012 at 12:28 Comment(0)
A
6

Start by setting inJustDecodeBounds to true in your Options, this will give you the size of the image, without loading any of the image data.
If the image size is smaller then your max size, then just load it as usual.
If on the other hand, it is too big, use the inSampleSize to read a smaller bitmap.

Note: I don't think that the decoding does any filtering when using the inSampleSize, so you might lose some detail, but as your image size is so big (2048 px) I don't think this will cause any problems.

Argentic answered 20/2, 2012 at 12:28 Comment(0)
A
4

You can try something like this:

int imageWidth, imageHeight;

Bitmap result = Bitmap.createScaledBitmap(bitmapPicture,
                        imageWidth, imageHeight, false);

Here you can add your own width and height. bitmapPicture is the object of Bitmap. Let me know if this is of any help to you.

Ashley answered 20/2, 2012 at 12:21 Comment(1)
Like i said, I am trying to avoid having to allocate another 2048x2048 pixels, but have the BitmapFactory do this automatically, because i'm very short on memory. Your method just allocates a new bitmap which is not what I want. Thanks for the reply though.Middleclass

© 2022 - 2024 — McMap. All rights reserved.