The GdkPixBuf
class contains methods to scale pixbufs, to scale
pixbufs and alpha blend against an existing image, and to scale
pixbufs and alpha blend against a solid color or checkerboard.
Alpha blending a checkerboard is a common way to show an image with
an alpha channel in image-viewing and editing software.
Note that in these functions, the terms ‘alpha blending’ and ‘compositing’ are used synonymously.
Since the full-featured functions gdk_pixbuf_scale()
,
gdk_pixbuf_composite()
, and gdk_pixbuf_composite_color()
are rather complex to use and have many arguments, two simple
convenience functions are provided, gdk_pixbuf_scale_simple()
and gdk_pixbuf_composite_color_simple()
which create a new
pixbuf of a given size, scale an original image to fit, and then return it.
If the destination pixbuf was created from a read only source, these operations will force a copy into a mutable buffer.
Scaling and alpha blending functions take advantage of MMX hardware
acceleration on systems where MMX is supported. If GdkPixbuf
is built
with the Sun mediaLib library, these functions are instead accelerated
using mediaLib, which provides hardware acceleration on Intel, AMD,
and Sparc chipsets. If desired, mediaLib support can be turned off by
setting the GDK_DISABLE_MEDIALIB
environment variable.
The alpha blending function used is:
Cd = Cs·As + Cd(1-As)
where Cd
is the destination pixel color, Cs
is the source pixel color,
and As
is the source pixel alpha.
NOTE: It is recommended to use Cairo for scaling and
compositing, by using the contents of a GdkPixbuf
pixel buffer as the
data for a Cairo image surface.