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#include "qbitmap.h"
#include "qpixmapdata_p.h"
#include "qimage.h"
#include "qvariant.h"
#include <qpainter.h>
#include <private/qgraphicssystem_p.h>
#include <private/qapplication_p.h>
QT_BEGIN_NAMESPACE
/*!
\class QBitmap
\brief The QBitmap class provides monochrome (1-bit depth) pixmaps.
\ingroup painting
\ingroup shared
The QBitmap class is a monochrome off-screen paint device used
mainly for creating custom QCursor and QBrush objects,
constructing QRegion objects, and for setting masks for pixmaps
and widgets.
QBitmap is a QPixmap subclass ensuring a depth of 1, except for
null objects which have a depth of 0. If a pixmap with a depth
greater than 1 is assigned to a bitmap, the bitmap will be
dithered automatically.
Use the QColor objects Qt::color0 and Qt::color1 when drawing on a
QBitmap object (or a QPixmap object with depth 1).
Painting with Qt::color0 sets the bitmap bits to 0, and painting
with Qt::color1 sets the bits to 1. For a bitmap, 0-bits indicate
background (or transparent pixels) and 1-bits indicate foreground
(or opaque pixels). Use the clear() function to set all the bits
to Qt::color0. Note that using the Qt::black and Qt::white colors
make no sense because the QColor::pixel() value is not necessarily
0 for black and 1 for white.
The QBitmap class provides the transformed() function returning a
transformed copy of the bitmap; use the QTransform argument to
translate, scale, shear, and rotate the bitmap. In addition,
QBitmap provides the static fromData() function which returns a
bitmap constructed from the given \c uchar data, and the static
fromImage() function returning a converted copy of a QImage
object.
Just like the QPixmap class, QBitmap is optimized by the use of
implicit data sharing. For more information, see the \l {Implicit
Data Sharing} documentation.
\sa QPixmap, QImage, QImageReader, QImageWriter
*/
/*! \typedef QBitmap::DataPtr
\internal
*/
/*!
Constructs a null bitmap.
\sa QPixmap::isNull()
*/
QBitmap::QBitmap()
: QPixmap(QSize(0, 0), QPixmapData::BitmapType)
{
}
/*!
\fn QBitmap::QBitmap(int width, int height)
Constructs a bitmap with the given \a width and \a height. The pixels
inside are uninitialized.
\sa clear()
*/
QBitmap::QBitmap(int w, int h)
: QPixmap(QSize(w, h), QPixmapData::BitmapType)
{
}
/*!
Constructs a bitmap with the given \a size. The pixels in the
bitmap are uninitialized.
\sa clear()
*/
QBitmap::QBitmap(const QSize &size)
: QPixmap(size, QPixmapData::BitmapType)
{
}
/*!
\fn QBitmap::clear()
Clears the bitmap, setting all its bits to Qt::color0.
*/
/*!
Constructs a bitmap that is a copy of the given \a pixmap.
If the pixmap has a depth greater than 1, the resulting bitmap
will be dithered automatically.
\sa QPixmap::depth(), fromImage(), fromData()
*/
QBitmap::QBitmap(const QPixmap &pixmap)
{
QBitmap::operator=(pixmap);
}
/*!
\fn QBitmap::QBitmap(const QImage &image)
Constructs a bitmap that is a copy of the given \a image.
Use the static fromImage() function instead.
*/
/*!
Constructs a bitmap from the file specified by the given \a
fileName. If the file does not exist, or has an unknown format,
the bitmap becomes a null bitmap.
The \a fileName and \a format parameters are passed on to the
QPixmap::load() function. If the file format uses more than 1 bit
per pixel, the resulting bitmap will be dithered automatically.
\sa QPixmap::isNull(), QImageReader::imageFormat()
*/
QBitmap::QBitmap(const QString& fileName, const char *format)
: QPixmap(QSize(0, 0), QPixmapData::BitmapType)
{
load(fileName, format, Qt::MonoOnly);
}
/*!
\overload
Assigns the given \a pixmap to this bitmap and returns a reference
to this bitmap.
If the pixmap has a depth greater than 1, the resulting bitmap
will be dithered automatically.
\sa QPixmap::depth()
*/
QBitmap &QBitmap::operator=(const QPixmap &pixmap)
{
if (pixmap.isNull()) { // a null pixmap
QBitmap bm(0, 0);
QBitmap::operator=(bm);
} else if (pixmap.depth() == 1) { // 1-bit pixmap
QPixmap::operator=(pixmap); // shallow assignment
} else { // n-bit depth pixmap
QImage image;
image = pixmap.toImage(); // convert pixmap to image
*this = fromImage(image); // will dither image
}
return *this;
}
#ifdef QT3_SUPPORT
QBitmap::QBitmap(int w, int h, const uchar *bits, bool isXbitmap)
{
*this = fromData(QSize(w, h), bits, isXbitmap ? QImage::Format_MonoLSB : QImage::Format_Mono);
}
QBitmap::QBitmap(const QSize &size, const uchar *bits, bool isXbitmap)
{
*this = fromData(size, bits, isXbitmap ? QImage::Format_MonoLSB : QImage::Format_Mono);
}
#endif
/*!
Destroys the bitmap.
*/
QBitmap::~QBitmap()
{
}
/*!
Returns the bitmap as a QVariant.
*/
QBitmap::operator QVariant() const
{
return QVariant(QVariant::Bitmap, this);
}
/*!
\fn QBitmap &QBitmap::operator=(const QImage &image)
\overload
Converts the given \a image to a bitmap, and assigns the result to
this bitmap. Returns a reference to the bitmap.
Use the static fromImage() function instead.
*/
/*!
Returns a copy of the given \a image converted to a bitmap using
the specified image conversion \a flags.
\sa fromData()
*/
QBitmap QBitmap::fromImage(const QImage &image, Qt::ImageConversionFlags flags)
{
if (image.isNull())
return QBitmap();
QImage img = image.convertToFormat(QImage::Format_MonoLSB, flags);
// make sure image.color(0) == Qt::color0 (white)
// and image.color(1) == Qt::color1 (black)
const QRgb c0 = QColor(Qt::black).rgb();
const QRgb c1 = QColor(Qt::white).rgb();
if (img.color(0) == c0 && img.color(1) == c1) {
img.invertPixels();
img.setColor(0, c1);
img.setColor(1, c0);
}
QGraphicsSystem* gs = QApplicationPrivate::graphicsSystem();
QScopedPointer<QPixmapData> data(gs ? gs->createPixmapData(QPixmapData::BitmapType)
: QGraphicsSystem::createDefaultPixmapData(QPixmapData::BitmapType));
data->fromImage(img, flags | Qt::MonoOnly);
return QPixmap(data.take());
}
/*!
Constructs a bitmap with the given \a size, and sets the contents to
the \a bits supplied.
The bitmap data has to be byte aligned and provided in in the bit
order specified by \a monoFormat. The mono format must be either
QImage::Format_Mono or QImage::Format_MonoLSB. Use
QImage::Format_Mono to specify data on the XBM format.
\sa fromImage()
*/
QBitmap QBitmap::fromData(const QSize &size, const uchar *bits, QImage::Format monoFormat)
{
Q_ASSERT(monoFormat == QImage::Format_Mono || monoFormat == QImage::Format_MonoLSB);
QImage image(size, monoFormat);
image.setColor(0, QColor(Qt::color0).rgb());
image.setColor(1, QColor(Qt::color1).rgb());
// Need to memcpy each line separatly since QImage is 32bit aligned and
// this data is only byte aligned...
int bytesPerLine = (size.width() + 7) / 8;
for (int y = 0; y < size.height(); ++y)
memcpy(image.scanLine(y), bits + bytesPerLine * y, bytesPerLine);
return QBitmap::fromImage(image);
}
/*!
Returns a copy of this bitmap, transformed according to the given
\a matrix.
\sa QPixmap::transformed()
*/
QBitmap QBitmap::transformed(const QTransform &matrix) const
{
QBitmap bm = QPixmap::transformed(matrix);
return bm;
}
/*!
\overload
\obsolete
This convenience function converts the \a matrix to a QTransform
and calls the overloaded function.
*/
QBitmap QBitmap::transformed(const QMatrix &matrix) const
{
return transformed(QTransform(matrix));
}
#ifdef QT3_SUPPORT
/*!
\fn QBitmap QBitmap::xForm(const QMatrix &matrix) const
Returns a copy of this bitmap, transformed according to the given
\a matrix.
Use transformed() instead.
*/
/*!
\fn QBitmap::QBitmap(const QSize &size, bool clear)
Constructs a bitmap with the given \a size. If \a clear is true,
the bits are initialized to Qt::color0.
Use the corresponding QBitmap() constructor instead, and then call
the clear() function if the \a clear parameter is true.
*/
/*!
\fn QBitmap::QBitmap(int width, int height, bool clear)
Constructs a bitmap with the given \a width and \a height. If \a
clear is true, the bits are initialized to Qt::color0.
Use the corresponding QBitmap() constructor instead, and then call
the clear() function if the \a clear parameter is true.
*/
/*!
\fn QBitmap::QBitmap(int width, int height, const uchar *bits, bool isXbitmap)
Constructs a bitmap with the given \a width and \a height, and
sets the contents to the \a bits supplied. The \a isXbitmap flag
should be true if \a bits was generated by the X11 bitmap
program.
Use the static fromData() function instead. If \a isXbitmap is
true, use the default bit order(QImage_FormatMonoLSB) otherwise
use QImage::Format_Mono.
\omit
The X bitmap bit order is little endian. The QImage
documentation discusses bit order of monochrome images. Opposed to
QImage, the data has to be byte aligned.
Example (creates an arrow bitmap):
\snippet doc/src/snippets/code/src_gui_image_qbitmap.cpp 0
\endomit
*/
/*!
\fn QBitmap::QBitmap(const QSize &size, const uchar *bits, bool isXbitmap)
\overload
Constructs a bitmap with the given \a size, and sets the contents
to the \a bits supplied. The \a isXbitmap flag should be true if
\a bits was generated by the X11 bitmap program.
\omit
The X bitmap bit order is little endian. The QImage documentation
discusses bit order of monochrome images.
\endomit
Use the static fromData() function instead. If \a isXbitmap is
true, use the default bit order(QImage_FormatMonoLSB) otherwise
use QImage::Format_Mono.
*/
#endif
QT_END_NAMESPACE