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<title>MuPDF Graphics API</title>
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<h1>MuPDF Graphics API</h1>
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<article>
<p>
This module is a grab bag of various graphics related objects and functions.
<h2>Colors</h2>
<p>
Colors throughout MuPDF are represented as a float vector associated with
a colorspace object. Colorspaces come in many variants, the most common of
which are Gray, RGB, and CMYK. We also support Indexed (palette), L*a*b*,
Separation, DeviceN, and ICC based colorspaces.
<pre>
enum { FZ_MAX_COLORS = 32 };
enum fz_colorspace_type {
FZ_COLORSPACE_NONE,
FZ_COLORSPACE_GRAY,
FZ_COLORSPACE_RGB,
FZ_COLORSPACE_BGR,
FZ_COLORSPACE_CMYK,
FZ_COLORSPACE_LAB,
FZ_COLORSPACE_INDEXED,
FZ_COLORSPACE_SEPARATION,
};
struct fz_colorspace_s {
enum fz_colorspace_type type;
int n;
char *name;
<i>private internal fields</i>
};
fz_colorspace *fz_keep_colorspace(fz_context *ctx, fz_colorspace *colorspace);
void fz_drop_colorspace(fz_context *ctx, fz_colorspace *colorspace);
</pre>
<p>
Most colorspaces have color components between 0 and 1.
The number of components a color uses is given by the 'n' field
of the colorspace. This is at most FZ_MAX_COLORS.
<p>
L*a*b* colors have a range of 0..100 for the L* and -128..127 for a* and b*.
<p>
CMYK, Separation, and DeviceN colorspaces are subtractive colorspaces.
Separation and DeviceN colorspaces also have a tint transform function and
a base colorspace used to represent the colors when rendering to a device that
does not have these specific colorants.
<h3>Color management engine</h3>
<p>
MuPDF is usually built with a color management engine, but this can be turned
off at runtime if you need faster performance at the cost of much more
inaccurate color conversions.
<pre>
int fz_enable_icc(fz_context *ctx);
int fz_disable_icc(fz_context *ctx);
</pre>
<p>
The various color conversion functions also take certain parameters that
the color management engine uses, such as rendering intent and overprint
control.
<pre>
enum {
FZ_RI_PERCEPTUAL,
FZ_RI_RELATIVE_COLORIMETRIC,
FZ_RI_SATURATION,
FZ_RI_ABSOLUTE_COLORIMETRIC,
};
typedef struct {
int ri; // Rendering intent
int bp; // Black point compensation
int op;
int opm;
} fz_color_params;
const fz_color_params fz_default_color_params = { FZ_RI_RELATIVE_COLORIMETRIC, 1, 0, 0 };
</pre>
<h3>Device colorspaces</h3>
<p>
When you need to define a color, and don't care too much about the calibration,
you can use the Device colorspaces. When MuPDF is built with a color management
engine and ICC is enabled the Gray and RGB colorspaces use an sRGB ICC profile.
<pre>
fz_colorspace *fz_device_gray(fz_context *ctx);
fz_colorspace *fz_device_rgb(fz_context *ctx);
fz_colorspace *fz_device_bgr(fz_context *ctx);
fz_colorspace *fz_device_cmyk(fz_context *ctx);
fz_colorspace *fz_device_lab(fz_context *ctx);
</pre>
<p>
BGR is present to allow you to render to pixmaps that have the RGB components
in a different order, so that the data can be passed directly to the operating
system for drawing without needing yet another conversion step.
<h3>Indexed colorspaces</h3>
<p>
Indexed colors have a range of 0..N where N is one less than the number of colors
in the palette. An indexed colorspace also has a base colorspace, which is used
to define the palette of colors used.
<pre>
fz_colorspace *fz_new_indexed_colorspace(fz_context *ctx,
fz_colorspace *base,
int high,
unsigned char *lookup);
</pre>
<p>
High is the maximum value in the palette; i.e. one less than the number of colors.
<p>
The lookup argument is a packed array of color values in the base colorspace,
represented as bytes mapped to the range of 0..255.
<h3>ICC colorspaces</h3>
<p>
You can create ICC colorspaces from a buffer containing the ICC profile.
<pre>
fz_colorspace *fz_new_icc_colorspace(fz_context *ctx,
enum fz_colorspace_type type,
int flags,
const char *name,
fz_buffer *buf);
</pre>
<p>
The 'type' argument can be NONE if you want to automatically infer the
colorspace type from the profile data. If the type is anything else, then an
error will be thrown if the profile does not match the type.
<h3>Color converters</h3>
<p>
There are several ways to convert colors. The easiest is to call a function,
but if you are converting many colors at once, it will be faster to use a
color converter object.
<pre>
void fz_convert_color(fz_context *ctx,
fz_colorspace *src_colorspace,
const float *src_color,
fz_colorspace *dst_colorspace,
float *dst_color,
fz_colorspace *proof_colorspace,
const fz_color_params params);
</pre>
<pre>
typedef struct {
void (*convert)(fz_context *ctx, fz_color_converter *cc, const float *src, float *dst);
<i>private internal fields</i>
} fz_color_converter;
void fz_find_color_converter(fz_context *ctx, fz_color_converter *cc,
fz_colorspace *src_colorspace,
fz_colorspace *dst_colorspace,
fz_colorspace *proof_colorspace,
fz_color_params params);
void fz_drop_color_converter(fz_context *ctx, fz_color_converter *cc);
</pre>
<p>
Here is some sample code to do a one-off CMYK to RGB color conversion.
<pre>
float cmyk[4] = { 1, 0, 0, 0 };
float rgb[3];
fz_convert_color(ctx, fz_device_cmyk(ctx), cmyk, fz_device_rgb(ctx), rgb, NULL, fz_default_color_params(ctx));
</pre>
<p>
Here is some sample code to do repeated CMYK to RGB color conversions on many colors
using a color converter object.
<pre>
float cmyk[100][4] = { {1,0,0,0}, ...
float rgb[100][3];
int i;
fz_color_converter cc;
fz_find_color_converter(ctx, &cc, fz_device_cmyk(ctx), fz_device_rgb(ctx), NULL, fz_default_color_params(ctx));
for (i = 0; i < 100; ++i)
cc.convert(ctx, &cc, cmyk[i], rgb[i]);
fz_drop_color_converter(ctx, &cc);
</pre>
<h2>Separations</h2>
<p>
TODO
<h2>Pixmaps</h2>
<p>
A pixmap is an 8-bit per component raster image.
Each pixel is packed with process colorants, spot colors, and alpha channel in that order.
If an alpha channel is present, the process colorants are pre-multiplied with the alpha value.
<pre>
typedef struct {
int w, h; // Width and height
int x, y; // X and Y offset
int n; // Number of components in total (colors + spots + alpha)
int s; // Number of components that are spot colors
int alpha; // True if alpha channel is present
int stride; // Number of bytes per row
int xres, yres; // Resolution in dots per inch.
fz_colorspace *colorspace; // Colorspace of samples, or NULL if alpha only pixmap.
unsigned char *samples;
<i>private internal fields</i>
} fz_pixmap;
fz_pixmap *fz_keep_pixmap(fz_context *ctx, fz_pixmap *pix);
void fz_drop_pixmap(fz_context *ctx, fz_pixmap *pix);
</pre>
<p>
There are too many pixmap constructors. Here is the only one you should need.
<pre>
fz_pixmap *fz_new_pixmap(fz_context *ctx, fz_colorspace *cs, int w, int h, fz_separations *seps, int alpha);
</pre>
<p>
A newly created pixmap has uninitialized data. The samples must either be
cleared or overwritten with existing data before the pixmap can be safely used.
<dl>
<dt>void fz_clear_pixmap(fz_context *ctx, fz_pixmap *pix);
<dd>Clear the pixmap to black.
<dt>void fz_clear_pixmap_with_value(fz_context *ctx, fz_pixmap *pix, int value);
<dd>Clear the pixmap to a grayscale value 0..255, where 0 is black and 255 is white.
The value is automatically inverted for subtractive colorspaces.
<dt>void fz_fill_pixmap_with_color(fz_context *ctx,
fz_pixmap *pix,
fz_colorspace *colorspace, float *color,
fz_color_params color_params);
<dd>Fill the pixmap with a solid color.
<dt>void fz_unpack_tile(fz_context *ctx, fz_pixmap *dst,
unsigned char *src,
int n,
int depth,
size_t stride,
int scale);
<dd>Unpack pixel values from source data to fill in the pixmap samples. N is the number of samples per pixel, depth is the bit depth (1, 2, 4, 8, 16, 24, or 32), stride is the number of bytes per row. If scale is non-zero, it is the scaling factor to apply to the input samples to map them to the 8-bpc pixmap range. Pass 1 to the scale for indexed images, and 0 for everything else. If there are more components in the source data than the destination, they will be dropped. If there are fewer components in the source data, the pixmap will be padded with 255.
</dl>
<p>
Some functions can create a pixmap and initialize its samples in one go:
<pre>
TODO: should these be public? make grayscale?
fz_pixmap *fz_new_pixmap_from_8bpp_data(fz_context *ctx, int x, int y, int w, int h, unsigned char *data, int stride);
fz_pixmap *fz_new_pixmap_from_1bpp_data(fz_context *ctx, int x, int y, int w, int h, unsigned char *data, int stride);
</pre>
<p>
Pixmaps can be tinted, inverted, scaled, gamma corrected, and converted to other colorspaces.
<dl>
<dt>void fz_invert_pixmap(fz_context *ctx, fz_pixmap *pix);
<dd>Invert the pixmap samples.
<dt>void fz_tint_pixmap(fz_context *ctx, fz_pixmap *pix, int black, int white);
<dd>Map black to black and white to white. The black and white colors are represented as a packed RGB integer. 0xFFFFFF is white, 0xFF0000 is red, and 0x000000 is black.
<dt>void fz_gamma_pixmap(fz_context *ctx, fz_pixmap *pix, float gamma);
<dd>Apply a gamma correction curve on the samples. A typical use is to adjust the gamma curve on an inverted image by applying a correction factor of 1/1.4.
<dt>fz_pixmap *fz_convert_pixmap(fz_context *ctx,
fz_pixmap *source_pixmap,
fz_colorspace *destination_colorspace,
fz_colorspace *proof_colorspace,
fz_default_colorspaces *default_cs,
fz_color_params color_params,
int keep_alpha);
<dd>Convert the source pixmap into the destination colorspace. Pass NULL for the default_cs parameter.
<dt>fz_pixmap *fz_scale_pixmap(fz_context *ctx,
fz_pixmap *src,
float x,
float y,
float w,
float h,
const fz_irect *clip);
<dd>Scale the pixmap up or down in size to fit the rectangle. Will return NULL
if the scaling factors are out of whack. This applies fancy filtering and will
anti-alias the edges for subpixel positioning if using non-integer coordinates.
If the clip rectangle is set, the returned pixmap may be subset to
fit the clip rectangle. Pass NULL to the clip if you want the whole pixmap
scaled.
</dl>
<h2>Bitmaps</h2>
<h2>Images</h2>
<h2>Shadings</h2>
<h2>Fonts</h2>
<h2>Paths</h2>
<h2>Text</h2>
</article>
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