mandag 21. mai 2012

Image zooming

A friend of mine posed the following problem to solve for his VB-in-Excel application:

In a view of 846 x 660, an image is rendered. By clicking anywhere on the image, zoom is multiplied by 1.2. However, and this is the important part, the part of the image clicked on shall remain the center of the zoom and remain in place of the part of the view clicked - i.e. directly below the mouse.

Since I'm not a VB-coder, my reply is in C-like quasi code.

Input data


To solve the problem, we need to be absolutely clear about what the input data is, which in turn is dependent on the source of the data. We start off with the follwing information:
// STATIC DATA
int imageWidth, imageHeight;              // Size of source image
int viewWidth=846, viewHeight=660; // Size of onscreen view 

// VARIABLE DATA
// Position of view/sliders on the projected (zoomed) image
int scrollX, scrollY;
// Size of projected (zoomed) view/sliders
int scrollWidth, scrollHeight;
// Bar/slider size represents the view compared to projected image
int barWidth=viewWidth, barHeight=viewHeight;
float zoom=1; // Current zoom
Then you have the mouse click. We need to know two things from the click: Visually where in the view you clicked (viewX,viewY where top left of view is 0,0), and what position this represents in the image (imgX,imgY). The image coordinates can be calculated from viewX,viewY this way:
int imgX=(viewX+scrollX)*zoom, imgY=(viewY+scrollY)*zoom;
However, in my friend's case, the input data had the entire zoomed image as its reference, so top left of entire zoomed image represents 0,0 and bottom right (with sliders also bottom right) represents scrollWidth,scrollHeight. Hence, the parameter representing the clicked position (clickX,clickY) is the position in the view (viewX,viewY) PLUS the position of the slider bar (scrollX,scrollY).

Since we need to know the actual visual position on screen, relative to the top left corner of the view, the two coordinates must be calculated as such:
// Position unzoomed to fit zoom=1
imgX=clickX/zoom; imgY=clickY/zoom;

// Pos. shifted to visual position
viewX=clickX-scrollX; viewY=clickY-scrollY;
User control

New zoom is calculated per policy defined by my friend - basically:
int zoomstep=1.2;
if(leftClick)zoom=zoom*zoomstep;
else if(rightClick)zoom=zoom/zoomstep; 
Calculating new scroll bars


We now know the new zoom and want to render the view with (imgX,imgY) located where the mouse is on screen (viewX,viewY). First step is to tell the scroll bar control what the new sizes are:
// Size of projected image changed with zoom
scrollWidth=imageWidth*zoom; scrollHeight=imageHeight*zoom;

// Size of bar/slider doesn't really change unless you change size of view
barWidth=viewWidth; barHeight=viewHeight;
If we set scrollX to imgX*zoom (image coordinate projected to new zoom level), our point ends up in top left corner of the view. However, we want this point at viewX,viewY, so we must offset the X-coordinate to the left, i.e. subtract the viewX,viewY coordinate:
scrollX=(imgX*zoom)-viewX; scrollY=(imgY*zoom)-viewY;
Edge adjustment

Unless we want to scroll off edge, we may need to adjust:
if(scrollX<0)scrollX=0;
  else if(scrollX+viewWidth>scrollWidth)scrollX=scrollWidth-viewWidth;
if(scrollY<0)scrollY=0;
  else if(scrollY+viewHeight>scrollHeight)scrollY=scrollHeight-viewHeight;
Rendering

If you need to render the image manually, the typical approach is to find the source rectangle within the image and project it to the full view.
int left=scrollX/zoom, top=scrollY/zoom;  // Reduce position to zoom=1
int right=(scrollX+viewWidth)/zoom, bottom=(scrollY+viewHeight)/zoom;
Then complete the operation using StretchBlt (if in a Windows development environment) to stretch-copy the rectangle from the source image to your new view context.

Other

Feel free to ask for further calculations or other parameters in the comments. If the above code fails, it may be that you have other input parameters or need to calculate some other numbers than what this article has attempted to convey.

2 kommentarer:

  1. I received the following comment be email:

    Can't make it work as described in the article, but made it work with:
    ViewData.Frame1.ScrollLeft = (X * 1.2) - X + ViewData.Frame1.ScrollLeft

    I don't know why, but it works.


    Trollsilm response:

    Assuming X here is clickX, what you're saying is that
     scrollX=clickX*1.2-clickX+scrollX
    Let's see if this is true.

    What I'm saying is that
    scrollX=imgX*(zoom2)-viewX, where
    imgX=clickX/(zoom1),
    viewX=clickX-scrollX and
    zoom2=zoom1*1.2

    Therefore,
    scrollX=(clickX/zoom1)*zoom1*1.2-clickX+scrollX;

    With zoom1 above and below the division line, we shorten this to
    scrollX=clickX*1.2-clickX+scrollX;

    So we agree in principle. Failing to use the formula in the article means that you have mistaken what variable represents what.

    SvarSlett
  2. int zoomstep=1.2; // hmmmm?

    Seems like the zoom step would just remain 1 :-)

    SvarSlett