Tips and Tricks » History » Version 2
Pieter Libin, 10/29/2009 02:24 PM
1 | 1 | Pieter Libin | h1. Tips and Tricks |
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3 | {{toc}} |
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6 | 2 | Pieter Libin | h2. Making a hard-copy of painted graphics |
7 | 1 | Pieter Libin | |
8 | The primary use for the Wt painting API is to paint on a WPaintedWidget. Internally, this uses either a VML, SVG or HTML 5 canvas painting device to deliver the painting to the browser. |
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10 | It is also possible to paint directly to an SVG image, which is a standardized generic vector graphics format, and increasingly supported by various tools. |
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12 | You could use the SVG image as a starting point for exporting the painted graphics to raster format. Using the "imagemagick":http://www.imagemagick.org/script/index.php or "graphicsmagick":http://www.graphicsmagick.org/ libraries, you can convert from SVG to other formats using the library API or using the command line 'convert' tool. Using "inkscape":http://www.inkscape.org/, a sophisticated SVG editor, you may get high quality SVG rendering (with, compared to imagemagick, much better font support) from the command-line (see the manpage). Another option may be "librsvg":http://librsvg.sourceforge.net. |
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14 | The WSvgImage class allows you to easily create an SVG image, and save it to a (file) stream, using the following template: |
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16 | <pre> |
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17 | WSvgImage image(400, 300); |
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18 | WPainter painter(&image); |
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20 | // paint things on the painter, like you normally do in WPaintedWidget::paintEvent(). |
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21 | // |
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22 | // e.g. you could do WCartesianChart *c = ... |
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23 | // c->paint(painter); |
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25 | painter.end(); |
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26 | std::ofstream f("image.svg"); |
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27 | image.write(f); |
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28 | f.close(); |
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29 | </pre> |