I have been trying to make a photo sharing app, with the ability to add your image and name to the image. I have been messing with Canvas for the whole day, but couldn't get good results. I was able to draw the name and bitmap, but they didn't look so good.
That's why I am here asking about is there any library or piece of code that could help me in making something similar to [this][1]. I wasn't able to find any thing for it.
EDIT: Sorry for not adding my own code
Here is my code from my latest try
public void AddText(Position2D pos){
//Position2D is an enum having the 4 corners of the image
bmWorking= bmOriginal.copy(Bitmap.Config.ARGB_8888,true);
Canvas canvas = new Canvas(bmWorking);
Paint paint = new Paint();
paint.setColor(Color.WHITE);
paint.setStyle(Paint.Style.FILL);
Paint textPaint = new Paint();
textPaint.setColor(Color.BLACK);
float width = (35f/100f) * bmWorking.getWidth();
float height = (width/16f) * 3;
textPaint.setTextSize(height - 4); //I wanted to have some space (margin) above and below the text
textPaint.setTextAlign(Paint.Align.LEFT);
float [] coords = getPositionCoords(pos, width, height); //getPositionCoords returns a float array with the Left,Top,Right,Bottom position calculated based on the width and height
canvas.drawRect(coords[0],coords[1], coords[2], coords[3],paint);
username = "Haider Ali Punjabi";
canvas.drawText(username, coords[0] ,coords[3], textPaint);
bitmapView.setImageBitmap(bmWorking);
}
Here is the result
UPDATE:
#pskink gave me this code
which works nicely
if you want to customize it, then instead of solid white rectangle (like in your original code) use a Drawable and the result could be something like this:
the code:
// for int gravity: see android.view.Gravity, like Gravity.LEFT, Gravity.BOTTOM, etc
// for example:
// Bitmap out = addText(this, in, "Haider Ali Punjabi", android.R.drawable.alert_light_frame, Gravity.BOTTOM, new Point(10, 10));
public Bitmap addText(Context ctx, Bitmap in, String text, int resId, int gravity, Point pad) {
if (pad == null) pad = new Point();
Bitmap out = in.copy(Bitmap.Config.ARGB_8888, true);
Canvas canvas = new Canvas(out);
Paint textPaint = new Paint(Paint.ANTI_ALIAS_FLAG);
textPaint.setColor(Color.BLACK);
textPaint.setTextAlign(Paint.Align.LEFT);
// textPaint.setTextSize(128);
Rect inBounds = new Rect();
textPaint.getTextBounds(text, 0, text.length(), inBounds);
float scale = out.getWidth() * 0.35f / inBounds.width();
Rect container = new Rect(0, 0, out.getWidth(), out.getHeight());
Rect outBounds = new Rect();
int w = (int) (inBounds.width() * scale);
int h = (int) (inBounds.height() * scale);
Gravity.apply(gravity, 2 * pad.x + w, 2 * pad.y + h, container, outBounds);
Drawable dr = ctx.getResources().getDrawable(resId);
Rect padding = new Rect();
dr.getPadding(padding);
dr.setBounds(outBounds.left - padding.left, outBounds.top - padding.top, outBounds.right + padding.right, outBounds.bottom + padding.bottom);
dr.draw(canvas);
Matrix matrix = new Matrix();
RectF src = new RectF(inBounds);
RectF dst = new RectF(outBounds);
dst.inset(pad.x, pad.y);
matrix.setRectToRect(src, dst, Matrix.ScaleToFit.CENTER);
canvas.concat(matrix);
canvas.drawText(text, 0, 0, textPaint);
return out;
}
Related
When drawing the text though, it gets blurred and not that crisp like when using below code. The only code I've used for the text painting on image can some one help me to solve this issue
code
public static Bitmap drawMultilineTextToBitmap(Context gContext, Bitmap bitmap, String gText) {
// prepare canvas
Resources resources = gContext.getResources();
float scale = resources.getDisplayMetrics().density;
//Bitmap bitmap = BitmapFactory.decodeResource(resources, gResId);
android.graphics.Bitmap.Config bitmapConfig = bitmap.getConfig();
// set default bitmap config if none
if (bitmapConfig == null) {
bitmapConfig = android.graphics.Bitmap.Config.ARGB_8888;
}
// so we need to convert it to mutable one
bitmap = bitmap.copy(bitmapConfig, true);
Canvas canvas = new Canvas(bitmap);
TextPaint paint = new TextPaint(Paint.LINEAR_TEXT_FLAG|Paint.ANTI_ALIAS_FLAG);
paint.setStyle(Paint.Style.FILL);
paint.setAntiAlias(true);
paint.setColor(Color.rgb(0, 0, 0));
paint.setFakeBoldText(true);
paint.setTextSize(10);
int textWidth = canvas.getWidth() - (int) (16 * scale);
// init StaticLayout for text
StaticLayout textLayout = new StaticLayout(gText, paint,
canvas.getWidth(), Layout.Alignment.ALIGN_NORMAL, 1.0f, 0.0f,
false);
// get height of multiline text
int textHeight = textLayout.getHeight();
// get position of text's top left corner
float x = (bitmap.getWidth() - textWidth);
float y = (bitmap.getHeight() - textHeight);
// draw text to the Canvas Left
canvas.save();
//canvas.translate(x, y);
canvas.translate((canvas.getWidth() / 2) - (textLayout.getWidth() / 2), y);
textLayout.draw(canvas);
canvas.restore();
return bitmap;
}
image
I guess here:
paint.setAntiAlias(true);
should be false. And two more methods which may relate to this issue:
paint.setAntiAlias(false);
paint.setFilterBitmap(false);
paint.setDither(true);
In this Image I want text to totally be in the triangle with CYAN color.
I have created my own ImageView:
public class BookImageView extends android.support.v7.widget.AppCompatImageView {
private static final Float DISCOUNT_SIDE_SIZE = 0.33333F;
private Bitmap bitmap;
private Paint drawPaint = new Paint();
private Paint trianglePaint = new Paint();
{
trianglePaint.setColor(Constants.DISCOUNT_COLOR);
trianglePaint.setStyle(Paint.Style.FILL);
trianglePaint.setShadowLayer(10.0f, 10.0f, 10.0f, Color.parseColor("#7f000000"));
trianglePaint.setAntiAlias(true);
drawPaint.setColor(Color.BLACK);
drawPaint.setTypeface(Typeface.create(Typeface.DEFAULT, Typeface.BOLD));
drawPaint.setShadowLayer(1f, 0f, 1f, Color.BLACK);
}
// Constractors ...
#Override
protected void onDraw(Canvas canvas) {
super.onDraw(canvas);
if (bitmap != null) {
Bitmap tempBitmap = Bitmap.createBitmap(bitmap.getWidth(), bitmap.getHeight(), Bitmap.Config.RGB_565);
Canvas tempCanvas = new Canvas(tempBitmap);
tempCanvas.drawBitmap(bitmap, 0, 0, null);
Path path = new Path();
path.setFillType(Path.FillType.EVEN_ODD);
float size = bitmap.getWidth() * DISCOUNT_SIDE_SIZE;
path.lineTo(size, 0);
path.lineTo(0, size);
path.lineTo(0, 0);
path.close();
tempCanvas.drawPath(path, trianglePaint);
float scale = getResources().getDisplayMetrics().density;
drawPaint.setTextSize((int) (14 * scale));
Rect textBounds = new Rect();
drawPaint.getTextBounds("50%", 0, "50%".length(), textBounds);
int x = (int) (size / 2) - textBounds.width() / 2;
int y = (int) (size / 2) - textBounds.height() / 2;
tempCanvas.save();
tempCanvas.rotate(-45, x, y);
tempCanvas.drawText("50%", x, y, drawPaint);
tempCanvas.restore();
setImageDrawable(new BitmapDrawable(getContext().getResources(), tempBitmap));
}
}
#Override
public void setImageBitmap(Bitmap bitmap) {
this.bitmap = bitmap;
invalidate();
}
}
what can I do to solve this problem ?
You can try something like this
1) Measure the width of your text
Use measureText
2) From the point you are drawing calculate the width remaining to draw
3) Now depending on the use case you can curtail the length of text or scale the text as needed
int textWidthRequired = (int) drawPaint.measureText(textToDraw);
int widthRemainingToDraw = totalWidth/2 - textDrawX;
if(textWidthRequired > widthRemainingToDraw){
//handling
}
// draw text
tempCanvas.drawText(textToDraw,textDrawX, textDrawY, drawPaint);
Depending on how high up you want the text to be, you can use properties of similar triangles to first determine the maximum width of the text. In your case, size = the triangle's base, and size = the triangle's height/altitude. Let's define two variables:
Correction: The altitude won't be equal to the base. You'd need to calculate the altitude in order to use the below solution.
float triangleBase = size; // triangle base
float triangleAltitude = size; // Calculate this.
Let's say we want the text to be halfway up the center of the triangle:
float textYHeight = triangleHeight/2;
We figure out the width of the triangle at this point by using the following formula since the sides of similar triangles are proportional:
baseOfTriangleA/baseOfTriangleB = altitudeOfTriangleA/altitudeOfTriangleB;
float triangleWidthAtTextYLocation = (textYHeight * triangleBase)/triangleAltitude;
Now that we know what the width of the triangle is at this location, we can just iterate through different text scales until the text width is less than the value triangleWidthAtTextYlocation.
float scale = getResources().getDisplayMetrics().density;
int scaleFactor = 0;
drawPaint.setTextSize((int) (scaleFactor * scale));
Rect textBounds = new Rect();
drawPaint.getTextBounds("50%", 0, "50%".length(), textBounds);
while(textBounds.length < triangleWidthAtTextYLocation){
// Re-measure the text until it exceeds the width
scaleFactor++;
drawPaint.setTextSize((int) (scaleFactor * scale));
drawPaint.getTextBounds("50%", 0, "50%".length(), textBounds);
}
// Once we know the scaleFactor that puts it over the width of the triangle
// at that location, we reduce it by 1 to be just under that width:
scaleFactor = Maths.abs(scaleFactor - 1);
// final text size:
drawPaint.setTextSize((int) (scaleFactor * scale));
Marking few markers and adding names using Canvas and Paint on map. But am able to see the text only 9 characters rest are hiding (not visible). How to do it?
private Bitmap drawTitleOnMarkerIcon(MarkingInfo markingInfo) {
Bitmap bm = BitmapFactory.decodeResource(getResources(), AddLocationTypeIcon.getIcon(markingInfo.getType())).copy(
Bitmap.Config.ARGB_8888, true);
Canvas canvas = new Canvas(bm);
Paint paint = new Paint();
paint.setColor(Color.BLUE);
paint.setAntiAlias(true);
paint.setFakeBoldText(true);
paint.setTextSize(16);
paint.setTextAlign(Align.LEFT);
canvas.drawText(markingInfo.getName(), 0, 60, paint);
BitmapDrawable draw = new BitmapDrawable(getResources(), bm);
return draw.getBitmap();
}
I should able to see complete text, When I have more than 15 character just I need to wrap it to next line. search many sites and posted query previously but I got no solution. please do help to achieve this task
private Bitmap textAsBitmap(String text, float textSize, int textColor) {
Paint paint = new Paint();
paint.setTextSize(textSize);
paint.setColor(textColor);
paint.setFakeBoldText(true);
paint.setTextAlign(Paint.Align.LEFT);
int width = (int) (paint.measureText(text) + 0.5f); // round
float baseline = (int) (-paint.ascent() + 0.5f); // ascent()is negative
int height = (int) (baseline + paint.descent() + 0.5f);
Bitmap image = Bitmap.createBitmap(width,height,Bitmap.Config.ARGB_8888);
Canvas canvas = new Canvas(image);
canvas.drawText(text, 0, baseline, paint);
return image;
}
MarkerOptions().title(Name()).icon(BitmapDescriptorFactory.fromBitmap(textAsBitmap));
I need to read the text/string from database and convert them into images. I tried the following code but I am getting only blank images. Please help
public Bitmap textAsBitmap(String text, float largest, int textColor) {
Paint paint = new Paint();
paint.setStyle(Paint.Style.FILL);
paint.setColor(textColor);
// int width = (int) (paint.measureText(text) + 0.5f); // round
paint.setAntiAlias(true);
paint.setTypeface(Typeface.MONOSPACE);
paint.setTextSize(16);
int width = 400;
// float baseline = (int) (paint.ascent() + 0.5f) + 3f;
// int height = (int) ((baseline + paint.descent() + 0.5f) + 3);
int height = 400;
Bitmap image = Bitmap.createBitmap(width, height,
Bitmap.Config.RGB_565);
Canvas canvas = new Canvas(image);
canvas.drawText(text, 0, 5, paint);
return image;
}
I haven't tried this, but do you perhaps need to first fill your bitmap with a colour that contrasts with textColor? This would certainly seem like an important thing to do in any case -- the documentation for createBitmap() does not specify the initial content of the bitmap, so it could theoretically be anything, and may change in future versions of the system.
I'm trying to draw a text on the center of a bitmap however I can't do it even though I used align.center. The code is:
public Bitmap drawTextToBitmap(Context gContext, String gText) {
Resources resources = gContext.getResources();
float scale = resources.getDisplayMetrics().density;
Bitmap bitmap =
BitmapFactory.decodeResource(resources, R.drawable.blank_marker);
android.graphics.Bitmap.Config bitmapConfig =
bitmap.getConfig();
// set default bitmap config if none
if(bitmapConfig == null) {
bitmapConfig = android.graphics.Bitmap.Config.ARGB_8888;
}
// resource bitmaps are imutable,
// so we need to convert it to mutable one
bitmap = bitmap.copy(bitmapConfig, true);
Canvas canvas = new Canvas(bitmap);
// new antialised Paint
Paint paint = new Paint(Paint.ANTI_ALIAS_FLAG);
// text color - #3D3D3D
paint.setColor(Color.rgb(61, 61, 61));
// text size in pixels
paint.setTextSize((int) (25 * scale));
// text shadow
paint.setShadowLayer(1f, 0f, 1f, Color.WHITE);
// draw text to the Canvas center
Rect bounds = new Rect();
paint.setTextAlign(Align.CENTER);
paint.getTextBounds(gText, 0, gText.length(), bounds);
int x = (bitmap.getWidth() - bounds.width())/2;
int y = (bitmap.getHeight() + bounds.height())/2;
canvas.drawText(gText, x * scale, y * scale, paint);
return bitmap;
}
What am I doing wrong?
It's a lot more straightforward than you think.
Draw the text at half the Bitmap's width and height (center point) in combination with Paint.setTextAlign(Align.CENTER).
The alignment property will take care of the rest.
I guess none of the answers given above are good enough so I post my answer. Try it out guys, it will work on all devices and is not complex at all:
String text = "Text"; //your string
Canvas canvas = new Canvas(bitmap);
Paint paint = new Paint(Paint.ANTI_ALIAS_FLAG);
paint.setColor(activity.getResources().getColor(R.color.white));
paint.setTextSize(30);
// draw text to the Canvas center
Rect boundsText = new Rect();
paint.getTextBounds(text, 0, text.length(), boundsText);
int x = (bitmap.getWidth() - boundsText.width()) / 2;
int y = (bitmap.getHeight() + boundsText.height()) / 2;
canvas.drawText(text, x, y, paint);
Where is the text drawing? The issue might be since you changed the text align to Align.CENTER. Your code calculating x and y assumes the text rendering is using Align.LEFT, I believe.
Either use setTextAlign(Align.CENTER) and render at the actual bitmap center, or use setTextAlign(Align.LEFT) and use the current x and y calculations you are using.