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gtkD load images
Aug 03, 2017
Johnson Jones
Aug 03, 2017
Mengu
Aug 03, 2017
Johnson Jones
Aug 05, 2017
Mike Wey
Aug 05, 2017
Johnson Jones
Aug 05, 2017
Mike Wey
Aug 05, 2017
ag0aep6g
Aug 06, 2017
Mike Wey
Aug 03, 2017
Johnson Jones
Aug 04, 2017
Antonio Corbi
Aug 04, 2017
Johnson Jones
August 03, 2017
How can be use gtkD to load images, I assume through gdkpixbuf? While I am getting errors loading images through glade's image:

(test.exe:8188): Gtk-WARNING **: Could not load image 'a.jpg': Couldn't recognize the image file format for file 'test\a.jpg'

(loads fine in glade)

which needs to be resolved, I'd also like to be able to use gdkpixbuf to load images programmatically. There seems to be no demos on the gtkD github page that deals with image loading.

I've tried to do something like

import gtkc.gdkpixbuf;
auto x = c_gdk_pixbuf_get_formats().data;

but I don't know how to interpret x.

Also something like

		import gtkc.gdkpixbuf;
		void* x;
		auto p = c_gdk_pixbuf_get_formats();
		for(int i = 0; i < 10; i++)
		{			
			x = p.data;
			p = p.next;
		}

which doesn't offer any help.


Aside: How can we call the gtk functions directly using gtkD? Seems it uses stuff like

Linker.link(gdk_pixbuf_get_formats, "gdk_pixbuf_get_formats", LIBRARY_GDKPIXBUF);

It does seem to alias to these function but something is off and I'm not sure what.


August 03, 2017
On Thursday, 3 August 2017 at 03:59:40 UTC, Johnson Jones wrote:
> How can be use gtkD to load images, I assume through gdkpixbuf? While I am getting errors loading images through glade's image:
>
> (test.exe:8188): Gtk-WARNING **: Could not load image 'a.jpg': Couldn't recognize the image file format for file 'test\a.jpg'
>
> (loads fine in glade)
>
> which needs to be resolved, I'd also like to be able to use gdkpixbuf to load images programmatically. There seems to be no demos on the gtkD github page that deals with image loading.
>
> I've tried to do something like
>
> import gtkc.gdkpixbuf;
> auto x = c_gdk_pixbuf_get_formats().data;
>
> but I don't know how to interpret x.
>
> Also something like
>
> 		import gtkc.gdkpixbuf;
> 		void* x;
> 		auto p = c_gdk_pixbuf_get_formats();
> 		for(int i = 0; i < 10; i++)
> 		{			
> 			x = p.data;
> 			p = p.next;
> 		}
>
> which doesn't offer any help.
>
>
> Aside: How can we call the gtk functions directly using gtkD? Seems it uses stuff like
>
> Linker.link(gdk_pixbuf_get_formats, "gdk_pixbuf_get_formats", LIBRARY_GDKPIXBUF);
>
> It does seem to alias to these function but something is off and I'm not sure what.

hi

- is the gtk.Image class not working for you? https://api.gtkd.org/gtkd/gtk/Image.html

- there's also a gdkpixbuf.Pixbuf that you can use. https://api.gtkd.org/gtkd/gdkpixbuf/Pixbuf.html

- you can import those functions from gdkpixbuf.c.functions.



August 03, 2017
On Thursday, 3 August 2017 at 13:12:03 UTC, Mengu wrote:
> On Thursday, 3 August 2017 at 03:59:40 UTC, Johnson Jones wrote:
>> How can be use gtkD to load images, I assume through gdkpixbuf? While I am getting errors loading images through glade's image:
>>
>> (test.exe:8188): Gtk-WARNING **: Could not load image 'a.jpg': Couldn't recognize the image file format for file 'test\a.jpg'
>>
>> (loads fine in glade)
>>
>> which needs to be resolved, I'd also like to be able to use gdkpixbuf to load images programmatically. There seems to be no demos on the gtkD github page that deals with image loading.
>>
>> I've tried to do something like
>>
>> import gtkc.gdkpixbuf;
>> auto x = c_gdk_pixbuf_get_formats().data;
>>
>> but I don't know how to interpret x.
>>
>> Also something like
>>
>> 		import gtkc.gdkpixbuf;
>> 		void* x;
>> 		auto p = c_gdk_pixbuf_get_formats();
>> 		for(int i = 0; i < 10; i++)
>> 		{			
>> 			x = p.data;
>> 			p = p.next;
>> 		}
>>
>> which doesn't offer any help.
>>
>>
>> Aside: How can we call the gtk functions directly using gtkD? Seems it uses stuff like
>>
>> Linker.link(gdk_pixbuf_get_formats, "gdk_pixbuf_get_formats", LIBRARY_GDKPIXBUF);
>>
>> It does seem to alias to these function but something is off and I'm not sure what.
>
> hi
>
> - is the gtk.Image class not working for you? https://api.gtkd.org/gtkd/gtk/Image.html
>
> - there's also a gdkpixbuf.Pixbuf that you can use. https://api.gtkd.org/gtkd/gdkpixbuf/Pixbuf.html
>
> - you can import those functions from gdkpixbuf.c.functions.

no, they are not... I haven't tried though, but there seems to be a problem with the pixbuf not having loaders for any images. using a gtk Image widget does not load the image and complains about the image format.

If I do something like

import gdkpixbuf.Pixbuf;
Pixbuf.newFromResource("C:\\a.jpg");

Unhandled exception: glib.GException.GException The resource at 'C:\a.jpg' does not exist at generated\gtkd\glib\GException.d(40) occurred

which doesn't seem to make much sense.

The resource exists where I say it is and not sure if this is related to the missing pixbuf loaders.
August 03, 2017
On Thursday, 3 August 2017 at 13:12:03 UTC, Mengu wrote:
> On Thursday, 3 August 2017 at 03:59:40 UTC, Johnson Jones wrote:
>> How can be use gtkD to load images, I assume through gdkpixbuf? While I am getting errors loading images through glade's image:
>>
>> (test.exe:8188): Gtk-WARNING **: Could not load image 'a.jpg': Couldn't recognize the image file format for file 'test\a.jpg'
>>
>> (loads fine in glade)
>>
>> which needs to be resolved, I'd also like to be able to use gdkpixbuf to load images programmatically. There seems to be no demos on the gtkD github page that deals with image loading.
>>
>> I've tried to do something like
>>
>> import gtkc.gdkpixbuf;
>> auto x = c_gdk_pixbuf_get_formats().data;
>>
>> but I don't know how to interpret x.
>>
>> Also something like
>>
>> 		import gtkc.gdkpixbuf;
>> 		void* x;
>> 		auto p = c_gdk_pixbuf_get_formats();
>> 		for(int i = 0; i < 10; i++)
>> 		{			
>> 			x = p.data;
>> 			p = p.next;
>> 		}
>>
>> which doesn't offer any help.
>>
>>
>> Aside: How can we call the gtk functions directly using gtkD? Seems it uses stuff like
>>
>> Linker.link(gdk_pixbuf_get_formats, "gdk_pixbuf_get_formats", LIBRARY_GDKPIXBUF);
>>
>> It does seem to alias to these function but something is off and I'm not sure what.
>
> hi
>
> - is the gtk.Image class not working for you? https://api.gtkd.org/gtkd/gtk/Image.html
>
> - there's also a gdkpixbuf.Pixbuf that you can use. https://api.gtkd.org/gtkd/gdkpixbuf/Pixbuf.html
>
> - you can import those functions from gdkpixbuf.c.functions.

So, like I said, I've tried

import gdkpixbuf.Pixbuf;
auto x = Pixbuf.newFromResource("C:\\a.jpg");

which gives me that error I stated before for x86. For x64 it simply crashes and no exception is given.

If I use a dummy image I get the same error:

"Unhandled exception: glib.GException.GException The resource at “C:\adf.jpg” does not exist at generated\gtkd\glib\GException.d(40)"

The error message makes look like like it should be


"Unhandled exception: glib.GException.GException The resource at “C:\adf.jpg” does not exist at “C:\” generated\gtkd\glib\GException.d(40)"


I'd rather use Pixbuf than image because I don't need to generate a full blow image widget.

If I do

GError* err = null;
auto p = gdk_pixbuf_new_from_resource(Str.toStringz("C:\\a.jpg"), &err);

p is null and err is

The resource at “D:\a.jpgâ€. does not exist.

which is clearly not true.

So not sure what is going on ;/ Seems to be a bug in pixbuf or am I specifying the path wrong? If gtk.Image uses these internally then it is working so...

August 04, 2017
On Thursday, 3 August 2017 at 21:06:36 UTC, Johnson Jones wrote:
> On Thursday, 3 August 2017 at 13:12:03 UTC, Mengu wrote:
>> On Thursday, 3 August 2017 at 03:59:40 UTC, Johnson Jones wrote:
>>> How can be use gtkD to load images, I assume through gdkpixbuf? While I am getting errors loading images through glade's image:
>>>
>>> (test.exe:8188): Gtk-WARNING **: Could not load image 'a.jpg': Couldn't recognize the image file format for file 'test\a.jpg'
>>>
>>> (loads fine in glade)
>>>
>>> which needs to be resolved, I'd also like to be able to use gdkpixbuf to load images programmatically. There seems to be no demos on the gtkD github page that deals with image loading.
>>>
>>> I've tried to do something like
>>>
>>> import gtkc.gdkpixbuf;
>>> auto x = c_gdk_pixbuf_get_formats().data;
>>>
>>> but I don't know how to interpret x.
>>>
>>> Also something like
>>>
>>> 		import gtkc.gdkpixbuf;
>>> 		void* x;
>>> 		auto p = c_gdk_pixbuf_get_formats();
>>> 		for(int i = 0; i < 10; i++)
>>> 		{			
>>> 			x = p.data;
>>> 			p = p.next;
>>> 		}
>>>
>>> which doesn't offer any help.
>>>
>>>
>>> Aside: How can we call the gtk functions directly using gtkD? Seems it uses stuff like
>>>
>>> Linker.link(gdk_pixbuf_get_formats, "gdk_pixbuf_get_formats", LIBRARY_GDKPIXBUF);
>>>
>>> It does seem to alias to these function but something is off and I'm not sure what.
>>
>> hi
>>
>> - is the gtk.Image class not working for you? https://api.gtkd.org/gtkd/gtk/Image.html
>>
>> - there's also a gdkpixbuf.Pixbuf that you can use. https://api.gtkd.org/gtkd/gdkpixbuf/Pixbuf.html
>>
>> - you can import those functions from gdkpixbuf.c.functions.
>
> So, like I said, I've tried
>
> import gdkpixbuf.Pixbuf;
> auto x = Pixbuf.newFromResource("C:\\a.jpg");
>
> which gives me that error I stated before for x86. For x64 it simply crashes and no exception is given.
>
> If I use a dummy image I get the same error:
>
> "Unhandled exception: glib.GException.GException The resource at “C:\adf.jpg” does not exist at generated\gtkd\glib\GException.d(40)"
>
> The error message makes look like like it should be
>
>
> "Unhandled exception: glib.GException.GException The resource at “C:\adf.jpg” does not exist at “C:\” generated\gtkd\glib\GException.d(40)"
>
>
> I'd rather use Pixbuf than image because I don't need to generate a full blow image widget.
>
> If I do
>
> GError* err = null;
> auto p = gdk_pixbuf_new_from_resource(Str.toStringz("C:\\a.jpg"), &err);
>
> p is null and err is
>
> The resource at “D:\a.jpgâ€. does not exist.
>
> which is clearly not true.
>
> So not sure what is going on ;/ Seems to be a bug in pixbuf or am I specifying the path wrong? If gtk.Image uses these internally then it is working so...

Hi!

I load images using Gtk like this (I use gtk under gnu/linux):

 Pixbuf pixbuf = new Pixbuf (filename);

And draw them in a GtkDrawingArea like this:

// redrawPage is a method from my window class
//    theCanvas = cast(DrawingArea) theBuilder.getObject("wCanvas");
//    theCanvas.addOnDraw (&redrawPage);

private bool redrawPage (Scoped!Context ctx, Widget wda) {
    if (pixbuf !is null) {
      Pixbuf img;
      int w, h;

      ctx.scale (drawingScale, drawingScale);

      w = cast(int) (pixbuf.getWidth  * drawingScale);
      h = cast(int) (pixbuf.getHeight * drawingScale);

      theCanvas.setSizeRequest (w, h);

      ctx.setSourcePixbuf (cast(Pixbuf) thePixmap, 0.0, 0.0);
      ctx.paint ();
    }
    return true;
  }

Hope it helps you.
A. Corbi

August 04, 2017
On Friday, 4 August 2017 at 06:58:00 UTC, Antonio Corbi wrote:
> On Thursday, 3 August 2017 at 21:06:36 UTC, Johnson Jones wrote:
>> [...]
>
> Hi!
>
> I load images using Gtk like this (I use gtk under gnu/linux):
>
> [...]

Thanks! I'm sure it will if it works ;)



August 05, 2017
On 03-08-17 21:56, Johnson Jones wrote:
> If I do something like
> 
> import gdkpixbuf.Pixbuf;
> Pixbuf.newFromResource("C:\\a.jpg");

There are two issues here, you need to properly escape the slash: "C:\\\\a.jpg".

And a.jpg is not a resource file, so you would use the Pixbuf constuctor to load an image file.

```
Pixbuf p = new Pixbuf(r"C:\\a.jpg");
```

-- 
Mike Wey
August 05, 2017
On Saturday, 5 August 2017 at 12:51:13 UTC, Mike Wey wrote:
> On 03-08-17 21:56, Johnson Jones wrote:
>> If I do something like
>> 
>> import gdkpixbuf.Pixbuf;
>> Pixbuf.newFromResource("C:\\a.jpg");
>
> There are two issues here, you need to properly escape the slash: "C:\\\\a.jpg".
>
> And a.jpg is not a resource file, so you would use the Pixbuf constuctor to load an image file.
>
> ```
> Pixbuf p = new Pixbuf(r"C:\\a.jpg");
> ```

Thanks. Why do I need 4 slashes? Is that standard with gtk because strings are interpreted twice or something? Seemed to work though.


August 05, 2017
On 05-08-17 15:23, Johnson Jones wrote:
> On Saturday, 5 August 2017 at 12:51:13 UTC, Mike Wey wrote:
>> On 03-08-17 21:56, Johnson Jones wrote:
>>> If I do something like
>>>
>>> import gdkpixbuf.Pixbuf;
>>> Pixbuf.newFromResource("C:\\a.jpg");
>>
>> There are two issues here, you need to properly escape the slash: "C:\\\\a.jpg".
>>
>> And a.jpg is not a resource file, so you would use the Pixbuf constuctor to load an image file.
>>
>> ```
>> Pixbuf p = new Pixbuf(r"C:\\a.jpg");
>> ```
> 
> Thanks. Why do I need 4 slashes? Is that standard with gtk because strings are interpreted twice or something? Seemed to work though.
> 
> 

Nothing specific to GTK but in D and other programing languages the \ is used as an escape character, so you can use special characters in your sting like `\n` for a newline. But this means you will need to use \\ to get an literal back slash.

https://dlang.org/spec/lex.html#double_quoted_strings

You can also use an wysiwyg string by using `r"` at the start so what you type is what you get.

https://dlang.org/spec/lex.html#wysiwyg

-- 
Mike Wey
August 05, 2017
On 08/05/2017 10:30 PM, Mike Wey wrote:
> On 05-08-17 15:23, Johnson Jones wrote:
>> On Saturday, 5 August 2017 at 12:51:13 UTC, Mike Wey wrote:
[...]
>>> There are two issues here, you need to properly escape the slash: "C:\\\\a.jpg".
[...]
>>> ```
>>> Pixbuf p = new Pixbuf(r"C:\\a.jpg");
>>> ```
>>
>> Thanks. Why do I need 4 slashes? Is that standard with gtk because strings are interpreted twice or something? Seemed to work though.
>>
>>
> 
> Nothing specific to GTK but in D and other programing languages the \ is used as an escape character, so you can use special characters in your sting like `\n` for a newline. But this means you will need to use \\ to get an literal back slash.

I think you missed the point of the question.

In the end, the path should contain only one backslash. But with `"C:\\\\a.jpg"` and `r"C:\\a.jpg"` you get two. Why do you need two? Does the library do another round of escape sequence handling?
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