VIPS from CUsing VIPS — How to use the VIPS library from C |
VIPS comes with a convenient, high-level C API. You should read the API docs for full details, but this section will try to give a brief overview. The vips program is handy for getting a summary of an operation's parameters.
When your program starts, use
to start up the VIPS library. You should pass it the name
of your program, usually VIPS_INIT()
argv[0]
. Use
vips_shutdown()
when you exit.
You can add the VIPS flags to your GObject
command-line processing
with
, see below.
vips_get_option_group()
The basic data object is the VipsImage. You can create an
image from a file on disc or from an area of memory, either
as a C-style array, or as a formatted object, like JPEG. See
vips_image_new_from_file()
and friends. Loading an
image is fast. VIPS read just enough of the image to be able to get
the various properties, such as width in pixels. It delays reading
any pixels until they are really needed.
Once you have an image, you can get properties from it in the usual way.
You can use projection functions, like vips_image_get_width()
or
g_object_get()
, to get GObject
properties. All VIPS objects are
immutable, meaning you can only get properties, you can't set them.
See VIPS Header to read about
image properties.
VIPS is based on the GObject
library and is therefore refcounted.
vips_image_new_from_file()
returns an object with a count of 1.
When you are done with an image, use g_object_unref()
to dispose of it.
If you pass an image to an operation and that operation needs to keep a
copy of the image, it will ref it. So you can unref an image as soon as
you no longer need it, you don't need to hang on to it in case anyone
else is still using it.
Use things like vips_invert()
to manipulate your images. See VIPS Operations for information on
running operations on images. When you are done, you can write
the final image to a disc file, to a formatted memory buffer, or to
C-style memory array. See vips_image_write_to_file()
and friends.
Use VipsRegion to read pixels out of images. You can use
VIPS_IMAGE_ADDR()
as well, but this can need a large amount of
memory to work. See extending
for an introduction to writing your own operations.
VIPS keeps a log of error message, see VIPS Error to find out how to get and set the error log.
Example 1. VIPS from C example
/* compile with: * * gcc -g -Wall try211.c `pkg-config vips --cflags --libs` */ #include <stdio.h> #include <vips/vips.h> int main( int argc, char **argv ) { GOptionContext *context; GOptionGroup *main_group; GError *error = NULL; VipsImage *in; double mean; VipsImage *out; if( VIPS_INIT( argv[0] ) ) vips_error_exit( NULL ); context = g_option_context_new( "hello infile outfile - VIPS demo" ); main_group = g_option_group_new( NULL, NULL, NULL, NULL, NULL ); g_option_context_set_main_group( context, main_group ); g_option_context_add_group( context, vips_get_option_group() ); if( !g_option_context_parse( context, &argc, &argv, &error ) ) { if( error ) { fprintf( stderr, "%s\n", error->message ); g_error_free( error ); } vips_error_exit( NULL ); } if( argc != 3 ) vips_error_exit( "usage: %s infile outfile", argv[0] ); if( !(in = vips_image_new_from_file( argv[1], NULL )) ) vips_error_exit( NULL ); printf( "image width = %d\n", vips_image_get_width( in ) ); if( vips_avg( in, &mean, NULL ) ) vips_error_exit( NULL ); printf( "mean pixel value = %g\n", mean ); if( vips_invert( in, &out, NULL ) ) vips_error_exit( NULL ); g_object_unref( in ); if( vips_image_write_to_file( out, argv[2], NULL ) ) vips_error_exit( NULL ); g_object_unref( out ); return( 0 ); }