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Transforming Shapes, Text, and Images (The Java™ Tutorials >
2D Graphics > Advanced Topics in Java2D)
Transforming Shapes, Text, and Images
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2D Graphics
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Advanced Topics in Java2D
Transforming Shapes, Text, and Images
You can modify the transform attribute in the Graphics2D
context to move, rotate, scale, and shear graphics primitives when they
are rendered. The transform attribute is defined by an instance of the
AffineTransform class. An affine transform is a transformation
such as translate, rotate, scale, or shear in which parallel lines
remain parallel even after being transformed.
The
Graphics2D class provides several methods for changing the transform attribute. You can
construct a new AffineTransform and change the
Graphics2D transform attribute by calling
transform.
AffineTransform defines the following factory methods to
make it easier to construct new transforms:
-
getRotateInstance
-
getScaleInstance
-
getShearInstance
-
getTranslateInstance
Alternatively you can use one of the Graphics2D
transformation methods to modify the current transform. When you call
one of these convenience methods, the resulting transform is
concatenated with the current transform and is applied during
rendering:
-
rotate--to specify an angle of rotation in radians
-
scale--to specify a scaling factor in the x
and y directions
-
shear--to specify a shearing factor in the x
and y directions
-
translate--to specify a translation offset in the
x and y directions
You can also construct an AffineTransform object directly and
concatenate it with the current transform by calling the
transform method.
The drawImage method is also overloaded to allow you to
specify an AffineTransform that is applied to the image as
it is rendered. Specifying a transform when you call
drawImage does not affect the Graphics2D
transform attribute.
Example: Transform
The following program is the same as StrokeandFill, but
also allows the user to choose a transformation to apply to the
selected object when it is rendered.
Note: If you don't see the applet running above, you need to install release 6 of the JDK.
Transform.java
contains the complete code for this applet.
When a transform is chosen from the Transform menu, the transform is
concatenated onto the AffineTransform at:
public void setTrans(int transIndex) {
// Sets the AffineTransform.
switch ( transIndex ) {
case 0 : at.setToIdentity();
at.translate(w/2, h/2); break;
case 1 : at.rotate(Math.toRadians(45)); break;
case 2 : at.scale(0.5, 0.5); break;
case 3 : at.shear(0.5, 0.0); break;
}
}
Before displaying the shape corresponding to the menu choices, the application
first retrieves the current transform from the Graphics2D object:
AffineTransform saveXform = g2.getTransform();
This transform will be restored to the Graphics2D after rendering.
After retrieving the current transform, another AffineTransform,
toCenterAt, is
created that causes shapes to be rendered in the center of the panel. The at
AffineTransform is concatenated onto toCenterAt:
AffineTransform toCenterAt = new AffineTransform();
toCenterAt.concatenate(at);
toCenterAt.translate(-(r.width/2), -(r.height/2));
The toCenterAt transform is concatenated onto the Graphics2D transform with the
transform method:
g2.transform(toCenterAt);
After rendering is completed, the original transform is restored using the
setTransform method:
g2.setTransform(saveXform);
Note: Never use the setTransform method to concatenate a coordinate transform onto
an existing transform. The setTransform method overwrites the
Graphics2D
object's current transform, which might be needed for other reasons, such
as positioning Swing and lightweight components in a window. Use these steps to perform
transformations:
- Use the
getTransform method to get the current transform.
- Use
transform, translate, scale,
shear, or rotate to concatenate a
transform.
- Perform the rendering.
- Restore the original transform using the
setTransform method.
JAVA, JSP, SERVLETS, TOMCAT, SERVLETS MANAGER,
Private JVM (Java Virtual Machine),
Private Tomcat Server
Alden Hosting offers private JVM (Java Virtual Machine), Java Server Pages (JSP), Servlets, and Servlets Manager with our Web Hosting Plans
WEB 4 PLAN and
WEB 5 PLAN ,
WEB 6 PLAN .
At Alden Hosting we eat and breathe Java! We are the industry leader in providing
affordable, quality and efficient Java web hosting in the shared hosting marketplace.
All our sites run on our Java hosing platform configured for
optimum performance using Java 1.6, Tomcat 6.0.X, MySQL 5.0.x, Apache 2.2.xx and web
application frameworks such as Struts, Hibernate, Cocoon, Ant, etc.
We offer only one type of Java hosting - Private Tomcat. Hosting accounts on the Private
Tomcat environment get their very own Tomcat server. You can start and re-start
your entire Tomcat server yourself.
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