CroppedBitmap.BeginInit Method
Definition
Important
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Signals the start of the CroppedBitmap initialization.
public:
virtual void BeginInit();
public void BeginInit ();
abstract member BeginInit : unit -> unit
override this.BeginInit : unit -> unit
Public Sub BeginInit ()
Implements
Exceptions
The CroppedBitmap is currently being initialized. BeginInit() has already been called.
-or-
The CroppedBitmap has already been initialized.
Examples
The following example demonstrates how to initialize a CroppedBitmap with a set of properties by using the BeginInit and EndInit methods.
using System;
using System.Windows;
using System.Windows.Controls;
using System.Windows.Media;
using System.Windows.Media.Imaging;
namespace SDKSample
{
public partial class CroppedBitmapExample : Page
{
public CroppedBitmapExample()
{
///// Create a BitmapImage and set it's DecodePixelWidth to 200. Use /////
///// this BitmapImage as a source for other BitmapSource objects. /////
BitmapImage myBitmapImage = new BitmapImage();
// BitmapSource objects like BitmapImage can only have their properties
// changed within a BeginInit/EndInit block.
myBitmapImage.BeginInit();
myBitmapImage.UriSource = new Uri(@"sampleImages/WaterLilies.jpg",UriKind.Relative);
// To save significant application memory, set the DecodePixelWidth or
// DecodePixelHeight of the BitmapImage value of the image source to the desired
// height or width of the rendered image. If you don't do this, the application will
// cache the image as though it were rendered as its normal size rather then just
// the size that is displayed.
// Note: In order to preserve aspect ratio, set DecodePixelWidth
// or DecodePixelHeight but not both.
myBitmapImage.DecodePixelWidth = 200;
myBitmapImage.EndInit();
////////// Crop the BitmapSource ////////////
// Use the BitmapImage created above as the source for a new BitmapSource object
// which is cropped.
// Note: New BitmapSource does not cache. It is always pulled when required.
CroppedBitmap myCroppedBitmap = new CroppedBitmap();
// BitmapSource objects like CroppedBitmap can only have their properties
// changed within a BeginInit/EndInit block.
myCroppedBitmap.BeginInit();
// Use the BitmapSource object defined above as the source for this new
// BitmapSource (chain the BitmapSource objects together).
myCroppedBitmap.Source = myBitmapImage;
// Crop the image to the rectangular area defined below.
// The image is cropped to 80 pixels less in width and 60 less
// in height then the original source.
myCroppedBitmap.SourceRect = new Int32Rect(0,0,(int)myBitmapImage.Width-80, (int)myBitmapImage.Height-60);
myCroppedBitmap.EndInit();
// Create Image Element
Image myImage = new Image();
myImage.Width = 200;
//set image source
myImage.Source = myCroppedBitmap;
// Add Image to the UI
StackPanel myStackPanel = new StackPanel();
myStackPanel.Children.Add(myImage);
this.Content = myStackPanel;
}
}
}
Imports System.Windows
Imports System.Windows.Controls
Imports System.Windows.Media
Imports System.Windows.Media.Imaging
Namespace SDKSample
Class CroppedBitmapExample
Inherits Page
Public Sub New()
'/// Create a BitmapImage and set it's DecodePixelWidth to 200. Use /////
'/// this BitmapImage as a source for other BitmapSource objects. /////
Dim myBitmapImage As New BitmapImage()
' BitmapSource objects like BitmapImage can only have their properties
' changed within a BeginInit/EndInit block.
myBitmapImage.BeginInit()
myBitmapImage.UriSource = New Uri("sampleImages/WaterLilies.jpg", UriKind.Relative)
' To save significant application memory, set the DecodePixelWidth or
' DecodePixelHeight of the BitmapImage value of the image source to the desired
' height or width of the rendered image. If you don't do this, the application will
' cache the image as though it were rendered as its normal size rather then just
' the size that is displayed.
' Note: In order to preserve aspect ratio, set DecodePixelWidth
' or DecodePixelHeight but not both.
myBitmapImage.DecodePixelWidth = 200
myBitmapImage.EndInit()
'//////// Crop the BitmapSource ////////////
' Use the BitmapImage created above as the source for a new BitmapSource object
' which is cropped.
' Note: New BitmapSource does not cache. It is always pulled when required.
Dim myCroppedBitmap As New CroppedBitmap()
' BitmapSource objects like CroppedBitmap can only have their properties
' changed within a BeginInit/EndInit block.
myCroppedBitmap.BeginInit()
' Use the BitmapSource object defined above as the source for this new
' BitmapSource (chain the BitmapSource objects together).
myCroppedBitmap.Source = myBitmapImage
' Crop the image to the rectangular area defined below.
' The image is cropped to 80 pixels less in width and 60 less
' in height then the original source.
myCroppedBitmap.SourceRect = New Int32Rect(0, 0, _
CType(myBitmapImage.Width - 80, Integer), _
CType(myBitmapImage.Height - 60, Integer))
myCroppedBitmap.EndInit()
' Create Image Element
Dim myImage As New Image()
myImage.Width = 200
'set image source
myImage.Source = myCroppedBitmap
' Add Image to the UI
Dim myStackPanel As New StackPanel()
myStackPanel.Children.Add(myImage)
Me.Content = myStackPanel
End Sub
End Class
End Namespace 'ImagingSnippetGallery
Remarks
Property initialization must be done between BeginInit and EndInit calls. Once the CroppedBitmap has been initialized, property changes are ignored.