DataMatrix-encoding with zxing only generates 14px bitmap

joschplusa picture joschplusa · Mar 31, 2014 · Viewed 7.5k times · Source

I'm using zxing to generate barcodes with different types (EAN, 2of5 and DataMatrix). Generating in general works fine. The only problem I currently have is that zxing only generates a 14x14 pixel bitmap which is way too small. But only when using DataMatrix! EAN13, 2of5/ITF and QR-Codes work perfect with the same code.

My code:

BitMatrix bitMatrix = new DataMatrixWriter().encode(message, BarcodeFormat.DATA_MATRIX, 1080, 1080, null);
int height = bitMatrix.getHeight(); //height is always 14, it doesn't matter what value I pass to the encoder

As you can imagine this looks pretty shitty on a 1080p screen like the nexus 5. Am I getting something wrong? Do I have to do some special settings for DataMatrix?

Google and Stackoverflow couldn't help me so far as I can't find any examples for the usage of DataMatrix

App screenshot of DataMatrix barcode

Update This is how I convert the bitmatrix to a bitmap

    int width = bitMatrix.getWidth();
    int height = bitMatrix.getHeight();
    int[] pixels = new int[width * height];
    // All are 0, or black, by default
    for (int y = 0; y < height; y++) {
        int offset = y * width;
        for (int x = 0; x < width; x++) {
            pixels[offset + x] = bitMatrix.get(x, y) ? BLACK : WHITE;
        }
    }
    Bitmap bitmap = Bitmap.createBitmap(width, height, Bitmap.Config.ARGB_8888);
    bitmap.setPixels(pixels, 0, width, 0, 0, width, height);

If I use any other values for the height I get an OutOfBoundsException which is pretty obvious (I didn't expect anything else)...

When I try to scale the imageview and set a fixed width and height, the barcode is scannable but looks like shit. This is obvious too, as the bitmatrix is only 14x14 instead of the size I specified.

enter image description here

Is there a simple way to somehow scale a bitmatrix? Because it only consists of dots so it should be possible but I don't want to calculate it myself. I couldn't find any documentation for bitmatrix besides stackoverflow and this didn't help me at all.

If I pass a MinWidth or MaxWidth to the encoder via HintMap the app always crashes with an Exception. HintMap (mWidth is the display width of the device but I tried several values): Hashtable hintMap = new Hashtable();

hintMap.put(EncodeHintType.MIN_SIZE, new Dimension(mWidth, mWidth));
hintMap.put(EncodeHintType.MAX_SIZE, new Dimension(mWidth, mWidth));
hintMap.put(EncodeHintType.DATA_MATRIX_SHAPE, SymbolShapeHint.FORCE_SQUARE);

Exception:

java.lang.IllegalArgumentException: Can't find a symbol arrangement that matches the message. Data codewords: 7

This last issue seems to me like a bug in zxing. I don't get it why the generating doesn't work if I change the size.

Answer

Michael picture Michael · Apr 2, 2014

Here is a small example how you can change your method for the conversion from BitMatrix to Bitmap. The method does the scaling of the BitMatrix.

int BLACK = 0xFF000000;
int WHITE = 0xFFFFFFFF;

// change the values to your needs
int requestedWidth = 300;
int requestedHeight = 300;

int width = bitMatrix.getWidth();
int height = bitMatrix.getHeight();

// calculating the scaling factor
int pixelsize = requestedWidth/width;
if (pixelsize > requestedHeight/height)
{
  pixelsize = requestedHeight/height;
}

int[] pixels = new int[requestedWidth * requestedHeight];
// All are 0, or black, by default
for (int y = 0; y < height; y++) {
  int offset = y * requestedWidth * pixelsize;

  // scaling pixel height
  for (int pixelsizeHeight = 0; pixelsizeHeight < pixelsize; pixelsizeHeight++, offset+=requestedWidth) {
    for (int x = 0; x < width; x++) {
      int color = bitMatrix.get(x, y) ? BLACK : WHITE;

      // scaling pixel width
      for (int pixelsizeWidth = 0; pixelsizeWidth < pixelsize; pixelsizeWidth++) {
        pixels[offset + x * pixelsize + pixelsizeWidth] = color;
      }
    }
  }
}
Bitmap bitmap = Bitmap.createBitmap(requestedWidth, requestedHeight, Bitmap.Config.ARGB_8888);
bitmap.setPixels(pixels, 0, requestedWidth, 0, 0, requestedWidth, requestedHeight);

// I could only test it with BufferedImage and a modified version of the zxing J2SE client
// BufferedImage bitmap = new BufferedImage(requestedWidth, requestedHeight, BufferedImage.TYPE_INT_ARGB);
// bitmap.getRaster().setDataElements(0, 0, requestedWidth, requestedHeight, pixels);