EDIT TWO
To prevent snarky comments and one-line answers missing the point: IFF it is as simple as calling setDoubleBuffered(true), then how do I get access to the current offline buffer so that I can start messing with the BufferedImage's underlying pixel databuffer?
I took the time to write a running piece of code (which looks kinda fun too) so I'd really appreciate answers actually answering (what a shock ;) my question and explaining what/how this is working instead of one-liners and snarky comments ;)
Here's a working piece of code that bounces a square across a JFrame. I'd like to know about the various ways that can be used to transform this piece of code so that it uses double-buffering.
Note that the way I clear the screen and redraw the square ain't the most efficient but this is really not what this question is about (in a way, it's better for the sake of this example that it is somewhat slow).
Basically, I need to constantly modify a lot pixels in a BufferedImage (as to have some kind of animation) and I don't want to see the visual artifacts due to single-buffering on screen.
I've got a JLabel whose Icon is an ImageIcon wrapping a BufferedImage. I want to modify that BufferedImage.
What has to be done so that this becomes double-buffered?
I understand that somehow "image 1" will be shown while I'll be drawing on "image 2". But then once I'm done drawing on "image 2", how do I "quickly" replace "image 1" by "image 2"?
Is this something I should be doing manually, like, say, by swapping the JLabel's ImageIcon myself?
Should I be always drawing in the same BufferedImage then do a fast 'blit' of that BufferedImage's pixels in the JLabel's ImageIcon's BufferedImage? (I guess no and I don't see how I could "synch" this with the monitor's "vertical blank line" [or equivalent in flat-screen: I mean, to 'synch' without interfering with the moment the monitor itselfs refreshes its pixels, as to prevent shearing]).
What about the "repaint" orders? Am I suppose to trigger these myself? Which/when exactly should I call repaint() or something else?
The most important requirement is that I should be modifying pixels directly in the images's pixel databuffer.
import javax.swing.*;
import java.awt.event.WindowAdapter;
import java.awt.event.WindowEvent;
import java.awt.image.BufferedImage;
import java.awt.image.DataBufferInt;
public class DemosDoubleBuffering extends JFrame {
private static final int WIDTH = 600;
private static final int HEIGHT = 400;
int xs = 3;
int ys = xs;
int x = 0;
int y = 0;
final int r = 80;
final BufferedImage bi1;
public static void main( final String[] args ) {
final DemosDoubleBuffering frame = new DemosDoubleBuffering();
frame.addWindowListener(new WindowAdapter() {
public void windowClosing( WindowEvent e) {
System.exit(0);
}
});
frame.setSize( WIDTH, HEIGHT );
frame.pack();
frame.setVisible( true );
}
public DemosDoubleBuffering() {
super( "Trying to do double buffering" );
final JLabel jl = new JLabel();
bi1 = new BufferedImage( WIDTH, HEIGHT, BufferedImage.TYPE_INT_ARGB );
final Thread t = new Thread( new Runnable() {
public void run() {
while ( true ) {
move();
drawSquare( bi1 );
jl.repaint();
try {Thread.sleep(10);} catch (InterruptedException e) {}
}
}
});
t.start();
jl.setIcon( new ImageIcon( bi1 ) );
getContentPane().add( jl );
}
private void drawSquare( final BufferedImage bi ) {
final int[] buf = ((DataBufferInt) bi.getRaster().getDataBuffer()).getData();
for (int i = 0; i < buf.length; i++) {
buf[i] = 0xFFFFFFFF; // clearing all white
}
for (int xx = 0; xx < r; xx++) {
for (int yy = 0; yy < r; yy++) {
buf[WIDTH*(yy+y)+xx+x] = 0xFF000000;
}
}
}
private void move() {
if ( !(x + xs >= 0 && x + xs + r < bi1.getWidth()) ) {
xs = -xs;
}
if ( !(y + ys >= 0 && y + ys + r < bi1.getHeight()) ) {
ys = -ys;
}
x += xs;
y += ys;
}
}
EDIT
This is not for a full-screen Java application, but a regular Java application, running in its own (somewhat small) window.
---- Edited to address per pixel setting ----
The item blow addresses double buffering, but there's also an issue on how to get pixels into a BufferedImage
.
If you call
WriteableRaster raster = bi.getRaster()
on the BufferedImage
it will return a WriteableRaster
. From there you can use
int[] pixels = new int[WIDTH*HEIGHT];
// code to set array elements here
raster.setPixel(0, 0, pixels);
Note that you would probably want to optimize the code to not actually create a new array for each rendering. In addition, you would probably want to optimized the array clearing code to not use a for loop.
Arrays.fill(pixels, 0xFFFFFFFF);
would probably outperform your loop setting the background to white.
---- Edited after response ----
The key is in your original setup of the JFrame and inside the run rendering loop.
First you need to tell SWING to stop Rasterizing whenever it wants to; because, you'll be telling it when you're done drawing to the buffered image you want to swap out in full. Do this with JFrame's
setIgnoreRepaint(true);
Then you'll want to create a buffer strategy. Basically it specifies how many buffers you want to use
createBufferStrategy(2);
Now that you tried to create the buffer strategy, you need to grab the BufferStrategy
object as you will need it later to switch buffers.
final BufferStrategy bufferStrategy = getBufferStrategy();
Inside your Thread
modify the run()
loop to contain:
...
move();
drawSqure(bi1);
Graphics g = bufferStrategy.getDrawGraphics();
g.drawImage(bi1, 0, 0, null);
g.dispose();
bufferStrategy.show();
...
The graphics grabbed from the bufferStrategy will be the off-screen Graphics
object, when creating triple buffering, it will be the "next" off-screen Graphics
object in a round-robin fashion.
The image and the Graphics context are not related in a containment scenario, and you told Swing you'd do the drawing yourself, so you have to draw the image manually. This is not always a bad thing, as you can specify the buffer flipping when the image is fully drawn (and not before).
Disposing of the graphics object is just a good idea as it helps in garbage collection. Showing the bufferStrategy
will flip buffers.
While there might have been a misstep somewhere in the above code, this should get you 90% of the way there. Good luck!
---- Original post follows ----
It might seem silly to refer such a question to a javase tutorial, but have you looked into BufferStrategy
and BufferCapatbilites
?
The main issue I think you are encountering is that you are fooled by the name of the Image. A BufferedImage
has nothing to do with double buffering, it has to do with "buffering the data (typically from disk) in memory." As such, you will need two BufferedImages if you wish to have a "double buffered image"; as it is unwise to alter pixels in image which is being shown (it might cause repainting issues).
In your rendering code, you grab the graphics object. If you set up double buffering according to the tutorial above, this means you will grab (by default) the off-screen Graphics
object, and all drawing will be off-screen. Then you draw your image (the right one of course) to the off-screen object. Finally, you tell the strategy to show()
the buffer, and it will do the replacement of the Graphics context for you.