USING THE IJG JPEG LIBRARY
Copyright (C) 1994-2009, Thomas G. Lane, Guido Vollbeding.
This file is part of the Independent JPEG Group's software.
For conditions of distribution and use, see the accompanying README file.
This file describes how to use the IJG JPEG library within an application
program. Read it if you want to write a program that uses the library.
The file example.c provides heavily commented skeleton code for calling the
JPEG library. Also see jpeglib.h (the include file to be used by application
programs) for full details about data structures and function parameter lists.
The library source code, of course, is the ultimate reference.
Note that there have been *major* changes from the application interface
presented by IJG version 4 and earlier versions. The old design had several
inherent limitations, and it had accumulated a lot of cruft as we added
features while trying to minimize application-interface changes. We have
sacrificed backward compatibility in the version 5 rewrite, but we think the
improvements justify this.
TABLE OF CONTENTS
-----------------
Overview:
Functions provided by the library
Outline of typical usage
Basic library usage:
Data formats
Compression details
Decompression details
Mechanics of usage: include files, linking, etc
Advanced features:
Compression parameter selection
Decompression parameter selection
Special color spaces
Error handling
Compressed data handling (source and destination managers)
I/O suspension
Progressive JPEG support
Buffered-image mode
Abbreviated datastreams and multiple images
Special markers
Raw (downsampled) image data
Really raw data: DCT coefficients
Progress monitoring
Memory management
Memory usage
Library compile-time options
Portability considerations
Notes for MS-DOS implementors
You should read at least the overview and basic usage sections before trying
to program with the library. The sections on advanced features can be read
if and when you need them.
OVERVIEW
========
Functions provided by the library
---------------------------------
The IJG JPEG library provides C code to read and write JPEG-compressed image
files. The surrounding application program receives or supplies image data a
scanline at a time, using a straightforward uncompressed image format. All
details of color conversion and other preprocessing/postprocessing can be
handled by the library.
The library includes a substantial amount of code that is not covered by the
JPEG standard but is necessary for typical applications of JPEG. These
functions preprocess the image before JPEG compression or postprocess it after
decompression. They include colorspace conversion, downsampling/upsampling,
and color quantization. The application indirectly selects use of this code
by specifying the format in which it wishes to supply or receive image data.
For example, if colormapped output is requested, then the decompression
library automatically invokes color quantization.
A wide range of quality vs. speed tradeoffs are possible in JPEG processing,
and even more so in decompression postprocessing. The decompression library
provides multiple implementations that cover most of the useful tradeoffs,
ranging from very-high-quality down to fast-preview operation. On the
compression side we have generally not provided low-quality choices, since
compression is normally less time-critical. It should be understood that the
low-quality modes may not meet the JPEG standard's accuracy requirements;
nonetheless, they are useful for viewers.
A word about functions *not* provided by the library. We handle a subset of
the ISO JPEG standard; most baseline, extended-sequential, and progressive
JPEG processes are supported. (Our subset includes all features now in common
use.) Unsupported ISO options include:
* Hierarchical storage
* Lossless JPEG
* DNL marker
* Nonintegral subsampling ratios
We support both 8- and 12-bit data precision, but this is a compile-time
choice rather than a run-time choice; hence it is difficult to use both
precisions in a single application.
By itself, the library handles only interchange JPEG datastreams --- in
particular the widely used JFIF file format. The library can be used by
surrounding code to process interchange or abbreviated JPEG datastreams that
are embedded in more complex file formats. (For example, this library is
used by the free LIBTIFF library to support JPEG compression in TIFF.)
Outline of typical usage
------------------------
The rough outline of a JPEG compression operation is:
Allocate and initialize a JPEG compression object
Specify the destination for the compressed data (eg, a file)
Set parameters for compression, including image size & colorspace
jpeg_start_compress(...);
while (scan lines remain to be written)
jpeg_write_scanlines(...);
jpeg_finish_compress(...);
Release the JPEG compression object
A JPEG compression object holds parameters and working state for the JPEG
library. We make creation/destruction of the object separate from starting
or finishing compression of an image; the same object can be re-used for a
series of image compression operations. This makes it easy to re-use the
same parameter settings for a sequence of images. Re-use of a JPEG object
also has important implications for processing abbreviated JPEG datastreams,
as discussed later.
The image data to be compressed is supplied to jpeg_write_scanlines() from
in-memory buffers. If the application is doing file-to-file compression,
reading image data from the source file is the application's responsibility.
The library emits compressed data by calling a "data destination manager",
which typically will write the data into a file; but the application can
provide its own destination manager to do something else.
Similarly, the rough outline of a JPEG decompression operation is:
Allocate and initialize a JPEG decompression object
Specify the source of the compressed data (eg, a file)
Call jpeg_read_header() to obtain image info
Set parameters for decompression
jpeg_start_decompress(...);
while (scan lines remain to be read)
jpeg_read_scanlines(...);
jpeg_finish_decompress(...);
Release the JPEG decompression object
This is comparable to the compression outline except that reading the
datastream header is a separate step. This is helpful because information
about the image's size, colorspace, etc is available when the application
selects decompression parameters. For example, the application can choose an
output scaling ratio that will fit the image into the available screen size.
The decompression library obtains compressed data by calling a data source
manager, which typically will read the data from a file; but other behaviors
can be obtained with a custom source manager. Decompressed data is delivered
into in-memory buffers passed to jpeg_read_scanlines().
It is possible to abort an incomplete compression or decompression operation
by calling jpeg_abort(); or, if you do not need to retain the JPEG object,
simply release it by calling jpeg_destroy().
JPEG compression and decompression objects are two separate struct types.
However, they share some common fields, and certain routines such as
jpeg_destroy() can work on either type of object.
The JPEG library has no static variables: all state is in the compression
or decompression object. Therefore it is possible to process multiple
compression and decompression operations concurrently, using multiple JPEG
objects.
Both compression and decompression can be done in an incremental memory-to-
memory fashion, if suitable source/destination managers are used. See the
section on "I/O suspension" for more details.
BASIC LIBRARY USAGE
===================
Data formats
------------
Bef
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Irrlicht引擎_Android版 (1127个子文件)
bzip2.1 16KB
cjpeg.1 12KB
jpegtran.1 9KB
djpeg.1 8KB
bzmore.1 4KB
wrjpgcom.1 3KB
rdjpgcom.1 2KB
ansi2knr.1 2KB
bzgrep.1 1KB
bzdiff.1 897B
libpng.3 175KB
libpngpf.3 18KB
zlib.3 5KB
makefile.32sunu 8KB
png.5 2KB
makefile.64sunu 8KB
configure.ac 11KB
makefile.acorn 2KB
makefile.aix 3KB
Makefile.am 5KB
makefile.amiga 1KB
ANNOUNCE 2KB
makefile.ansi 12KB
jmemdosa.asm 8KB
makefile.atari 2KB
png2pnm.bat 2KB
pnm2png.bat 2KB
pngminus.bat 60B
makefile.bc32 3KB
makefile.bcc 15KB
jconfig.bcc 1KB
makefile.beos 7KB
testimg.bmp 34KB
builtInFont.bmp 8KB
makefile.bor 3KB
libpng.bpf 682B
libpngstat.bpf 642B
libpng.bpg 954B
libpng.bpr 7KB
libpngstat.bpr 2KB
bzdiff 2KB
bzgrep 2KB
bzmore 1KB
jidctint.c 183KB
jfdctint.c 159KB
pngrtran.c 149KB
pngrutil.c 96KB
pngwutil.c 86KB
rpng2-x.c 82KB
deflate.c 64KB
bzip2.c 57KB
transupp.c 55KB
pngtest.c 52KB
pngwrite.c 50KB
jchuff.c 50KB
inflate.c 49KB
jquant2.c 49KB
pngpread.c 48KB
pngread.c 47KB
rpng2-win.c 45KB
bzlib.c 45KB
trees.c 44KB
jdhuff.c 43KB
jdmarker.c 41KB
jmemmgr.c 41KB
pngset.c 40KB
jquant1.c 31KB
gzio.c 31KB
wpng.c 31KB
rpng-x.c 31KB
example.c 31KB
blocksort.c 30KB
jcarith.c 28KB
LzmaDec.c 28KB
jcmaster.c 28KB
png.c 27KB
VisualPng.c 27KB
jdcoefct.c 25KB
pngget.c 25KB
jdmaster.c 25KB
readpng2.c 25KB
jdarith.c 24KB
rpng-win.c 23KB
infback.c 22KB
jcparam.c 22KB
pngtrans.c 21KB
ansi2knr.c 21KB
jdmainct.c 20KB
cjpeg.c 20KB
bzcompress.c 20KB
jcsample.c 20KB
decompress.c 20KB
djpeg.c 20KB
jmemdos.c 19KB
jpegtran.c 18KB
jcmarker.c 18KB
pngwtran.c 18KB
pngmem.c 17KB
example.c 17KB
wrjpgcom.c 17KB
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- fla8882014-07-12还不错,github上有不少这种版本。
- King.W.2016-06-13不错,可以成功运行。http://blog.csdn.net/birdflyto206/article/details/51649848
- asukazj2013-08-28东西不错,不过这版本一直有bug,需要自己修改下
Young_Liu
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