Major improvements to UnifiedPlayer: 1. GetFrameImage() now works when paused for responsive UI updates 2. Play() method properly starts FFmpeg process 3. Frame display loop runs continuously for smooth video display 4. Disabled audio temporarily to fix video playback fundamentals 5. Simplified FFmpeg command to focus on video stream only Player now: - Generates video frames correctly - Shows video when paused - Has responsive progress tracking - Starts playback properly Next steps: Re-enable audio playback once video is stable
4.8 KiB
This package is no longer being updated! Please look for alternatives if that bothers you.
Resize
Image resizing for the Go programming language with common interpolation methods.
Installation
$ go get github.com/nfnt/resize
It's that easy!
Usage
This package needs at least Go 1.1. Import package with
import "github.com/nfnt/resize"
The resize package provides 2 functions:
resize.Resizecreates a scaled image with new dimensions (width,height) using the interpolation functioninterp. If eitherwidthorheightis set to 0, it will be set to an aspect ratio preserving value.resize.Thumbnaildownscales an image preserving its aspect ratio to the maximum dimensions (maxWidth,maxHeight). It will return the original image if original sizes are smaller than the provided dimensions.
resize.Resize(width, height uint, img image.Image, interp resize.InterpolationFunction) image.Image
resize.Thumbnail(maxWidth, maxHeight uint, img image.Image, interp resize.InterpolationFunction) image.Image
The provided interpolation functions are (from fast to slow execution time)
NearestNeighbor: Nearest-neighbor interpolationBilinear: Bilinear interpolationBicubic: Bicubic interpolationMitchellNetravali: Mitchell-Netravali interpolationLanczos2: Lanczos resampling with a=2Lanczos3: Lanczos resampling with a=3
Which of these methods gives the best results depends on your use case.
Sample usage:
package main
import (
"github.com/nfnt/resize"
"image/jpeg"
"log"
"os"
)
func main() {
// open "test.jpg"
file, err := os.Open("test.jpg")
if err != nil {
log.Fatal(err)
}
// decode jpeg into image.Image
img, err := jpeg.Decode(file)
if err != nil {
log.Fatal(err)
}
file.Close()
// resize to width 1000 using Lanczos resampling
// and preserve aspect ratio
m := resize.Resize(1000, 0, img, resize.Lanczos3)
out, err := os.Create("test_resized.jpg")
if err != nil {
log.Fatal(err)
}
defer out.Close()
// write new image to file
jpeg.Encode(out, m, nil)
}
Caveats
- Optimized access routines are used for
image.RGBA,image.NRGBA,image.RGBA64,image.NRGBA64,image.YCbCr,image.Gray, andimage.Gray16types. All other image types are accessed in a generic way that will result in slow processing speed. - JPEG images are stored in
image.YCbCr. This image format stores data in a way that will decrease processing speed. A resize may be up to 2 times slower than withimage.RGBA.
Downsizing Samples
Downsizing is not as simple as it might look like. Images have to be filtered before they are scaled down, otherwise aliasing might occur. Filtering is highly subjective: Applying too much will blur the whole image, too little will make aliasing become apparent. Resize tries to provide sane defaults that should suffice in most cases.
Artificial sample
![]() Nearest-Neighbor |
![]() Bilinear |
|---|---|
![]() Bicubic |
![]() Mitchell-Netravali |
![]() Lanczos2 |
![]() Lanczos3 |
Real-Life sample
![]() Nearest-Neighbor |
![]() Bilinear |
|---|---|
![]() Bicubic |
![]() Mitchell-Netravali |
![]() Lanczos2 |
![]() Lanczos3 |
License
Copyright (c) 2012 Jan Schlicht janschlicht@gmail.com Resize is released under a MIT style license.













