Resizing a canvas image without blurring it

2019-03-18 06:07发布

问题:

I have a small image, which I am rendering on a canvas, like this:

ctx.drawImage(img, 0, 0, img.width*2, img.height*2);

I would like this to show a sharp upsized image (4 identical pixels for each image pixel). However, this code (in Chrome 29 on Mac) makes a blurry image. In Photoshop terms, it looks like it's using "Bicubic" resampling, instead of "Nearest Neighbour".

In a situation where it would be useful (eg. a retro game), Is it possible to produce a sharp upsized image, or do I need to have a seperate image file for each size of the image on the server?

回答1:

Simply turn off canvas' anti-aliasing for images - unfortunately this property is still vendor prefixed so here are the variations:

context.webkitImageSmoothingEnabled = false;
context.mozImageSmoothingEnabled = false;
context.imageSmoothingEnabled = false; /// future

then draw the image.

Optionally for older versions and browsers which hasn't implemented this yet, you can use CSS instead:

canvas {
    image-rendering: optimizeSpeed;             // Older versions of FF
    image-rendering: -moz-crisp-edges;          // FF 6.0+
    image-rendering: -webkit-optimize-contrast; // Webkit (non standard naming)
    image-rendering: -o-crisp-edges;            // OS X & Windows Opera (12.02+)
    image-rendering: crisp-edges;               // Possible future browsers.
    -ms-interpolation-mode: nearest-neighbor;   // IE (non standard naming)
}

ONLINE TEST HERE



回答2:

Check this fiddle: http://jsfiddle.net/yPFjg/

It loads the image into a canvas, then creates a resized copy and uses that as sprite.

With few modifications, you can implement an image loader that resizes images on the fly.

var ctx = document.getElementById('canvas1').getContext('2d');
var img = new Image();
var original = document.createElement("canvas");
var scaled = document.createElement("canvas");

img.onload = function() {
    var oc = original.getContext('2d');
    var sc = scaled.getContext('2d');
    oc.canvas.width = oc.canvas.height = 16;
    sc.canvas.width = sc.canvas.height = 32;
    oc.drawImage(this, 0, 0);    
    var od = oc.getImageData(0,0,16,16);
    var sd = sc.getImageData(0,0,32,32);
    for (var x=0; x<32; x++) {
        for (var y=0; y<32; y++) {
            for (var c=0; c<4; c++) {        
                // you can improve these calculations, I let them so for clarity        
                sd.data[(y*32+x)*4+c] = od.data[((y>>1)*16+(x>>1))*4+c];
            }
        }
    }
    sc.putImageData(sd, 0, 0);
    ctx.drawImage(scaled, 0, 0);    
}

img.src = document.getElementById('sprite').src;

Some notes about getImageData: it returns an object with an array. The array has a height*width*4 size. The color components are stored in RGBA order (red, green, blue, alpha, 8 bits each value).