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AgeCommit message (Collapse)Author
2015-08-17GProof: Fix creating images from a selection of separationsRobin Watts
The code for this was broken; the wrong flag was being tested for selection number, and the values were being assembled per line rather than per pixel.
2015-08-17GProof: Fix a potential signed/unsigned problem in CMYK conversion.Robin Watts
Not sure if this is actually an issue at the moment, but it potentially could be.
2015-08-17Add fz_read_string function to read a null terminated stringRobin Watts
Use that within gproof. The existing use of fz_read_line was broken and was resulting in bad values for separations.
2015-08-17Add JNI interface to MuPDFCore to read/write separations on a page.Robin Watts
Get separation information out to the Java level.
2015-07-31Clean up fz_read_[u]intNN() functions and add big-endian versions.Tor Andersson
Use an endian-ness independent method of reading, instead of byte swapping.
2015-07-20Gproof doc handler; add ability to call gs via gsapi rather than exe.Robin Watts
2015-07-20Improve Grid fitting of images for .gproof files.Robin Watts
By default in MuPDF, when we render an axis aligned image, we 'gridfit' it. This is a heuristic used to improve the rendering of tiled images, and avoid the background showing through on the antialiased edges. The general algorithm we use is to expand any image outwards so that it completely covers any pixels that it touches any part of. This is 'safe' in that we never cause any pixels to not be covered that should otherwise be so, and is important when we have images that are aligned with (say) line art rectangles. For gproof files though, this gives nasty results - because we have multiple images tiled across the page all exactly abutting, in most cases the edges will not be on exact integer coordinates. This means we expand both images and 1 (destination) pixel is lost. This severely hurts the rendering (in particular on text based pages). We therefore introduce a new type of grid fitting, where we simply align the edges of images to the closest integer pixel. This is safe because we know that neighbouring images will be adjusted identically and edges will stay coincident. We enable/disable this behaviour through a new device flag, and make the gproof interpreter set/clear this flag when generating the page - thus normal rendering is unaffected. We *could* have just poked the dev->flags fields directly, but that would require magic in the display list device to check for them being set/unset and to poke the dev->flags fields on playback, so instead we introduce a new fz_render_flags function (that calls a device function) to set/unset flags. The other attraction of this is that if we ever have devices that 'filter', we can neatly handle passing flag changes on with those. Currently the display list implementation only copes with set/clear of the FZ_DEVFLAG_GRIDFIT_AS_TILED option. We only readily have 6 bits available to us, so we'll just extend this as required if we add new render flags.
2015-07-20Code to generate a GProof file from a currently opened document.Robin Watts
Given a document, generate a gproof file from it. This encapsulates the name of the file, the desired resolution for proofing, and the page dimensions of all the pages in the file. The idea is that an app will call this when it is asked to go into 'proofing' mode, and will reinvoke itself on this file. This gives the gprf document handler just enough information to fake up a document of n pages of the required sizes. Each page will then be autogenerated on demand.
2015-07-20First cut at gprf document handler.Robin Watts
Doesn't actually trigger generation from ghostscript, or load images from files generated by ghostscript yet.