[Lazarus] Fast drawing to canvas

Alejandro PĆ©rez alex at esolva.com
Thu Feb 9 10:13:16 CET 2012


My 2 cents.

Try to load in memory some png first and descompress them, when the 
buffer is full, launch other thread that only get data from the buffer 
and paint it while the first thread fills the buffer with more files, 
your bottleneck is always loading and decoding png files from disk.

Plase let us know your improvements,
Alex


El 09/02/2012 3:33, Brett Hunter escribiĆ³:
> I seem to remember some code that was in the NativeJPG examples that loaded
> the file into a TMemoryStream first, then did a LoadfromSteam instead of a
> LoadfromFile.  It might be that the loadfromfile (or in your case
> LoadFromRawImage) is slower than a
> TMemorysteam.loadfromfile+Image.LoadfromStream.  I admit I have never tried
> as I have never needed it, but it might help.  Please let us know if there
> is a speed improvement.
> Ciao
> brett
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: Darius Blaszyk [mailto:dhkblaszyk at zeelandnet.nl]
> Sent: Thursday, 9 February 2012 11:52 AM
> To: Lazarus mailing list
> Subject: Re: [Lazarus] Fast drawing to canvas
>
> Despite all the advices, none of the suggestions of drawing on a TPaintBox
> or creating a TCustomControl actually speed up the painting significantly.
> Therefore I did some profiling. It appears that loading a 40kb png file (50%
> HD) from a stream takes about 60msec another 30msec is used to paint the
> bitmap to screen. It all results in approx. 11fps which is actually pretty
> poor when you imagine a full HD loop will make the rate drop 2.5fps.
>
> As I see it now, I will need to lower the access time to the png's from
> disk. I will do a test with storing only raw pixel data instead. This means
> that there will be no conversion (or decompression in the case of PNG) when
> streaming from disk. However, although the minor part of the total loop, I
> was hoping to improve the painting speed significantly as well. Hopefully
> someone else has an idea that works.
> Is there a way to access even lower level functions from LCL? Like GDI and
> GTK2 functions to copy the pixel data as fast as possible?
>
> Appreciate the help from everybody so far.
>
> Regards, Darius
>
>
>
>
> On Feb 8, 2012, at 5:12 PM, Sven Barth wrote:
>
>> Am 08.02.2012 16:02, schrieb dhkblaszyk at zeelandnet.nl:
>>> I have played with Image.Update, .Invalidate and .Repaint, but none
>>> of them seem to work for me. Only when I put
>>> Application.ProcessMessages the painted images show on screen. See
>>> below for the testloop code. The images are streamed from a file
>>> cache. For 24 frames this seems overkill, but running at 24fps the
>>> memeory requirements quickly get very large!
>>>
>>> Image.Transparent is also set to false btw, which is default.
>>> Otherwise the drawing on the canvas is even messed up.
>>>
>>> Regards, Darius
>>>
>>> procedure TForm1.Button1Click(Sender: TObject); var
>>> s: TDateTime;
>>> i: Integer;
>>> begin
>>> s := now;
>>> for i := 1 to 24 do
>>> begin
>>> if filecache_get_from_cache(i, png) then begin
>>> Image1.Picture.Bitmap.LoadFromRawImage(png.RawImage, False);
>>> Application.ProcessMessages; end; end;
>>>
>>> ShowMessage(FloatToStr(24 / ((now - s) * 24 * 3600))) end;
>> Here it is clear that you need to use Application.ProcessMessages, because
> "LoadFromRawImage" will only tell the control that it needs to repaint
> itself, but does not execute this repainting (this is done in
> Application.ProcessMessages). In the example you posted in the beginning the
> call to Application.ProcessMessages is located inside the OnPaint handler of
> the Image which is - in my opinion - not good. Maybe also the loading of the
> image inside the OnPaint handler is not good...
>> Maybe you should try - like Felipe suggested - something else than TImage.
> Try for example TPaintBox in combination with the Application.OnIdle event:
>> procedure TForm1.ApplicationOnIdle(aSender: TObject; var aDone:
>> Boolean); begin  LoadNextImageFromCache; // this will load the next
>> image into some private variable of the form (let's call it fImage).
>> [this is based on your filecache_get_from_cache any you'll need to
>> write it of course ;) ]  PaintBox1.Invalidate;  aDone := False; //
> important!
>> end;
>>
>> procedure TForm1.PaintBox1Paint(aSender: TObject); begin
>> PaintBox1.Canvas.Draw(fImage); // or however you'll get the content of
>> the fImage onto the canvas of the PaintBox end;
>>
>> Note: Don't forget to assign your ApplicationOnIdle to Application.OnIdle
> or use the ApplicationProperties component located in the Additional tab.
>> Regards,
>> Sven
>>
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