I am building a report in SSRS using images and I need to flip the image 180 degrees. The solution in this link How to rotate an image in SSRS is not clear.
Someone with a better explanation ?
Related
I have a background image sizing issue with a RDLC report. Does anyone know how to size a background for a RDLC report written in VS (vb.net C# responses are fine) desktop application, the report is running in local mode. When I initially created the report was fine text boxes appeared in the correct position but when I run it with a different resolution/and or Scale/ or export it's a mess. Lots of answers about the issue, but I want to know where exactly can I interoperate the page size and resize the image, custom class, custom code.
The image is an embedded image set as background on the body.
Any help would be greatly appreciated, the application is to manage Covid in a third world country and against the clock with delta.
RDLC Report background Image
Try setting the page size of the background image according to the paper size of your report. Example: If the paper size is 8.5x11 inches then the background image must have the size of 8.5x11 inches.
I am using pentaho report designer. I want to rotate text by 90 degree in label.How to do that if any body knows please help me out.
There is a property called rotation in style section where you can specify the rotation between -90 to 90 based on your requirement.
I'm using PS CS6 and have almost no experiences with Photoshop. I just need to get some sizes in pixels to create HTML.
Maybe a trivial question, but couldn't find any answer on Google and stackoverflow.
Problem:
The main image consists of different layers. Those layers contain an image. How do I get the size of those images in pixels? I could use the ruler but there has to be a much more simple way. Any idea?
Please assist me.
Try this
For Single image (sub-Image)
Select or click on Image than look under menu of cs6 you can show [Show Transform Control] check it and you can re-size your image in any size.
For Whole Image
PS>Image > Image Size > Give Wight and Height in Pixel so u can use that image as HTML file.
Hope It will be work
Regards
Dhruvil
for images or other objects on a layer show the info palette (F8) and select the object as if you wanted to resize it (eg click upper right corner). The dimensions of the image are then displayed in the info palette.
In PS CS6 simply make a rectangle and you have shown its size next to the cursor. Before this make sure that you have pixels as your main unit in preferences.
Good Luck.
I'm using a 40 x 40 sized image as a search result suggestion image in Windows 8 search. Only advice about the image format I can find is to have correct size for it (http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/windows/apps/Hh700542.aspx: "Windows will scale or crop smaller or larger images").
However, the correctly sized image blurs annoyingly. The same thing happens whether I use jpg or png. Original image looks fine, but the result suggestion in the search charm is very ugly, being still of same size! Is Windows converting the image somehow, and how could I get the image to stay crisp?
I haven't noticed blurring with photo-like images, but this image contains clear lines and areas which are vulnerable to any scaling etc.
Update Sep 24:
Here is the test image I used when trying to figure out the problem. I also created different scale versions, but in my case the 100% version was used (that's why the "100" marking) - as I supposed because the resulting image really is 40x40. As you can see, the resulting image (right) is of same size as original (left), but blurry.
it does not happen that often but it seems the right solution in this case was simply to wait ;) I haven't done anything new regarding result suggestion images in my solution and today I realized that the images became crisp. Probably fixed by any of the windows updates.
[Took a stab at answering what seems the related question mentioned in the comments, so I'm posting here as well.]
It sounds like this could be related to automatic scaling of the images. Windows will automatically scale up/down based on pixel density, and you can help things scale well by either using vector-based images or, for bitmap images, supplying scale-specific versions.
For example, to scale an image referenced in markup as "AppLogo.jpg", you'd include these images:
AppLogo.scale-100.jpg
AppLogo.scale-140.jpg
AppLogo.scale-180.jpg
You can also use folders, e.g. "\scale-140\AppLogo.jpg".
For search result images, the 100% image is the 40x40 pixel version, 140 is 56x56, and 180 is 72x72. Just reference the image as "AppLogo.jpg" and the appropriate version will be used automatically. (You can also detect scale with DisplayProperties.ResolutionScale and manually choose an image.)
Here's a couple of articles with more examples/details:
"Guidelines for scaling to pixel density"
"Quickstart: Using file or image resources"
There's also some scaling discussion in the forums (general, not specific to search) here and here.
I'm searching for a posibility to crop UIImages. I've found lots of examples via google how to do this, but I want to do a bit more than just croping the image.
It would be nice if the user can choose which area of the UIImage will be crop. In other languages, for example Javascript, there are many plugins to do that. I'm looking to find something like this:
http://odyniec.net/projects/imgareaselect/
Does anybody know if some similar project exists for objective-c? Thank you!
after days of searching I found out that there is no "plugin" which is similar to ImgAreaSelect. :-(
The best thing I found was this:
https://github.com/barrettj/BJImageCropper
It wasn't very hard to adapt this project to my needs: now I can choose a proportional area with min size. :-)
You could always make a black&white mask of this area and then mask the image (white area on mask will result in transparent area on masked image).
Link to nice tutorial on how to mask an image.
As an addition you could later calculate the miminum square frame that holds complete masked (cropped) image and crop the result - to get rid of excess transparent areas.