Exporting High-Resolution Images in Processing



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In this post we’re going to look at two ways to export high-resolution versions of your artwork from Processing.

The first method we’re going to look at is to draw everything we draw on the screen onto an additional off-screen PGraphic that has been scaled to the size we want.

In the second approach, we’ll first generate a PDF of our artwork and then use command-line tools to generate a high-resolution PNG version.

NOTE: If you want to skip the details and start a new sketch with all this built in, you can just copy-paste this boilerplate code from over here on GitHub.

In order to create high-resolution images, we first need to make our sketch deterministic. That means we make sure that we can always recreate whatever is on the screen exactly the same way.

Creating Deterministic Sketches

The only unpredictable parts of a Processing sketch are calls to random() and noise() , as well as the use of time-related functions like millis() . The way to fix the first two is to simply use a known number as the seed for Processing’s (pseudo)random-number generator. We do this with the randomSeed() and noiseSeed() functions.

There is no easy way to mitigate the unpredictability of millis() so you cannot use it in your sketches if you want to use this technique.

Here is a basic sketch for generating a deterministic image.

int seed ; void setup () { size ( 500 , 500 ); seed = millis (); seededRender (); } void draw () { } void seededRender () { randomSeed ( seed ); noiseSeed ( seed ); render (); } void render () { /* Do your drawing in here */ }

Above, in setup() , we first pick some random initial number for the seed using millis() . Note that the seed itself can be chosen randomly, but to re-create an identical image, the same seed needs to be used. We therefore store it in the seed variable.

We then call the seededRender() function, which just sets the seeds using the randomSeed() and randomNoise() calls before calling a user-defined render() function. This is where we write all our drawing code.

Technique #1 - Draw to Off-Screen Buffer

The basic idea here is to be able to press a single key and have Processing save a high-resolution version of whatever is on screen.

Now that our sketch is deterministic and only dependent on a seed to recreate an image, here is a function that saves a high-resolution PNG image.

void saveHighRes ( int scaleFactor ) { PGraphics hires = createGraphics ( width * scaleFactor , height * scaleFactor , JAVA2D ); println ( "Generating high-resolution image..." ); beginRecord ( hires ); hires . scale ( scaleFactor ); seededRender (); endRecord (); hires . save ( seed + "-highres.png" ); println ( "Finished" ); }

The saveHighRes() function is where all the magic happens. It creates a PGraphic instance with scaled-out dimensions (based on our configured scale factor), and begins recording any drawing actions performed. However, before calling our seededRender() function, it first tells Processing to scale out any drawing actions that are performed using the scale() function. Finally, once our render() function has finished, it ends the recording and writes the image to disk.

I’ve successfully used this technique to generate images as large as 10,000x10,000 pixels. The limiting factor is the amount of RAM available to Processing, which can be increased to a certain degree in the preferences window.

Technique #2 - Generate a PDF

An alternative if you want to generate large images for which you do not have memory available, we can generate a PDF instead. The technique for generating is similar the recording technique shown above. Here is the function I use for this purpose.

import processing.pdf.* ; ... void savePDF () { println ( "Saving PDF image..." ); beginRecord ( PDF , seed + "-vector.pdf" ); seededRender (); endRecord (); println ( "Finished" ); }

This trick has been taken from the documentation for the PDF library in Processing. Just remember to add the import line at the top of your sketch or Processing will complain.

Putting It Together

I use a keypress handler to allow me to export to low-resolution, high-resolution, and vector versions. I also store the seed value in the filename itself so that I can recreate it later if needed. It looks like this:

/* * The keyPressed handler handles the following * -- If the key 's' (lower case) is pressed, then * it will save a low-resolution version of the * image into a file '<seed>-lowres.png'. * * -- If the key 'h' (lower case) is pressed, then * it will save a high-resolution version into * the file '<seed>-highres.png', scaled by an * amount set in the SCALE_FACTOR variable. * So if your screen width is 500 pixels, a * scale factor of 10 will generate a * high-resolution version that is 5000x5000px. * * -- If the key 'p' (lower case) is pressed, then * it will save a vector version as PDF into the * file '<seed>-vector.pdf', which is inherently * scalable to any resolution. * * -- If any other key is pressed, a new random * seed is generated and the render function * called again to generate a new artwork. */ void keyPressed () { if ( key == 's' ) { saveLowRes (); } else if ( key == 'h' ) { saveHighRes ( CONFIG_SCALE_FACTOR ); } else if ( key == 'p' ) { savePDF (); } else { seed = millis (); seededRender (); } }

If you want to start a new sketch with all this built in, you can just copy-paste this boilerplate code from over here on GitHub.

Converting a PDF to PNG

It’s annoying how information on doing something so easy is so difficult to find on the web so I’m adding this one additional piece of information here.

Once you have a PDF file, you might want to convert it to a PNG or other raster format. To do this, I use the pdftoppm command-line utility that is part of the Poppler library.

pdftoppm processing.pdf outputfilename -png -r 300

This converts the file processing.pdf and saves a new file outputfilename.png . The last argument describes how many pixels per inch should be generated, with 72 pixels making up 1 inch in a Processing sketch. So, a 720x720 pixel sketch would be 10x10 inches wide, and using a value of 300 with pdftoppm would result in a 3000x3000 pixel image.