nuttx-apps/tools
Petro Karashchenko 2498be1f40 romfsimg: add attribute to set minimum 4 bytes aignment for romfs image data
Signed-off-by: Petro Karashchenko <petro.karashchenko@gmail.com>
2022-01-28 00:02:45 +08:00
..
bitmap_converter.py Remove unneeded semicolons and parentheses from Python files 2020-12-12 19:20:38 +01:00
check-hash.sh tools: update licenses to Apache 2021-06-10 08:49:24 -05:00
mkimport.sh tools: update licenses to Apache 2021-06-10 08:49:24 -05:00
mkkconfig.bat tools: update licenses to Apache 2021-06-10 08:49:24 -05:00
mkkconfig.sh tools: update licenses to Apache 2021-06-10 08:49:24 -05:00
mkromfsimg.sh romfsimg: add attribute to set minimum 4 bytes aignment for romfs image data 2022-01-28 00:02:45 +08:00
mksymtab.sh tools/mksymtab.sh: Fix issue to generate symtab_apps.c for MSYS 2021-10-05 06:23:29 -07:00
README.md Rewritten READMEs to Markdown 2020-07-25 01:01:51 -07:00

Tools

NxWidgets bitmap_converter.py

This script converts from any image type supported by Python imaging library to the RLE-encoded format used by NxWidgets.

RLE (Run Length Length) is a very simply encoding that compress quite well with certain kinds of images: Images that that have many pixels of the same color adjacent on a row (like simple graphics). It does not work well with photographic images.

But even simple graphics may not encode compactly if, for example, they have been resized. Resizing an image can create hundreds of unique colors that may differ by only a bit or two in the RGB representation. This color smear is the result of pixel interpolation (and might be eliminated if your graphics software supports resizing via pixel replication instead of interpolation).

When a simple graphics image does not encode well, the symptom is that the resulting RLE data structures are quite large. The palette structure, in particular, may have hundreds of colors in it. There is a way to fix the graphic image in this case. Here is what I do (in fact, I do this on all images prior to conversion just to be certain):

  • Open the original image in GIMP.
  • Select the option to select the number of colors in the image.
  • Pick the smallest number of colors that will represent the image faithfully. For most simple graphic images this might be as few as 6 or 8 colors.
  • Save the image as PNG or other lossless format (NOT jpeg).
  • Then generate the image.