** Important update, see below! **
I am creating a program that changes the pixels of a BufferedImage to a certain color when that pixel fulfills a set of conditions in Java. However, when I write the image to disk, the pixels that should be colored are instead black.
First I define the color, using RGB codes:
Color purple = new Color(82, 0, 99);
int PURPLE = purple.getRGB();
Then I read the image I want to alter from a File into a BufferedImage called "blank":
BufferedImage blank = ImageIO.read(new File("some path"));
Now, loop through the pixels, and when a pixel at location (x, y) matches a criteria, change its color to purple:
blank.setRGB(x, y, PURPLE);
Now, write "blank" to the disk.
File output = new File("some other path");
ImageIO.write(blankIn, "png", output); // try-catch blocks intentionally left out
The resulting file should be "blank" with some purple pixels, but the pixels in question are instead black. I know for a fact that the issue is with setRGB and NOT any import or export functions, because "blank" itself is a color image, and gets written to file as such. I read around and saw a lot of posts recommending that I use Graphics2D and to avoid setRGB, but with no discussion of pixel-by-pixel color changing.
I also tried direct bit manipulation, like this:
blank.setRGB(x, y, ((82 << 16) + (0 << 8) + 99));
I'm probably doing that wrong, but if I put it in correctly it wouldn't matter, because the pixels are getting set to transparent when I do this (regardless of what the numbers say, which is very strange, to say the least).
** When I try this:
blank.setRGB(x, y, Color.RED.getRGB());
My output file is grayscale, so that means setRGB is, in fact, modifying my picture in grayscale. I think this is actually a rather simple issue, but the solution eludes me.