Question

I would like to export the image in my JPanel to a vector graphics file so it can be edited and printed at a higher-than-screen resolution. Essentially I want its paint() function to be called with a destination Graphics that saves the drawing commands into a vector graphic file.

What is a good, simple way to do this? What libraries are recommended? Which vector format would be best, and why?

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Solution

Have a look at The Java EPS Graphics2D package.

Many Java programs use Graphics2D to draw stuff on the screen, and while it is easy to save the output as a png or jpeg file, it is a little harder to export it as an EPS for including in a document or paper.

This package makes the whole process extremely easy, because you can use the EpsGraphics2D object as if it's a Graphics2D object. The only difference is that all of the implemented methods create EPS output, which means the diagrams you draw can be resized without leading to any of the jagged edges you may see when resizing pixel-based images, such as JEPG and PNG files.

OTHER TIPS

Apache Batik will let you paint to a specialised implementation of a Graphics2D object and then export as an scalable vector graphics (.svg) file. You can then view/process/print it using an SVG-enabled browser (Firefox will handle it nativly, ISTR, IE and others can use plugins).

See the SVGGraphics2D object (process documented here)

The Java EPS mentioned by Pierre looks good, but if it isn't you might also like to look at FreeHEP Vector Graphics. Written to allow Java reuse in the High Energy Physics field it includes a vector graphics package, done through an implementation of Graphics2D. We've used it to export EPS very successfull for a number of years.

I can recommend the VectorGraphics2D library (LGPL). Although it does not support all the features of Graphics2D, I used it successfully for my project. It provides implementations of java.awt.Graphics2D for various vector file formats. It simply exports all paint operations to EPS, SVG, or PDF files.

Additional libraries for people with the same requirement:

Both of these GPLv3 and well tested via extensive usage in JFreeChart and Orson Charts.

FreeHEP seems to work quite well although it does not appear to be maintained anymore and its bug and forum pages are gone. With just a handful of lines you get a popup dialog that can save any component to a variety of scalable and regular image formats. We have some challenging images, using alpha channel, rotated text, areas bounded by curves, and they saved perfectly, much better with with VectorGraphics2D.

The only problem I've seen so far is in jpeg save, which comes out black for all my images. This isn't very important for us given that png works, plus all the vector modes, but I'm sure it would be an issue for some.

I had to add exactly this much code to save in all these modes:

public static void showImage(Component comp) 
{
    try
    {
        ExportDialog export = new ExportDialog();
        export.showExportDialog( null, "Export view as ...", comp, "export" );
        System.err.println("Image save complete");

    }
    catch(Exception e)
    {
        e.printStackTrace();
    }
}

There are a bunch of library jars that must be added as well.

this is basically not possible directly, as the low level java api works in terms of raster (pixels) and is never stored in vector format. (Check the API of java.awt.Graphics to see what I mean).

there are some general purpose program that convert raster to vector formats, this is one I found on a quick search: http://autotrace.sourceforge.net/index.html

so, using such a program you can divide your problem into two smaller problems:

  1. convert your JPanel into a bitmap or file (http://www.jguru.com/faq/view.jsp?EID=242020)
  2. run autotrace on the file.
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