I have a jpeg2000 image, img.jp2
on a file, and on a DataInputStream object imgobj
in my project, and want to show that image on a JFrame.
The old version jai_imageio-1.1.jar recommended here and the jj2000 library are both included.
I have tried:
j2kImageReader.setInput(new FileImageInputStream(new File(fileName)));
ImageReadParam imageReadParam =
j2kImageReader.getDefaultReadParam();
imageReadParam.setSourceRegion(new Rectangle(0, 0, 300, 300));
IIOImage image = j2kImageReader.readAll(0, imageReadParam);
// This type of images is difficult to handle,
// I just don't know what to do with IIOImage,
// ImageIcon doesn't accept that type in its constructor.
And this:
Image img = ImageIO.read(new File(fileName));
ImageIcon imgIcon = new ImageIcon(img);
JLabel label = new JLabel(imgIcon);
panel1.add(label);
panel1.repaint();
//Error: Can't read input file!. The panel is still empty
The option included in JMRTD is using two decoders, and no one of them accepts .jp2
:
NistDecoder dec=new NistDecoder();
WsqDecoder wdec=new WsqDecoder();
//using the last one, I tried: bitmp= wdec.decode(myDataInputStream);
//but with Error, Invalid pointer : 0!.
So the question is: what is the proper use of jj2000 or jai_imageio to read a jpeg2000 image from a file or a DataInputStream, and if it is possible, to show it on a simple panel on a JFrame?
Thank you for help.
EDIT
AS requested in comments, this is what I did:
//1
FaceImageInfo imgfn = fsinf.getFaceImageInfos().get(0);
BufferedImage bf=ImageIO.read(imgfn.getImageInputStream());
ImageIcon iconImg = new ImageIcon();
iconImg= new ImageIcon(bf);// if this fails try write it to a stream and read it back see //2
JLabel(iconImg, JLabel.CENTER);
//2
ByteArrayOutputStream baos=null;
try{
baos=new ByteArrayOutputStream();
ImageIO.write(bf, "jpg", baos);
}
finally{
try{
baos.close();
}
catch(Exception ex)
{
ex.printStackTrace();
}
}
try {
ByteArrayInputStream bais=new ByteArrayInputStream(baos.toByteArray());
bf2=ImageIO.read(bais) ;
iconImg= new ImageIcon(bf2);
JLabel(iconImg, JLabel.CENTER);
} catch (Exception e) {
e.printStackTrace();
}