On 2010-07-21 19:24, Andrew wrote:
Thanks for the reply.
That doesn't seem to work for me, it gives the image attached. I have
also tried this with other icon themes (GNOME, Tango) and the results
are still similiar.
Is this just a bug in GTK?
I can't be sure, but it looks like the image returned by render_icon
with size 'button' is 16-by-16 for you, whereas it's 20-by-20 for me. I
guess your system is configured differently. This means that sampling a
20-by-20 area in composite gets some pixels that are outside the area of
the icon. Try this for the general case:
small = widget.render_icon('gtk-ok', 'button')
w = small.get_width()
h = small.get_height()
large = gtk.gdk.Pixbuf('rgb', True, 8, 10 + w, 10 + h)
large.fill(0)
assert large.get_has_alpha()
assert small.get_has_alpha()
small.composite(large, 0, 0, w, h, 0, 0, 1, 1, 'nearest', 255)
small.composite(large, 5, 5, w, h, 5, 5, 1, 1, 'nearest', 255)
small.composite(large, 10, 10, w, h, 10, 10, 1, 1, 'nearest', 255)
large.save('test.png', 'png')
Personally I would consider the behaviour of composite when sampling an
area larger than the scaled source to be a minor bug. It can be worked
around pretty easily, but I can't imagine any situation where the
current behaviour would be useful. As you've demonstrated it can be
higher counter-intuitive.
--
Tim Evans
Applied Research Associates NZ
http://www.aranz.com/
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