Java™ Platform
Standard Ed. 7

Package javax.imageio

The main package of the Java Image I/O API.

See: Description

Package javax.imageio Description

The main package of the Java Image I/O API.

Many common image I/O operations may be performed using the static methods of the ImageIO class.

This package contains the basic classes and interfaces for describing the contents of image files, including metadata and thumbnails (IIOImage); for controlling the image reading process (ImageReader, ImageReadParam, and ImageTypeSpecifier) and image writing process (ImageWriter and ImageWriteParam); for performing transcoding between formats (ImageTranscoder), and for reporting errors (IIOException).

All implementations of javax.imageio provide the following standard image format plug-ins:

  Reading Writing Notes Metadata
JPEG yes yes none JPEG metadata format
PNG yes yes none PNG metadata format
BMP yes yes none BMP metadata format
WBMP yes yes none WBMP metadata format
GIF yes yes GIF plug-in notes GIF metadata format



Standard Plug-in Notes

Standard plug-in for GIF image format

ImageIO provides ImageReader and ImageWriter plug-ins for the Graphics Interchange Format (GIF) image format. These are the "standard" GIF plug-ins, meaning those that are included in the JRE, as distinct from those included in standard extensions, or 3rd party plug-ins. The following notes and metadata specification apply to the standard plug-ins.

Writing GIF images

The GIF image writer plug-in guarantees lossless writing for images which meet the following requirements:

By default the GIF writer plug-in creates version "89a" images. This can be changed to "87a" by explicitly setting the version in the stream metadata (see GIF Stream Metadata Format Specification).

The GIF writer plug-in supports the creation of animated GIF images through the standard sequence writing methods defined in the ImageWriter class.

A global color table is written to the output stream if one of the following conditions is met:

In the first case the global color table in the stream metadata is used, in the second the local color table in the image metadata is used, and in the third a global color table is created from the ColorModel or SampleModel of the (first) image.

A local color table is written to the output stream only if image metadata containing a LocalColorTable element is supplied to the writer, or no image metadata is supplied to the writer and the local color table which would be generated from the image itself is not equal to the global color table.

A Graphic Control Extension block is written to the output stream only if image metadata containing a GraphicControlExtension element is supplied to the writer, or no image metadata is supplied and the local color table generated from the image requires a transparent index. Application, Plain Text, and Comment Extension blocks are written only if they are supplied to the writer via image metadata.

The writing of interlaced images can be controlled by the progressive mode of the provided ImageWriteParam instance. If progressive mode is MODE_DISABLED then a non-interlaced image will be written. If progressive mode is MODE_DEFAULT then an interlaced image will be written. If progressive mode is MODE_COPY_FROM_METADATA, then the metadata setting is used (if it is provided, otherwise an interlaced image will be written).

The GIF image writer plug-in supports setting output stream metadata from metadata supplied to the writer in either the native GIF stream metadata format javax_imageio_gif_stream_1.0 or the standard metadata format javax_imageio_1.0, and setting output image metadata from metadata supplied to the writer in either the native GIF image metadata format javax_imageio_gif_image_1.0 or the standard metadata format javax_imageio_1.0. The mapping of standard metadata format to the GIF native stream and image metadata formats is given in the tables here .

Since:
1.4
Java™ Platform
Standard Ed. 7

Submit a bug or feature
For further API reference and developer documentation, see Java SE Documentation. That documentation contains more detailed, developer-targeted descriptions, with conceptual overviews, definitions of terms, workarounds, and working code examples.
Copyright © 1993, 2015, Oracle and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved.