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Flood Fill Algorithms in C# and GDI+

By , 4 Oct 2003
 

Sample Image - floodfill.jpg

Prerequisites

This article assumes that you have a basic understanding of:

  • Direct pixel access in GDI+
  • Pointers
  • I highly recommend reading all of the articles in Christian Graus's image processing series, but if you don't read them all, at least you should read the first one - it gives you the basic knowledge necessary for pixel manipulation in GDI+.

Introduction/Overview

GDI+ does not have built-in flood fill capabilities. This example shows you how to create three different flood-fill algorithms for GDI+. It expands on the typical flood fill implementation by allowing adjustable color tolerance, and optional 8-way (diagonal) branching.

The flood fill algorithms will not be as fast as they would be if they were written in assembler, but you most likely won't notice this in ordinary use, because they are still quite fast.

Background

There are two main types of flood fills. The most common is 4-direction flood fill. This type of flood fill starts from a single point and branches up, down, and to the right and left. The 8-direction flood fill is similar to the 4-direction, except that it also branches diagonally.

Sample screenshot

Figure 1: The 4-direction flood fill branches in 4 directions from each pixel, whereas the 8-direction flood fill branches in 8 directions from each pixel.

The algorithms

We will look at 3 different flood fill algorithms - linear, recursive, and queue.

Recursive

This is the most common algortihm, and simplest to implement. The recursive algorithm branches in all directions at once. This can (read: often will) lead to stack overflows in a managed environment.

Queue

The queue algorithm is similar to the recursive algorithm, except that it adds the points to be checked to a queue rather than calling them directly. The loop returns immediately to the main fill method, rather than calling itself recursively. It requires extra heap space for a queue, but it uses hardly any stack space.

The queue algorithm is by far the slowest algorithm, taking about twice as long as the others. This may be partly because of lack of optimizations in the .NET Queue class, but the queue method would be slower regardless of whether the Queue class was optimized.

Linear

The linear algorithm first finds the horizontal extent of the color on a given level, then it moves horizontally from left to right, initializing the fill loop upwards and downwards for each point along the way.

By handling vertical and horizontal checking separately, this algorithm consumes only half the stack space that the recursive algorithm uses, while avoiding the extra heap space needed for a queue. It is also just as fast as the recursive algorithm.

Needless to say, the linear algorithm is the best algorithm of the three covered here. I decided to cover the others because they would inevitably be brought up anyway if I didn't do it in the article. Anyway, it's nice to see some other kinds of techniques that could be used.

The demonstration program

The demo program allows you to open and save bitmap files, and flood-fill them. It allows you to change the fill color and color tolerance for the fill operation, and has a brief explanation of each algorithm. You can watch the fill operation in slow motion (helpful for understanding how the different algorithms work). You can also see how long the flood fill operation took.

The code

So as not to take up too much space, I am only showing a small part of the code - the method that starts the fill, the 4-way version of the linear algorithm, and the function that checks the pixels.

///<SUMMARY>initializes the FloodFill operation</SUMMARY>
public override void FloodFill(Bitmap bmp, Point pt)
{
    //timeGetTime() is used instead of the 
    //performance ctr, for Win98/ME compatibility
    int ctr=timeGetTime(); 
    
    //get the color's int value, and convert it from 
    //RGBA to BGRA format (as GDI+ uses BGRA)
    m_fillcolor=ColorTranslator.ToWin32(m_fillcolorcolor);
    m_fillcolor=BGRA(GetB(m_fillcolor),
        GetG(m_fillcolor),GetR(m_fillcolor),GetA(m_fillcolor));
    
    //get the bits
    BitmapData bmpData=bmp.LockBits(
            new Rectangle(0,0,bmp.Width,bmp.Height),
            ImageLockMode.ReadWrite,
            PixelFormat.Format32bppArgb);
    System.IntPtr Scan0 = bmpData.Scan0;
    
    unsafe
    {
        //resolve pointer
        byte * scan0=(byte *)(void *)Scan0;
        //get the starting color
        //[loc += Y offset + X offset]
        int loc=CoordsToIndex(pt.X,pt.Y,bmpData.Stride);
        int color= *((int*)(scan0+loc));
        
        //create the array of bools that indicates whether each pixel
        //has been checked.  
        //(Should be bitfield, but C# doesn't support bitfields.)
        PixelsChecked=new bool[bmpData.Width+1,bmpData.Height+1];
        
        //do the first call to the loop
        switch(m_FillStyle)
        {
            case FloodFillStyle.Linear :
                if(m_FillDiagonal)
                {
                        LinearFloodFill8(scan0,pt.X,pt.Y,
                            new Size(bmpData.Width,bmpData.Height),
                            bmpData.Stride,
                            (byte*)&color);
                }else{
                        LinearFloodFill4(scan0,pt.X,pt.Y,
                            new Size(bmpData.Width,bmpData.Height),
                            bmpData.Stride,
                            (byte*)&color);
                }
                break;
            case FloodFillStyle.Queue :
                QueueFloodFill(scan0,pt.X,pt.Y,
                    new Size(bmpData.Width,bmpData.Height),
                    bmpData.Stride,
                    (byte*)&color);
                break;
            case FloodFillStyle.Recursive :
                if(m_FillDiagonal)
                {
                        RecursiveFloodFill8(scan0,pt.X,pt.Y,
                            new Size(bmpData.Width,bmpData.Height),
                            bmpData.Stride,
                            (byte*)&color);
                }else{
                        RecursiveFloodFill4(scan0,pt.X,pt.Y,
                            new Size(bmpData.Width,bmpData.Height),
                            bmpData.Stride,
                            (byte*)&color);
                }
                break;
        }
    }
    
    bmp.UnlockBits(bmpData);
        
    m_TimeBenchmark=timeGetTime()-ctr;
        
}



unsafe void LinearFloodFill4( byte* scan0, int x, int y,Size bmpsize,
                                int stride, byte* startcolor)
{
        
    //offset the pointer to the point passed in
    int* p=(int*) (scan0+(CoordsToIndex(x,y, stride)));
    
    
    //FIND LEFT EDGE OF COLOR AREA
    int LFillLoc=x; //the location to check/fill on the left
    int* ptr=p; //the pointer to the current location
    while(true)
    {
        ptr[0]=m_fillcolor;      //fill with the color
        PixelsChecked[LFillLoc,y]=true;
        LFillLoc--;               //de-increment counter
        ptr-=1;                      //de-increment pointer
        if(LFillLoc<=0 || 
            !CheckPixel((byte*)ptr,startcolor) ||  
            (PixelsChecked[LFillLoc,y]))
                //exit loop if we're at edge of bitmap or color area
                break;
        
    }
    LFillLoc++;
    
    //FIND RIGHT EDGE OF COLOR AREA
    int RFillLoc=x; //the location to check/fill on the left
    ptr=p;
    while(true)
    {
        ptr[0]=m_fillcolor; //fill with the color
        PixelsChecked[RFillLoc,y]=true;
        RFillLoc++;          //increment counter
        ptr+=1;                 //increment pointer
        if(RFillLoc>=bmpsize.Width || 
            !CheckPixel((byte*)ptr,startcolor) ||  
            (PixelsChecked[RFillLoc,y]))
                //exit loop if we're at edge of bitmap or color area
                break;
        
    }
    RFillLoc--;
    
    
    //START THE LOOP UPWARDS AND DOWNWARDS            
    ptr=(int*)(scan0+CoordsToIndex(LFillLoc,y,stride));
    for(int i=LFillLoc;i<=RFillLoc;i++)
    {
      //START LOOP UPWARDS
      //if we're not above the top of the bitmap 
      //and the pixel above this one is within the color tolerance
      if(y>0 && 
       CheckPixel((byte*)(scan0+CoordsToIndex(i,y-1,stride)),startcolor) && 
       (!(PixelsChecked[i,y-1])))
           LinearFloodFill4(scan0, i,y-1,bmpsize,stride,startcolor);

      //START LOOP DOWNWARDS
      if(y<(bmpsize.Height-1) && 
      CheckPixel((byte*)(scan0+CoordsToIndex(i,y+1,stride)),startcolor) && 
      (!(PixelsChecked[i,y+1])))
           LinearFloodFill4(scan0, i,y+1,bmpsize,stride,startcolor);
      ptr+=1;
    }
        
}

///<SUMMARY>Sees if a pixel is within the color tolerance range.</SUMMARY>
//px - a pointer to the pixel to check
//startcolor - a pointer to the color of the pixel we started at
unsafe bool CheckPixel(byte* px, byte* startcolor)
{
    bool ret=true;
    for(byte i=0;i<3;i++)
            ret&= (px[i]>= (startcolor[i]-m_Tolerance[i])) &&
                    px[i] <= (startcolor[i]+m_Tolerance[i]);            
    return ret;
}

Undoubtedly there will be optimizations that I did not think of, and you are more than welcome to mention any that you find.

History

  • 10/05/03 - Posted the article

License

This article has no explicit license attached to it but may contain usage terms in the article text or the download files themselves. If in doubt please contact the author via the discussion board below.

A list of licenses authors might use can be found here

About the Author

J. Dunlap
Web Developer
United States United States
Member
My main goal as a developer is to improve the way software is designed, and how it interacts with the user. I like designing software best, but I also like coding and documentation. I especially like to work with user interfaces and graphics.
 
I have extensive knowledge of the .NET Framework, and like to delve into its internals. I specialize in working with VG.net and MyXaml. I also like to work with ASP.NET, AJAX, and DHTML.

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Comments and Discussions

 
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    Spacing  Noise  Layout  Per page   
GeneralI'm confused.....memberChristian Graus5 Jul '05 - 14:08 
Thanks for referencing me in your article, but I'm confused. I looked at your code, and all your functions are marked unsafe, but I don't see any direct pixel access, just calls to getpixel and setpixel ? Am I missing something ?

 
Christian Graus - Microsoft MVP - C++
GeneralRe: I'm confused.....memberJ. Dunlap16 Jul '05 - 18:59 
DemoFloodFiller uses GetPixel() and SetPixel(), so that the results are immediately visible on the screen (check out the "Slow" option, which lets you see the fill in realtime), whereas FloodFiller uses unsafe code for the sake of speed.
 
Since the time that I wrote this (it's been a while!), I found out about a new pixel manipulation method, which allows you to do fast pixel manipulation directly on the bitmap bits in GDI+, without unsafe code, and without the overhead of copying the bits to a buffer and back (as LockBits does). Kudos to Frank Hileman[^] for alerting me to this new method!
 
Since changes can be done in realtime directly on the bitmap, there would also be no need for separate classes with the new method - the only difference between the two speed settings would be that the one would update a small portion of the screen on each change (rather than the whole bitmap as currently!) and the other would do no screen updates until the end of the operation.
 
In my tests, the new method turned out to be over twice as fast as the "unsafe" (pointer-based) method. I did a couple of extra optimizations on the new code, and that may account for part of the speed increase, but the new method eliminates the overhead of copying the bits to and from a secondary buffer (as LockBits() does), and I'm guessing that's where a lot of the speed increase comes from. At some point I'm going to optimize the old code as well, so that I can determine how much of the speed increase is due to the new method.
 
I don't know when I'll get a chance to post an update to this article, with code that uses this new method, but I hope to do it not too long from now. I don't really want to rewrite the Queue or Recursive algorithms over again, as they aren't really useful in a practical sense - so I'm considering just rewriting the article from scratch, and omitting the other algorithms, other than a brief mention in the article. I think I could do much better now at the article anyhow. I am also considering writing an article on an island detection algorithm I've worked out, although that one may need to wait a while due to time constraints.
GeneralRe: I'm confused.....memberChristian Graus17 Jul '05 - 13:07 
Sure - I still don't get why the class that doesn't use unsafe methods is marked unsafe, but anyhow...
 
I sure would be interested to hear your method for direct pixel access though...

 
Christian Graus - Microsoft MVP - C++
GeneralRe: I'm confused.....memberJ. Dunlap17 Jul '05 - 14:59 
Christian Graus wrote:
Sure - I still don't get why the class that doesn't use unsafe methods is marked unsafe, but anyhow...
 
You're right - I just looked at the code and several of the methods of DemoFloodFiller are unnecessarily marked as "unsafe". Blush | :O Thanks for alerting me to that!
 

Christian Graus wrote:
I sure would be interested to hear your method for direct pixel access though...
 
I will finish up the article and code as soon as I get the chance. Smile | :) I've got a working, although not fully finished build already. I built it with VS2005, though, because I wanted to get the test code working as quickly and easily as possible, and that's much easier in VS2005 with all the IDE enhancements. However, many people don't have it yet, so I may have to downport it to VS2003 before I post the article.
GeneralRe: I'm confused.....memberJ. Dunlap15 Nov '06 - 17:03 
Hi Christian,
I've posted my pointerless pixel access method here[^].
regards,
Justin

 

GeneralRe: I'm confused.....staffChristian Graus15 Nov '06 - 17:11 
I've already seen and read it, it looks pretty cool Smile | :)
 

 
Christian Graus - C++ MVP

GeneralRe: I'm confused.....memberCoLithium11 Apr '06 - 16:22 
If it isn't too much of a bother, do you have a link describing this method? Or can you give me the gist of it? I'm very interest in Image Processing and if it halves the time... I'm impressed.
GeneralInitialize GDI Bitmap from HBITMAPmemberRenugopal15 Jun '05 - 20:26 
I want to know how to initialize GDI Bitmap from HBITMAP instead from file.
and i want to access bitmap address:
Sample code here:
 
Bitmap *bmpq11;
bmpq11=(Bitmap*) Bitmap::FromHBITMAP(hbmp,NULL);
 
BitmapData* bitmapData = new BitmapData;
Rect rect(0,0,FFwidth,FFheight);
bmpq11->LockBits(&rect,ImageLockModeWrite,PixelFormat32bppARGB,bitmapData);
 
void *Scan0 = bitmapData->Scan0;
byte * scan0=(byte *)(void *)Scan0;
 
here scan0 become emppty when initialize bitmap from HBTIMAP
if i give file name...scan0 has some value.
can you tell me problem in the above code.
the above code i modified to my MFC application using GDI...
it works well when i initialize by file name...
thanksSmile | :)
-Renu
 

Generalrecognitionmemberamir mortazavi26 Jan '05 - 18:34 
Hi dear
Can you recognition coordinate of circle in bitmap?
i searching a algorithm for do this task but i cann't find
I want search a sample picture in another picture .
for example I give a circle picture to program then program search this picture in another picture ,if find get me coordinate of circle picture.
Thank
GeneralFixed!memberjdunlap5 Oct '03 - 22:21 
I'm hosting the files on my hosting area until I manage to upload them to CP. The links are updated to point to the files on my hosting area.
 

"Going to church doesn't make you a Christian any more than going to the garage makes you a car." -- Laurence J. Peter

FLUID UI Toolkit | FloodFill in C# & GDI+







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