Is there any way to get a high resolution screen shot of a certain view in an activity.
I want to convert html content of my webview to PDF. For that I
Update: See Edit 3 for an answer to op's original question
There are two options:
Use a library to convert the HTML to PDF. This is by far the best option, since it will (probably) preserve text as vectors.
Get a high resolution render of the HTML and save it as a PNG (not PDF surely!).
For HTML to PDF, wkhtmltopdf looks like a good option, but it relies on Qt which you can't really use on Android. There are some other libraries but I doubt they do the PDF rendering very well.
For getting a high-res webview, you could try creating your own WebView
and calling onMeasure(...)
and onLayout(...)
and pass appropriate parameters so the view is really big. Then call onDraw(myOwnCanvas)
and the webview will draw itself to your canvas, which can be backed by a Bitmap
using Canvas.setBitmap()
.
You can probably copy the state into the new WebView
using something like
screenshotterWebview.onRestoreInstanceState(mWebView.onSaveInstanceState());
Orrr it may even be possible to use the same WebView
, just temporarily resize it to be large, onDraw()
it to your canvas, and resize it back again. That's getting very hacky though!
You might run into memory issues if you make it too big.
I thought of a third, exactly-what-you-want option, but it's kind of hardcore. You can create a custom Canvas
, that writes to a PDF. In fact, it is almost easy, because underlying Canvas
is Skia, which actually includes a PDF backend. Unfortunately you don't get access to it on Android, so you'll basically have to build your own copy of it on Android (there are instructions), and duplicate/override all the Canvas
methods to point to your Skia instead of Androids. Note that there is a tempting Picture.writeToStream()
method which serializes the Skia data, but unfortunately this format is not forwards or backwards compatible so if you use it your code will probably only work on a few versions of Android.
I'll update if/when I have fully working code.
Actually it is impossible to make your own "intercepting" Canvas
. I started doing it and went through the tedious process of serializing all function calls. A few you can't do because they are hidden, but those didn't look important. But right at the end I came to serializing Path
only to discover that it is write-only. That seems like a killer to me, so the only option is to interpret the result of Picture.writeToStream()
. Fortunately there are only two versions of that format in use, and they are nearly identical.
Bitmap
of a viewOk, it turns out just getting a high res bitmap of a view (which can be the entire app) is trivial. Here is how to get double resolution. Obviously all the bitmaps look a bit crap, but the text is rendered at full resolution:
View window = activity.getWindow().getDecorView()
Canvas bitmapCanvas = new Canvas();
Bitmap bitmap = Bitmap.createBitmap(window.getWidth()*2, window.getHeight()*2, Bitmap.Config.ARGB_8888);
bitmapCanvas.setBitmap(bitmap);
bitmapCanvas.scale(2.0f, 2.0f);
window.draw(bitmapCanvas);
bitmap.compress(Bitmap.CompressFormat.PNG, 0, myOutputStream);
Works like a charm. I've now given up on getting a PDF screenshot with vector text. It's certainly possible, but very difficult. Instead I am working on getting a high-res PSD where each draw operation is a separate layer, which should be much easier.
Woa this is getting a bit long, but success! I've generated an .xcf
(GIMP) and PDF where each layer is a different canvas drawing operation. It's not quite as fine-grained as I was expecting, but still, pretty useful!
Actually my code just outputs full-size PNGs and I used "Open as layers..." and "Autocrop layer" in GIMP to make these files, but of course you can do that in code if you like. I think I will turn this into a blog post.
Download the GIMP or Photoshop demo file (rendered at 3x resolution).
Sure, Use this:
Bitmap bitmap;
View v1 = MyView.getRootView();
v1.setDrawingCacheEnabled(true);
bitmap = Bitmap.createBitmap(v1.getDrawingCache());
v1.setDrawingCacheEnabled(false);
Here MyView is the View you need a screenshot of.
When you capture the view, just screen bound will capture ( due to control weight and android render pipeline ).
Capturing screenshot for converting to PDF is tricky way. I think two way is more reasonable solutions.
Solution #1
Write a parser ( it's simple ) to convert webview content ( that is HTML ) to iText format.
You can refer to this article for more information.
http://www.vogella.com/articles/JavaPDF/article.html
Also to write a parser you can use REGEX and provide your own methods like parseTable
, parseImage
, ...
Solution #2 Internet Required
Provide a URL ( or webservice ) to convert HTML to PDF using PHP or C# that has a lot of nice libraries. Next you can send download link to the Client ( Android Device ).
So you can also dynamically add some Tags, Banners, ... to the PDF from server side.
Screen Shot is nothing but picture of your device display which usually depend upon your phone absolute pixels, if your phone is 480x800 screen shot will be same and generally applicable for all scenarios.