In ImageJ 1.38x, the behavior of the magnifying glass appears to be
inconsistent. On occasion, using it without the shift key down will make the image enlarge and the window grow larger. However, on other occasions, using it will zoom in on the image but not increase the size of the window. If the latter happens and I try again with the shift key down, nothing happens--the magnifying glass has no effect at all. Other behavior seems normal; right-clicking will make the window grow smaller as it zooms out. Anyone else seen this? I'm using ImageJ under Windows XP SP2 and Java 1.5.0_09. Thanks-- Martin -- Martin Wessendorf, Ph.D. office: (612) 626-0145 Assoc Prof, Dept Neuroscience lab: (612) 624-2991 University of Minnesota Preferred FAX: (612) 624-8118 6-145 Jackson Hall, 321 Church St. SE Dept Fax: (612) 626-5009 Minneapolis, MN 55455 E-mail: martinw[at]med.umn.edu |
The magnifying glass tool is obsolete. It is much more efficient to
press "+" to zoom in and "-" to zoom out. ImageJ will make the window larger if there is room on the screen. Hold down the shift key and press "+" to zoom in without enlarging the window. To scroll the image, hold the space bar down and drag. -wayne On Dec 10, 2007, at 4:48 PM, Martin Wessendorf wrote: > In ImageJ 1.38x, the behavior of the magnifying glass appears to be > inconsistent. On occasion, using it without the shift key down will > make the image enlarge and the window grow larger. However, on other > occasions, using it will zoom in on the image but not increase the > size of the window. If the latter happens and I try again with the > shift key down, nothing happens--the magnifying glass has no effect at > all. Other behavior seems normal; right-clicking will make the window > grow smaller as it zooms out. > > Anyone else seen this? I'm using ImageJ under Windows XP SP2 and Java > 1.5.0_09. > > Thanks-- > > Martin > -- > Martin Wessendorf, Ph.D. office: (612) 626-0145 > Assoc Prof, Dept Neuroscience lab: (612) 624-2991 > University of Minnesota Preferred FAX: (612) 624-8118 > 6-145 Jackson Hall, 321 Church St. SE Dept Fax: (612) 626-5009 > Minneapolis, MN 55455 E-mail: martinw[at]med.umn.edu > |
I get the same behavior either way. The window will become smaller but
not larger, despite there being plenty of room. However, if I zoom in and manually make the window larger, it will subsequently zoom out to that size window--but for that image only. Martin Wayne Rasband wrote: > The magnifying glass tool is obsolete. It is much more efficient to > press "+" to zoom in and "-" to zoom out. ImageJ will make the window > larger if there is room on the screen. Hold down the shift key and press > "+" to zoom in without enlarging the window. To scroll the image, hold > the space bar down and drag. > > -wayne > > On Dec 10, 2007, at 4:48 PM, Martin Wessendorf wrote: > >> In ImageJ 1.38x, the behavior of the magnifying glass appears to be >> inconsistent. On occasion, using it without the shift key down will >> make the image enlarge and the window grow larger. However, on other >> occasions, using it will zoom in on the image but not increase the >> size of the window. If the latter happens and I try again with the >> shift key down, nothing happens--the magnifying glass has no effect at >> all. Other behavior seems normal; right-clicking will make the window >> grow smaller as it zooms out. >> >> Anyone else seen this? I'm using ImageJ under Windows XP SP2 and Java >> 1.5.0_09. >> >> Thanks-- >> >> Martin >> -- >> Martin Wessendorf, Ph.D. office: (612) 626-0145 >> Assoc Prof, Dept Neuroscience lab: (612) 624-2991 >> University of Minnesota Preferred FAX: (612) 624-8118 >> 6-145 Jackson Hall, 321 Church St. SE Dept Fax: (612) 626-5009 >> Minneapolis, MN 55455 E-mail: martinw[at]med.umn.edu >> > > -- Martin Wessendorf, Ph.D. office: (612) 626-0145 Assoc Prof, Dept Neuroscience lab: (612) 624-2991 University of Minnesota Preferred FAX: (612) 624-8118 6-145 Jackson Hall, 321 Church St. SE Dept Fax: (612) 626-5009 Minneapolis, MN 55455 E-mail: martinw[at]med.umn.edu |
On Monday 10 December 2007 23:02:42 Martin Wessendorf wrote:
> I get the same behavior either way. The window will become smaller but > not larger, despite there being plenty of room. However, if I zoom in > and manually make the window larger, it will subsequently zoom out to > that size window--but for that image only. > Works as Wayne suggests in my setup. 1.38x is not the latest version of IJ, have you tried updating to the latest ij.jar and see if the behaviour you mention is still there? http://imagejdocu.tudor.lu/imagej-documentation-wiki/faq/how-do-i-update-imagej Cheers, G. |
In reply to this post by Wayne Rasband
Shift-zooming works fine with the num-pad on my desktop-keyboard, but
leaving out the num-pad (as on Laptops) the shift-plus does not work on my German keyboard. Probably ImageJ gets a "*" instead of a "shift-+". I liked the possiblity to "shift-mouseclick", where you don't have to get your hand off the mouse to zoom and keep the window the same size. Joachim Wayne Rasband schrieb: > The magnifying glass tool is obsolete. It is much more efficient to > press "+" to zoom in and "-" to zoom out. ImageJ will make the window > larger if there is room on the screen. Hold down the shift key and > press "+" to zoom in without enlarging the window. To scroll the > image, hold the space bar down and drag. > > -wayne > > On Dec 10, 2007, at 4:48 PM, Martin Wessendorf wrote: > >> In ImageJ 1.38x, the behavior of the magnifying glass appears to be >> inconsistent. On occasion, using it without the shift key down will >> make the image enlarge and the window grow larger. However, on other >> occasions, using it will zoom in on the image but not increase the >> size of the window. If the latter happens and I try again with the >> shift key down, nothing happens--the magnifying glass has no effect >> at all. Other behavior seems normal; right-clicking will make the >> window grow smaller as it zooms out. >> >> Anyone else seen this? I'm using ImageJ under Windows XP SP2 and >> Java 1.5.0_09. >> >> Thanks-- >> >> Martin >> -- >> Martin Wessendorf, Ph.D. office: (612) 626-0145 >> Assoc Prof, Dept Neuroscience lab: (612) 624-2991 >> University of Minnesota Preferred FAX: (612) 624-8118 >> 6-145 Jackson Hall, 321 Church St. SE Dept Fax: (612) 626-5009 >> Minneapolis, MN 55455 E-mail: martinw[at]med.umn.edu >> -- ----------------------------------------------- Dr. Joachim Walter TILL I.D. GmbH c\o BioImaging Zentrum Großhaderner Str. 2 D-82152 Martinsried Tel.: +49-89-2180-74189 Fax: +49-89-2180-9974189 Geschäftsführer: Dr. Rainer Uhl HRB 129399 Amtsgericht München USt.-IdNr. DE 205045721 |
In reply to this post by Wayne Rasband
Hi there,
I seem to remember to have seen this strange inconsistent behaviour too in some very recent versions of IJ, however, cannot duplicate it in the moment ;-((! I´m just struggling with a somewhat related problem when trying to programmatically zoom a window, as already described by Tony Shepherd: The problem is I can change the canvas but not the window. If I go: imp.getWindow.getCanvas.setMagnification(2.0); imp.updateAndDraw(); ( ... OR imp.updateAndRepaintWindow();) then the magnified canvas is displayed inside a 'normal sized' window, i.e. you just see the top-left portion of the bigger image and you have to drag the window from the bottom right corner to see the rest of it. Repeatedly calling zoomIn works, though! James Norman described a workaround that relies on calling setDrawingSize from an overriden ImageCanvas IIRC, (does not seem to work if you simply call it from the plugin code), is there a more cleaner way? Mit freundlichen Grüßen / Best regards Joachim Wesner Projektleiter Optik Technologiesysteme Ernst Leitz Strasse 17-37 | 35578 Wetzlar (Germany) Tel. +49 6441 29 2611 | Fax +49 6441 29 2700 ____________________________________________ Leica Microsystems CMS GmbH | GmbH mit Sitz in Wetzlar | Amtsgericht Wetzlar HRB 2432 Geschäftsführer: Dr. Martin Haase | Colin Davis | Dr. Wolf-Otto Reuter Wayne Rasband <[hidden email]> Gesendet von: An ImageJ Interest [hidden email] Group Kopie <[hidden email]. GOV> Thema Re: magnifying glass in 1.38x 10.12.2007 23:06 Bitte antworten an ImageJ Interest Group <[hidden email]. GOV> The magnifying glass tool is obsolete. It is much more efficient to press "+" to zoom in and "-" to zoom out. ImageJ will make the window larger if there is room on the screen. Hold down the shift key and press "+" to zoom in without enlarging the window. To scroll the image, hold the space bar down and drag. -wayne On Dec 10, 2007, at 4:48 PM, Martin Wessendorf wrote: > In ImageJ 1.38x, the behavior of the magnifying glass appears to be > inconsistent. On occasion, using it without the shift key down will > make the image enlarge and the window grow larger. However, on other > occasions, using it will zoom in on the image but not increase the > size of the window. If the latter happens and I try again with the > shift key down, nothing happens--the magnifying glass has no effect at > all. Other behavior seems normal; right-clicking will make the window > grow smaller as it zooms out. > > Anyone else seen this? I'm using ImageJ under Windows XP SP2 and Java > 1.5.0_09. > > Thanks-- > > Martin > -- > Martin Wessendorf, Ph.D. office: (612) 626-0145 > Assoc Prof, Dept Neuroscience lab: (612) 624-2991 > University of Minnesota Preferred FAX: (612) 624-8118 > 6-145 Jackson Hall, 321 Church St. SE Dept Fax: (612) 626-5009 > Minneapolis, MN 55455 E-mail: martinw[at]med.umn.edu > ______________________________________________________________________ This email has been scanned by the MessageLabs Email Security System. For more information please visit http://www.messagelabs.com/email ______________________________________________________________________ |
In reply to this post by Joachim Walter
Hi Martin and others,
on my ImageJ 1.39k (Mac OSX) the magnifying glass behaves exactly like the "+" and "-" keys for zooming. With both methods of zooming, there is a feature that might make it look inconsistent at the first glance: When zooming in, ImageJ always extends the image to the bottom and right, keeping the top left at the original position. The window is enlarged only if there is enough space on the screen for the enlarged window (current window size times the zoom factor, leaving some extra space near the borders). Otherwise, the window size remains fixed. So an image well below half screen size will always get a larger window by zooming in if it is placed at top left. It won't get a larger window if placed near the bottom or right borders of the screen. Maybe this was the reason for the seemingly inconsistent behavior? Michael ________________________________________________________________ On 11 Dec 2007, at 10:15, Joachim Walter wrote: > In ImageJ 1.38x, the behavior of the magnifying glass appears to be > inconsistent. On occasion, using it without the shift key down > will make the image enlarge and the window grow larger. However, > on other occasions, using it will zoom in on the image but not > increase the size of the window. If the latter happens and I try > again with the shift key down, nothing happens--the magnifying > glass has no effect at all. Other behavior seems normal; right- > clicking will make the window grow smaller as it zooms out. > > Anyone else seen this? I'm using ImageJ under Windows XP SP2 and > Java 1.5.0_09. > > Thanks-- > > Martin |
Michael--
That was it exactly. Amidst all the inconsistent behavior, what I missed was the fact that I was moving the window. As a result, sometimes it seemed to work appropriately and sometimes it didn't. Thanks! Martin Michael Schmid wrote: > Hi Martin and others, > > on my ImageJ 1.39k (Mac OSX) the magnifying glass behaves > exactly like the "+" and "-" keys for zooming. > > With both methods of zooming, there is a feature that might > make it look inconsistent at the first glance: > > When zooming in, ImageJ always extends the image to the bottom > and right, keeping the top left at the original position. The > window is enlarged only if there is enough space on the screen > for the enlarged window (current window size times the zoom > factor, leaving some extra space near the borders). > Otherwise, the window size remains fixed. > > So an image well below half screen size will always get a larger > window by zooming in if it is placed at top left. > It won't get a larger window if placed near the bottom or right > borders of the screen. > > Maybe this was the reason for the seemingly inconsistent > behavior? > > Michael > ________________________________________________________________ > > On 11 Dec 2007, at 10:15, Joachim Walter wrote: > >> In ImageJ 1.38x, the behavior of the magnifying glass appears to be >> inconsistent. On occasion, using it without the shift key down will >> make the image enlarge and the window grow larger. However, on other >> occasions, using it will zoom in on the image but not increase the >> size of the window. If the latter happens and I try again with the >> shift key down, nothing happens--the magnifying glass has no effect at >> all. Other behavior seems normal; right-clicking will make the window >> grow smaller as it zooms out. >> >> Anyone else seen this? I'm using ImageJ under Windows XP SP2 and Java >> 1.5.0_09. >> >> Thanks-- >> >> Martin > > -- Martin Wessendorf, Ph.D. office: (612) 626-0145 Assoc Prof, Dept Neuroscience lab: (612) 624-2991 University of Minnesota Preferred FAX: (612) 624-8118 6-145 Jackson Hall, 321 Church St. SE Dept Fax: (612) 626-5009 Minneapolis, MN 55455 E-mail: martinw[at]med.umn.edu |
There is at least one reason to use the magnifying glass : with the
SyncWindows plugin from Joachim Walter, using the tool magnifies all the synchronized windows, whereas using "+" or "-" magnifies only the active window (the one that is actually clicked). Wether it is an inconsistency of the plugin or a feature is questionnable, though. On Dec 11, 2007 7:50 PM, Martin Wessendorf <[hidden email]> wrote: > Michael-- > > That was it exactly. Amidst all the inconsistent behavior, what I > missed was the fact that I was moving the window. As a result, > sometimes it seemed to work appropriately and sometimes it didn't. > > Thanks! > > Martin > > Michael Schmid wrote: > > Hi Martin and others, > > > > on my ImageJ 1.39k (Mac OSX) the magnifying glass behaves > > exactly like the "+" and "-" keys for zooming. > > > > With both methods of zooming, there is a feature that might > > make it look inconsistent at the first glance: > > > > When zooming in, ImageJ always extends the image to the bottom > > and right, keeping the top left at the original position. The > > window is enlarged only if there is enough space on the screen > > for the enlarged window (current window size times the zoom > > factor, leaving some extra space near the borders). > > Otherwise, the window size remains fixed. > > > > So an image well below half screen size will always get a larger > > window by zooming in if it is placed at top left. > > It won't get a larger window if placed near the bottom or right > > borders of the screen. > > > > Maybe this was the reason for the seemingly inconsistent > > behavior? > > > > Michael > > ________________________________________________________________ > > > > On 11 Dec 2007, at 10:15, Joachim Walter wrote: > > > >> In ImageJ 1.38x, the behavior of the magnifying glass appears to be > >> inconsistent. On occasion, using it without the shift key down will > >> make the image enlarge and the window grow larger. However, on other > >> occasions, using it will zoom in on the image but not increase the > >> size of the window. If the latter happens and I try again with the > >> shift key down, nothing happens--the magnifying glass has no effect at > >> all. Other behavior seems normal; right-clicking will make the window > >> grow smaller as it zooms out. > >> > >> Anyone else seen this? I'm using ImageJ under Windows XP SP2 and Java > >> 1.5.0_09. > >> > >> Thanks-- > >> > >> Martin > > > > > > -- > Martin Wessendorf, Ph.D. office: (612) 626-0145 > Assoc Prof, Dept Neuroscience lab: (612) 624-2991 > University of Minnesota Preferred FAX: (612) 624-8118 > 6-145 Jackson Hall, 321 Church St. SE Dept Fax: (612) 626-5009 > Minneapolis, MN 55455 E-mail: martinw[at]med.umn.edu > |
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