The rectangle in your example appears to be a frame representing the changed portion of the image sequence, starting from 1. Open the file in Gimp to see.
Addendum: It looks like a feature intended to optimize rendering. At a guess, I'd say you could rely on the bounds of image number getMinIndex()
; later frames appear to be subsumed in the first.
Addendum:
is there a way to get the full pixel data with the normal image and changes?
Assuming known geometry, you should be able to combine the first image and any later one in a BufferedImage
, as shown here.
Code:
import java.awt.image.BufferedImage;
import java.io.IOException;
import java.net.URL;
import javax.imageio.ImageIO;
import javax.imageio.ImageReader;
public class GifBounds {
/** @see https://stackoverflow.com/questions/5688104 */
public static void main(String[] args) throws IOException {
search(new URL("http://i55.tinypic.com/263veb9.gif"));
}
public static void search(URL url) throws IOException {
try {
ImageReader reader = ImageIO.getImageReadersBySuffix("gif").next();
reader.setInput(ImageIO.createImageInputStream(url.openStream()));
int i = reader.getMinIndex();
while (true) {
BufferedImage bi = reader.read(i++);
System.out.println(i
+ ": " + bi.getWidth()
+ ", " + bi.getHeight());
}
} catch (IndexOutOfBoundsException e) {
// ignored
}
}
}
Console:
1: 200, 220
2: 79, 95
3: 77, 94
4: 78, 95
5: 79, 95
6: 77, 94
7: 78, 95
8: 79, 95
9: 77, 94
10: 180, 205
11: 97, 111
12: 173, 200
13: 174, 155
14: 174, 155
15: 174, 155
16: 174, 155
17: 174, 155
18: 174, 155
19: 174, 155
20: 167, 200
21: 97, 111
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