Uses a ChromaKey algorithm to select all pixels of a particular hue. SelectChromaKey uses the options in ChromaKeyOptions.
If the first overload is used KeyColor specifies the color of the background. With the second overload, the specified pixel is used as the key color.
Use Op = iespReplace to replace the existing selection, or iespAdd to append to the existing selection
A ChromaKey image contains a solid color block that is removed so that it can be applied to a background. E.g. in the following image the key color is neon green (R=0/G=254/B=0).
Note: ◼This is the programmatic equivalent of setting miSelectChromaKey in MouseInteractGeneral ◼A bitmap/non-vector selection is used. You can use IsPointInsideSelection to determine whether specific pixels are selected.
// Load a chroma key file, guess the chroma key color and select it ImageEnView1.IO.LoadFromFile( 'D:\Chroma.png' ); ImageEnView1.ChromaKeyOptions.KeyColor := clNone; ImageEnView1.SelectChromaKey();
// Select subject in image with green chroma-key background ImageEnView1.ChromaKeyOptions.KeyColor := clGreen; ImageEnView1.ChromaKeyOptions.Mode := iecSubject; ImageEnView1.ChromaKeyOptions.Saturation := 35; ImageEnView1.ChromaKeyOptions.Tolerance := 0.25; ImageEnView1.SelectChromaKey();