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GetBoundingBox Method

GetBoundingBox Method

Gets the bounding box in ink space coordinates for either all of the strokes in an InkDisp object, an individual stroke, or a InkStrokes collection.

Declaration

[C++]

HRESULT GetBoundingBox (
    [in, optional, defaultvalue(IBBM_DEFAULT)] InkBoundingBoxMode BoundingBoxMode,
    [out, retval] IInkRectangle **BoundingBox
);

[Microsoft® Visual Basic® 6.0]

Public Function GetBoundingBox( _
  [boundingBoxMode As InkBoundingBoxMode = IBBM_Default] _
) As InkRectangle

Parameters

boundingBoxMode

[in, optional] Specifies the stroke characteristics to use to calculate the bounding box. For more details about the use of stroke characteristics to calculate a bounding box, see the BoundingBoxMode enumeration type.

The BoundingBoxMode parameter of the Ink::GetBoundingBox method has a default value of -1, which means that all characteristics of a stroke are used to specify the bounding box.

BoundingBox

[out, retval] Returns the rectangle that defines the bounding box of an InkDisp object, an IInkStrokeDisp object, or an InkStrokes collection.

Note: For an IInkStrokeDisp object, the returned bounding box is a copy of the strokes bounding box, so altering the returned bounding box does not affect the strokes location.

Return Value

HRESULT value Description
S_OK Success.
E_POINTER A parameter contained an invalid pointer.
E_INK_EXCEPTION An exception occurred inside the method.
E_UNEXPECTED Unexpected parameter or property type.
REGDB_CLASSNOTREG The InkRectangle object is not registered.

Remarks

When the bounding box is affected by the pen width, then this width is scaled appropriately for the InkRenderer's view transform. To do this, the pen width is multiplied by the square root of the determinant of the view transform.

Note: If you have not set the pen width explicitly, it is 53 by default. You must multiply the pen width by the square root of the determinant to yield the correct bounding box. The height and width of the bounding box are expanded by half this amount in each direction. For example, consider that the pen width is 53, the square root of the determinant is 50, and the bounding box is (0, 0, 1000, 1000). The pen width adjustment to the bounding box in each direction is calculated as (53 * 50) / 2, and the right and bottom sides are incremented by one. This results in a rendered bounding box of (-1325, -1325, 2326, 2326).

Example

[Visual Basic 6.0]

This Visual Basic 6.0 example gets the bounding box from an InkDisp object, using the IBBM_CurveFit flag to determine the bounds.

Dim theBoundingBox As InkRectangle
Set theBoundingBox = _
    theInkCollector.Ink.GetBoundingBox(IBBM_CurveFit)

Applies To