Palette Properties
The Palette Properties dialog is used to
view and change the properties of
image palette used by the
Image Window. The palette can be changed for that
window or the changes can be made permanent. You can also create
new palettes and delete those you no longer need. The
Import Palette and
Export Palette commands in the View > Palette menu are used to move palettes
between Mira and Palette files (such as the
collection of extra palettes in thePalettes folder (see
Mira's Special Folders). Simple palette
stretching can be done using the
Palette Pane without opening this dialog.
Both the
image palette and the
transfer function combine to display the image as you
see it. The transfer function converts the image intensity to 256
discrete levels and the palette assigns colors to those levels.
Therefore, if palette adjustments do not suffice to change the
image appearance in the desired way, try using the
Transfer Function Pane to make more fundamental
changes to the way the image is displayed. Then fine tune the
result using the controls in the Palette Properties dialog
or by using interactive palette stretching in the
Palette Pane.
The Palette Graph
The Palette Graph shows the relationship between
the image intensity (brightness) and the color you see on the
screen. For non RGB images, the image brightness range is sliced
into 256 bins by the Transfer Function. Each bin of brightness has
a lower and upper bound and the palette is a table of colors
assigned to each small range of brightness spanned by each bin. By
changing the actual color value assigned to an index of the
transfer function, the all pixels assigned to that index will
change on the displayed image. This provides a way to enhance and
suppress image features in different regions of the brightness
scale. Note that palette or transfer function changes do not affect
the actual pixel values in the image—they are just display
adjustments.
To the right of the palette graph, the following
quantities are listed for the position of the mouse pointer:
-
The X field lists the x-coordinate of the
pointer. This is the transfer function index and it ranges from 0
to 255 for a total of 256 levels.
-
The Y field lists the Y coordinate of the
mouse pointer. This is the color intensity in the selected channel
and it ranges from 0 to 255 units of color. The active channel is
selected using the tabs in the lower portion of the dialog (not
shown in the above figure).
-
The Z field is the actual image
intensity, or pixel value, at the midpoint of the range of
brightness assigned to the palette color.
Using the 3 definitions above, we can decipher what
is shown in the sample window above. The pointer is at coordinate
(70,206) which corresponds to index 70 of the palette. Index 70 is
assigned a red value of 206 in the range 0 (black) to 255 (maximum
red). The Z value of 2424 indicates that a pixel value of 2424 is
at the midpoint of palette index 70. Palette Index 69 might
correspond to an average pixel value of 2410 and index 71 to an
average pixel value of 2438.
What happens to pixel values below palette index 0
or above palette index 255? All image values below palette index 0
are assigned the color of palette index 0 and all of those above
index 255 are assigned the color of index 255.
Adjusting the Palette
There are 3 ways to adjust the palette. All of
these methods directly update the displayed image(s). You do not
have to use the Palette Properties dialog to adjust a
palette. The Palette Properties dialog shows the mathematical
changes to the palette while the Image Window shows the effect of
the adjustments on the displayed image.
See these topics on adjusting the palette:
Using the Mouse from the Palette Pane
Rubber Banding the Palette Graph
Using the Palette Property Trackbars
Related Topics
Palette Pane
Image Palettes
Import Palette
Export Palette
Transfer Functions
Transfer
Function Properties
Transfer Function Pane
Mira Pro x64 User's Guide, Copyright Ⓒ 2023 Mirametrics, Inc. All
Rights Reserved.
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