Bentley Descartes has many functionalities to transform a raster. This set of tools differ from the raster edit tools in that they don't modify the pixels' value of an image but its form and content. These functions can be found in the Descartes Raster Control tool bar.
The Move Raster, Scale Raster and Rotate Raster tools do basic transformations on the raster. These three operations are found in the Transform Raster tool or as separate tools in the Descartes Raster Control toolbox.
Found in the Transform Raster tool, the anchor point can be used with the scale or rotate tools to determine the location that will remain fixed or pinned in position.
Productivity tip : Instead of moving the image after a scale or rotation operation use the anchor point.
As the name implied, the Mirror tool is used to mirror the selected raster.
The Warp Raster tool allows you to apply a move, scale, rotate or skew transformation or a combination of all those by specifying source to destination relationships.
For example, let's say you want to fit an image in a rotated rectangle as show in the graphic below.
Since the rectangle doesn't have the same height / width ratio as the image, an affine transformation must be used. An affine transformation can be defined with at least three source-to-destination relationships which are entered as pairs of data points. The defined relationships and the resulting warped image are shown in the graphic below :
Productivity Tip : A warp using the Align, Helmert, and Similitude modes can also done using the basic Move, Scale and Rotate tools. However, when the source-to-destination relationships are known (i.e. : the position, scale and orientation of the image) it's easier and faster to use the Warp tool rather than attempting to do the same with the Move, Scale and Rotate tools.
The Square tool is used to rotate a raster image by squaring a horizontal, vertical, or diagonal axis.
The Crop tool allows you to remove excess pixels on the outside of a specified area. The result of a crop operation is visually identical to a clip operation, the difference being that the cropping operation modifies the source file while clipping doesn't.
This section demonstrates the use of the Warp to Area option. The original image with the element defining the crop area is shown below.
When the Warp to Area option is off, the resulting image is created by placing a rectangular non-oriented block around the crop area and copying the pixels found in that block in the source image to the destination image. The pixels in the block, but not in the cropped area, are set to black. The image below shows the resulting image and its border in magenta.
When the Warp to Area option is on, the resulting image is created by placing a rectangular oriented block around the crop area that minimize the size of the resulting image and warping the pixels found in that block in the source image to the destination image. The image below shows the resulting image and its border in magenta.
As you can see, the resulting image in this example is much smaller when the area option is on then off (i.e. : 82 kB compared to 152 kB, almost twice as small).
Productivity Tip : Use the Warp to Area option for diminishing the size of the file resulting from a crop operation. The more the crop area is diagonal in shape, the more the saving in space.
The Resize Canvas tool is used to enlarge or reduce the size of a raster.
The Merge tools is used to merge several rasters and vectors element together so as to form only one raster.
In this pane you can set all special options related to the merge operation.
In this pane you can set the resolution of the resulting raster. This settings is important because the rasters merged together can have different resolutions. Usually choosing a resolution twice as high as the highest resolution of all merged rasters will ensure that there is no loss in quality for all merged rasters.
In this pane you can set the options related to the raster created for the merge operation.
The Corridor tool allows user to copy all the rasters or parts of rasters from an area to another area. This destination and source areas are defined with standard MicroStation elements.