I'm trying to do simple drawing in a subclass of a decorator, similar to what they're doing here...
How can I draw a border with squared corners in wpf?
...except with a single-pixel border thickness instead of the two they're using there. However, no matter what I do, WPF decides it needs to do its 'smoothing' (e.g. instead of rendering a single-pixel line, it renders a two-pixel line with each 'half' about 50% of the opacity.) In other words, it's trying to anti-alias the drawing. I do not want anti-aliased drawing. I want to say if I draw a line from 0,0 to 10,0 that I get a single-pixel-wide line that's exactly 10 pixels long without smoothing.
Now I know WPF does that, but I thought that's specifically why they introduced SnapsToDevicePixels and UseLayoutRounding, both of which I've set to 'True' in the XAML. I'm also making sure that the numbers I'm using are actual integers and not fractional numbers, but still I'm not getting the nice, crisp, one-pixel-wide lines I'm hoping for.
Help!!!
Mark
Have a look at this article: Draw lines exactly on physical device pixels
UPD
Some valuable quotes from the link:
The reason why the lines appear blurry, is that our points are center points of the lines not edges. With a pen width of 1 the edges are drawn excactly between two pixels.
A first approach is to round each point to an integer value (snap to a logical pixel) an give it an offset of half the pen width. This ensures, that the edges of the line align with logical pixels.
Fortunately the developers of the milcore (MIL stands for media integration layer, that's WPFs rendering engine) give us a way to guide the rendering engine to align a logical coordinate excatly on a physical device pixels. To achieve this, we need to create a GuidelineSet
protected override void OnRender(DrawingContext drawingContext)
{
Pen pen = new Pen(Brushes.Black, 1);
Rect rect = new Rect(20,20, 50, 60);
double halfPenWidth = pen.Thickness / 2;
// Create a guidelines set
GuidelineSet guidelines = new GuidelineSet();
guidelines.GuidelinesX.Add(rect.Left + halfPenWidth);
guidelines.GuidelinesX.Add(rect.Right + halfPenWidth);
guidelines.GuidelinesY.Add(rect.Top + halfPenWidth);
guidelines.GuidelinesY.Add(rect.Bottom + halfPenWidth);
drawingContext.PushGuidelineSet(guidelines);
drawingContext.DrawRectangle(null, pen, rect);
drawingContext.Pop();
}