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Aspose.Imaging  for Java
CDR

View CDR images via Java

Build your own Java apps to View CDR image files using server-side APIs

How to View CDR images Using Java

We often receive images in less common formats as source materials. For subsequent viewing of such images, special programs are required. In order not to think about this problem and use the time to solve the issue for more creative tasks, use the functions of the Java graphic library. By converting such images to files of more popular formats, you can open them in the standard image viewing program for your platform. In order to view CDR files, we’ll use Aspose.Imaging for Java API which is a feature-rich, powerful and easy to use image manipulation and conversion API for Java platform. You can download its latest version directly from Maven and install it within your Maven-based project by adding the following configurations to the pom.xml.

Repository

<repository>
<id>AsposeJavaAPI</id>
<name>Aspose Java API</name>
<url>https://repository.aspose.com/repo/</url>
</repository>

Dependency

<dependency>
<groupId>com.aspose</groupId>
<artifactId>aspose-imaging</artifactId>
<version>version of aspose-imaging API</version>
<classifier>jdk16</classifier>
</dependency>

Steps to View CDR via Java

You need the aspose-imaging-version-jdk16.jar to try the following workflow in your own environment.

  • load CDR files with Image.Load method;
  • create image view;
  • save new image to disc in the supported by Aspose.Imaging format.

System Requirements

Aspose.Imaging for Java is supported on all major operating systems. Just make sure that you have the following prerequisites.

  • JDK 1.6 or higher is installed.

Free App to View CDR

  • Select or drag and drop an CDR image
  • Image will be automatically uploaded and shown

Check our live demos to view CDR

 

View CDR images - Java

 
  • About Aspose.Imaging for Java API

    Aspose.Imaging API is an image processing solution to create, modify, draw or convert images (photos) within applications. It offers: cross-platform Image processing, including but not limited to conversions between various image formats (including uniform multi-page or multi-frame image processing), modifications such as drawing, working with graphic primitives, transformations (resize, crop, flip&rotate, binarization, grayscale, adjust), advanced image manipulation features (filtering, dithering, masking, deskewing), and memory optimization strategies. It’s a standalone library and does not depend on any software for image operations. One can easily add high-performance image conversion features with native APIs within projects. These are 100% private on-premise APIs and images are processed at your servers.

    CDR What is CDR File Format

    A CDR file is a vector drawing image file that is natively created with CorelDRAW for storing digital image encoded and compressed. Such a drawing file contains text, lines, shapes, images, colours and effects for vector representation of image contents. CDR files can be opened with CorelDRAW as the primary application and can also be converted to other formats such as PDF, JPG, PNG, BMP and AI. It can be used for representation of various graphics data like brochures, tabloids, envelopes, and postcards. Besides CorelDRAW, other Corel products such as Corel Paintshop Pro and CorelDRAW Graphics suite can also open the CDR file formats.

    Read More

    Other Supported View Formats

    Using Java, one can easily View different formats including:

    APNG (Animated Portable Network Graphics)
    BMP (Bitmap Picture)
    ICO (Windows icon)
    JPG (Joint Photographic Experts Group)
    JPEG (Joint Photographic Experts Group)
    DIB (Device Independent Bitmap)
    DICOM (Digital Imaging & Communications)
    DJVU (Graphics Format)
    DNG (Digital Camera Image)
    EMF (Enhanced Metafile Format)
    EMZ (Windows Compressed Enhanced Metafile)
    GIF (Graphical Interchange Format)
    JP2 (JPEG 2000)
    J2K (Wavelet Compressed Image)
    PNG (Portable Network Graphics)
    TIFF (Tagged Image Format)
    TIF (Tagged Image Format)
    WEBP (Raster Web Image)
    WMF (Microsoft Windows Metafile)
    WMZ (Compressed Windows Media Player Skin)
    TGA (Targa Graphic)
    SVG (Scalable Vector Graphics)
    EPS (Encapsulated PostScript Language)
    CMX (Corel Exchange Image)
    OTG (OpenDocument Standard)
    ODG (Apache OpenOffice Draw Format)