<itemvalue="Add an axis-aligned scale to the current transform, scaling by the first argument in the horizontal direction and the second in the vertical direction. If [sy] is unspecified, [sx] will be used for the scale in both directions."/>
<itemvalue="Add an axis-aligned scale to the current transform, scaling by the first argument in the horizontal direction and the second in the vertical direction. If [sy] is unspecified, [sx] will be used for the scale in both directions."/>
<itemvalue="Draws the subset of the given image described by the `src` argument into the canvas in the axis-aligned rectangle given by the `dst` argument. This might sample from outside the `src` rect by up to half the width of an applied filter. Multiple calls to this method with different arguments (from the same image) can be batched into a single call to [drawAtlas] to improve performance."/>
<itemvalue="Draws the subset of the given image described by the `src` argument into the canvas in the axis-aligned rectangle given by the `dst` argument. This might sample from outside the `src` rect by up to half the width of an applied filter. Multiple calls to this method with different arguments (from the same image) can be batched into a single call to [drawAtlas] to improve performance."/>
<itemvalue="Multiply the color components of the source and destination images. This can only result in the same or darker colors (multiplying by white, 1.0, results in no change; multiplying by black, 0.0, results in black). When compositing two opaque images, this has similar effect to overlapping two transparencies on a projector. For a variant that also multiplies the alpha channel, consider [multiply]."/>
<itemvalue="Multiply the color components of the source and destination images. This can only result in the same or darker colors (multiplying by white, 1.0, results in no change; multiplying by black, 0.0, results in black). When compositing two opaque images, this has similar effect to overlapping two transparencies on a projector. For a variant that also multiplies the alpha channel, consider [multiply]."/>