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Computer Vision with OpenCV 3 and Qt5

You're reading from   Computer Vision with OpenCV 3 and Qt5 Build visually appealing, multithreaded, cross-platform computer vision applications

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Product type Paperback
Published in Jan 2018
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781788472395
Length 486 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Author (1):
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Amin Ahmadi Tazehkandi Amin Ahmadi Tazehkandi
Author Profile Icon Amin Ahmadi Tazehkandi
Amin Ahmadi Tazehkandi
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Table of Contents (14) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Introduction to OpenCV and Qt FREE CHAPTER 2. Creating Our First Qt and OpenCV Project 3. Creating a Comprehensive Qt+OpenCV Project 4. Mat and QImage 5. The Graphics View Framework 6. Image Processing in OpenCV 7. Features and Descriptors 8. Multithreading 9. Video Analysis 10. Debugging and Testing 11. Linking and Deployment 12. Qt Quick Applications 13. Other Books You May Enjoy

Image filtering


In this starting section, you will learn about linear and non-linear image filtering methods available in OpenCV. It's important to note that all of the functions discussed in this section take a Mat image as an input and produce a Mat image of the same size and the same number of channels. In fact, the filters are applied to each channel independently. In general, filtering methods take a pixel and its pixels from the input image and calculate the value of the corresponding pixel in the resulting image based on a function response from those pixels.

This usually requires an assumption to be made about the pixels that do not exist, while calculating the filtered pixel result. OpenCV provides a number of methods to overcome this issue, and they can be specified in almost all of the OpenCV functions that need to deal with this phenomenon using the cv::BorderTypes enum. We will see how it is used in our first example in this chapter a bit later, but, before that, let's make...

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