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OpenCV 3 Computer Vision Application Programming Cookbook

You're reading from   OpenCV 3 Computer Vision Application Programming Cookbook Recipes to make your applications see

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Product type Paperback
Published in Feb 2017
Publisher
ISBN-13 9781786469717
Length 474 pages
Edition 3rd Edition
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Author (1):
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Robert Laganiere Robert Laganiere
Author Profile Icon Robert Laganiere
Robert Laganiere
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Toc

Table of Contents (15) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Playing with Images FREE CHAPTER 2. Manipulating Pixels 3. Processing the Colors of an Image 4. Counting the Pixels with Histograms 5. Transforming Images with Morphological Operations 6. Filtering the Images 7. Extracting Lines, Contours, and Components 8. Detecting Interest Points 9. Describing and Matching Interest Points 10. Estimating Projective Relations in Images 11. Reconstructing 3D Scenes 12. Processing Video Sequences 13. Tracking Visual Motion 14. Learning from Examples

Detecting image contours with the Canny operator


In the previous chapter, we learned how it is possible to detect the edges of an image. In particular, we showed you that by applying a threshold to the gradient magnitude, a binary map of the main edges of an image can be obtained. Edges carry important visual information since they delineate the image elements. For this reason, they can be used, for example, in object recognition. However, simple binary edge maps suffer from two main drawbacks. First, the edges that are detected are unnecessarily thick; this makes the object's limits more difficult to identify. Second, and more importantly, it is often impossible to find a threshold that is sufficiently low in order to detect all important edges of an image and is, at the same time, sufficiently high in order to not include too many insignificant edges. This is a trade-off problem that the Canny algorithm tries to solve.

How to do it...

The Canny algorithm is implemented in OpenCV by the cv...

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