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OpenCV Computer Vision Application Programming Cookbook Second Edition

You're reading from   OpenCV Computer Vision Application Programming Cookbook Second Edition Over 50 recipes to help you build computer vision applications in C++ using the OpenCV library

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Product type Paperback
Published in Aug 2014
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781782161486
Length 374 pages
Edition 1st 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 (13) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Playing with Images FREE CHAPTER 2. Manipulating Pixels 3. Processing Color Images with Classes 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. Processing Video Sequences Index

Scanning an image with pointers

In most image-processing tasks, you need to scan all pixels of the image in order to perform a computation. Considering the large number of pixels that will need to be visited, it is essential that you perform this task in an efficient way. This recipe, and the next one, will show you different ways of implementing efficient scanning loops. This recipe uses the pointer arithmetic.

Getting ready

We will illustrate the image-scanning process by accomplishing a simple task: reducing the number of colors in an image.

Color images are composed of 3-channel pixels. Each of these channels corresponds to the intensity value of one of the three primary colors, red, green, and blue. Since each of these values is an 8-bit unsigned character, the total number of colors is 256x256x256, which is more than 16 million colors. Consequently, to reduce the complexity of an analysis, it is sometimes useful to reduce the number of colors in an image. One way to achieve this goal...

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