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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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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

Introduction

In order to build computer vision applications, you need to be able to access the image content and eventually modify or create images. This chapter will teach you how to manipulate the picture elements (also known as pixels). You will learn how to scan an image and process each of its pixels. You will also learn how to do this efficiently, since even images of modest dimensions can contain hundreds of thousands of pixels.

Fundamentally, an image is a matrix of numerical values. This is why, as we learned in Chapter 1 , Playing with Images, OpenCV manipulates them using the cv::Mat data structure. Each element of the matrix represents one pixel. For a gray-level image (a black-and-white image), pixels are unsigned 8-bit values (that is, of type unsigned char) where 0 corresponds to black and 255 corresponds to white.

In the case of color images, three primary color values are required in order to reproduce the different visible colors. This is a consequence of the fact that...

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