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OpenCV By Example

You're reading from   OpenCV By Example Enhance your understanding of Computer Vision and image processing by developing real-world projects in OpenCV 3

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Product type Paperback
Published in Jan 2016
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781785280948
Length 296 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Authors (3):
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Vinícius G. Mendonça Vinícius G. Mendonça
Author Profile Icon Vinícius G. Mendonça
Vinícius G. Mendonça
David Millán Escrivá David Millán Escrivá
Author Profile Icon David Millán Escrivá
David Millán Escrivá
Prateek Joshi Prateek Joshi
Author Profile Icon Prateek Joshi
Prateek Joshi
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Toc

Table of Contents (13) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Getting Started with OpenCV 2. An Introduction to the Basics of OpenCV FREE CHAPTER 3. Learning the Graphical User Interface and Basic Filtering 4. Delving into Histograms and Filters 5. Automated Optical Inspection, Object Segmentation, and Detection 6. Learning Object Classification 7. Detecting Face Parts and Overlaying Masks 8. Video Surveillance, Background Modeling, and Morphological Operations 9. Learning Object Tracking 10. Developing Segmentation Algorithms for Text Recognition 11. Text Recognition with Tesseract Index

Using Tesseract OCR library

As Tesseract OCR is already integrated with OpenCV 3.0, it still worth studying its API since it allows a finer-grained control over Tesseract parameters. The integration will be studied in the next chapter.

Creating a OCR function

We'll change the previous example to work with Tesseract. We will start with adding baseapi and fstream tesseracts to the list:

#include <opencv2/opencv.hpp>
#include <tesseract/baseapi.h>

#include <vector>
#include <fstream>

Then, we'll create a global TessBaseAPI object that represents our Tesseract OCR engine:

tesseract::TessBaseAPI ocr;

Tip

The ocr engine is completely self-contained. If you want to create multithreaded OCR software, just add a different TessBaseAPI object to each thread, and the execution will be fairly thread-safe. You just need to guarantee that file writing is not done over the same file; otherwise, you'll need to guarantee safety for this operation.

Next, we will create a function...

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