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Raspberry Pi Computer Vision Programming

You're reading from   Raspberry Pi Computer Vision Programming Design and implement computer vision applications with Raspberry Pi, OpenCV, and Python 3

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Product type Paperback
Published in Jun 2020
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781800207219
Length 306 pages
Edition 2nd Edition
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Author (1):
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Ashwin Pajankar Ashwin Pajankar
Author Profile Icon Ashwin Pajankar
Ashwin Pajankar
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Table of Contents (15) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Chapter 1: Introduction to Computer Vision and the Raspberry Pi 2. Chapter 2: Preparing the Raspberry Pi for Computer Vision FREE CHAPTER 3. Chapter 3: Introduction to Python Programming 4. Chapter 4: Getting Started with Computer Vision 5. Chapter 5: Basics of Image Processing 6. Chapter 6: Colorspaces, Transformations, and Thresholding 7. Chapter 7: Let's Make Some Noise 8. Chapter 8: High-Pass Filters and Feature Detection 9. Chapter 9: Image Restoration, Segmentation, and Depth Maps 10. Chapter 10: Histograms, Contours, and Morphological Transformations 11. Chapter 11: Real-Life Applications of Computer Vision 12. Chapter 12: Working with Mahotas and Jupyter 13. Chapter 13: Appendix 14. Other Books You May Enjoy

Performance measurement and the management of OpenCV

OpenCV has a lot of optimized and unoptimized code. The optimized code uses features of modern microprocessors, such as instruction pipelining and AVX.

We can check whether the optimization of OpenCV is enabled on the computer we are currently using with the cv2.useOptimized() function. We can also use the cv2.setUseOptimized() function to toggle the optimization. The cv2.getTickCount() function returns the number of clock ticks (also known as clock cycles) from the time that the computer was turned on. This function is called before and after the execution of the code snippet that we are interested in.

Then, we compute the difference between the clock cycles and it returns the number of clock cycles needed to execute the code snippet. The cv2.getTickFrequency() function returns the frequency of the clock cycles. Then, we can divide the difference between the clock cycles by the frequency of the clock cycles to obtain the...

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