class cv::NAryMatIterator
Overview
n-ary multi-dimensional array iterator. More…
#include <mat.hpp> class NAryMatIterator { public: // fields const Mat** arrays; int narrays; size_t nplanes; Mat* planes; uchar** ptrs; size_t size; // construction NAryMatIterator(); NAryMatIterator( const Mat** arrays, uchar** ptrs, int narrays = -1 ); NAryMatIterator( const Mat** arrays, Mat* planes, int narrays = -1 ); // methods void init( const Mat** arrays, Mat* planes, uchar** ptrs, int narrays = -1 ); NAryMatIterator& operator++(); NAryMatIterator operator++(int); protected: // fields size_t idx; int iterdepth; };
Detailed Documentation
n-ary multi-dimensional array iterator.
Use the class to implement unary, binary, and, generally, n-ary element-wise operations on multi-dimensional arrays. Some of the arguments of an n-ary function may be continuous arrays, some may be not. It is possible to use conventional MatIterator ‘s for each array but incrementing all of the iterators after each small operations may be a big overhead. In this case consider using NAryMatIterator to iterate through several matrices simultaneously as long as they have the same geometry (dimensionality and all the dimension sizes are the same). On each iteration it.planes[0]
, it.planes[1]
,… will be the slices of the corresponding matrices.
The example below illustrates how you can compute a normalized and threshold 3D color histogram:
void computeNormalizedColorHist(const Mat& image, Mat& hist, int N, double minProb) { const int histSize[] = {N, N, N}; // make sure that the histogram has a proper size and type hist.create(3, histSize, CV_32F); // and clear it hist = Scalar(0); // the loop below assumes that the image // is a 8-bit 3-channel. check it. CV_Assert(image.type() == CV_8UC3); MatConstIterator_<Vec3b> it = image.begin<Vec3b>(), it_end = image.end<Vec3b>(); for( ; it != it_end; ++it ) { const Vec3b& pix = *it; hist.at<float>(pix[0]*N/256, pix[1]*N/256, pix[2]*N/256) += 1.f; } minProb *= image.rows*image.cols; // initialize iterator (the style is different from STL). // after initialization the iterator will contain // the number of slices or planes the iterator will go through. // it simultaneously increments iterators for several matrices // supplied as a null terminated list of pointers const Mat* arrays[] = {&hist, 0}; Mat planes[1]; NAryMatIterator itNAry(arrays, planes, 1); double s = 0; // iterate through the matrix. on each iteration // itNAry.planes[i] (of type Mat) will be set to the current plane // of the i-th n-dim matrix passed to the iterator constructor. for(int p = 0; p < itNAry.nplanes; p++, ++itNAry) { threshold(itNAry.planes[0], itNAry.planes[0], minProb, 0, THRESH_TOZERO); s += sum(itNAry.planes[0])[0]; } s = 1./s; itNAry = NAryMatIterator(arrays, planes, 1); for(int p = 0; p < itNAry.nplanes; p++, ++itNAry) itNAry.planes[0] *= s; }
Fields
const Mat** arrays
the iterated arrays
int narrays
the number of arrays
size_t nplanes
the number of hyper-planes that the iterator steps through
Mat* planes
the current planes
uchar** ptrs
data pointers
size_t size
the size of each segment (in elements)
Construction
NAryMatIterator()
the default constructor
NAryMatIterator( const Mat** arrays, uchar** ptrs, int narrays = -1 )
the full constructor taking arbitrary number of n-dim matrices
NAryMatIterator( const Mat** arrays, Mat* planes, int narrays = -1 )
the full constructor taking arbitrary number of n-dim matrices
Methods
void init( const Mat** arrays, Mat* planes, uchar** ptrs, int narrays = -1 )
the separate iterator initialization method
NAryMatIterator& operator++()
proceeds to the next plane of every iterated matrix
NAryMatIterator operator++(int)
proceeds to the next plane of every iterated matrix (postfix increment operator)