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C++ Converting a float to an unsigned char?

I'm new to C++, and doing a bit of googling I thought sprintf would do the job, but I get an error upon compiling that I can't convert between an unsigned char and a char. I need an unsigned char because I am going to print to an image file (0-255 RGB).

unsigned char*** pixels = new unsigned char**[SIZE];
vector<float> pixelColors;

...

sprintf(pixels[i][j][k], "%.4g", pixelColors.at(k));

(pixelColors has size of 3 and 'k' refers to a 'for loop' variable)

like image 358
Steve Avatar asked Jan 22 '23 07:01

Steve


1 Answers

I'll guess that the floats are in the range 0.0 ... 1.0, then you do it like this:

float redf = 0.5f;
unsigned char reduc = redf * 255;

The variable reduc is now 128.


EDIT: complete example, outputting image in Net PPM format.

// Usage 
//  program > file.ppm

#include <vector>
#include <iostream>

typedef struct
{   /* colors in range 0..1 anything else is out of gamut */
    float red, green, blue;
} color;

using namespace std;

int main ( int argc, char **argv )
{   
    int width = 10, height = 10;
    vector<color> bitmap; // This should maybe be called floatmap? ;)

    // Make an image in memory as a float vector

    for( int y = 0; y < height; y++ )
    {   
        for( int x = 0; x < width; x++ )
        {
            color temp;
            temp.red = ((float)x / width);
            temp.green = 0;
            temp.blue = ((float)y / height);
            bitmap.push_back(temp);
        }
    }

    // output image as an Netppm pixmap
    cout << "P3" << endl << width << " " << height << endl << 255 << endl;
    for( int y = 0; y < height; y++ )
    {   
        for( int x = 0; x < width; x++ )
        {
            int red, green, blue;
            red = (unsigned char)(bitmap[y*width+x].red * 255);
            green = (unsigned char)(bitmap[y*width+x].green * 255);
            blue = (unsigned char)(bitmap[y*width+x].blue * 255);
            cout << red << " ";
            cout << green << " ";
            cout << blue << " ";
        }
        cout << endl;
    }
    return 0;

}

I hope this helps you. You can read about Netpbm format on wikipedia.


EDIT2: The image output is clear text.
Result is like this:
test image (Tiny, isn't it? edit line 16 to 512x512 or something)

And the actual output is this:

P3
10 10
255
0 0 0 25 0 0 51 0 0 76 0 0 102 0 0 127 0 0 153 0 0 178 0 0 204 0 0 229 0 0 
0 0 25 25 0 25 51 0 25 76 0 25 102 0 25 127 0 25 153 0 25 178 0 25 204 0 25 229 0 25 
0 0 51 25 0 51 51 0 51 76 0 51 102 0 51 127 0 51 153 0 51 178 0 51 204 0 51 229 0 51 
0 0 76 25 0 76 51 0 76 76 0 76 102 0 76 127 0 76 153 0 76 178 0 76 204 0 76 229 0 76 
0 0 102 25 0 102 51 0 102 76 0 102 102 0 102 127 0 102 153 0 102 178 0 102 204 0 102 229 0 102 
0 0 127 25 0 127 51 0 127 76 0 127 102 0 127 127 0 127 153 0 127 178 0 127 204 0 127 229 0 127 
0 0 153 25 0 153 51 0 153 76 0 153 102 0 153 127 0 153 153 0 153 178 0 153 204 0 153 229 0 153 
0 0 178 25 0 178 51 0 178 76 0 178 102 0 178 127 0 178 153 0 178 178 0 178 204 0 178 229 0 178 
0 0 204 25 0 204 51 0 204 76 0 204 102 0 204 127 0 204 153 0 204 178 0 204 204 0 204 229 0 204 
0 0 229 25 0 229 51 0 229 76 0 229 102 0 229 127 0 229 153 0 229 178 0 229 204 0 229 229 0 229 
like image 189
Frank Avatar answered Jan 30 '23 08:01

Frank