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How to get rgb value by cimg?

CImg<unsigned char> src("image.jpg");
int width = src.width();
int height = src.height();
unsigned char* ptr = src.data(10,10); 

How can I get rgb from ptr?

like image 529
user198729 Avatar asked Jul 20 '10 15:07

user198729


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2 Answers

Tested on Ubuntu 10.04 with a handmade 3x3 RGB image saved as test.png:

sudo apt-get install cimg-dev

Source file cimg_test.cpp:

#include <iostream>
using namespace std;

#include <CImg.h>
using namespace cimg_library;

int main()
{
    CImg<unsigned char> src("test.png");
    int width = src.width();
    int height = src.height();
    cout << width << "x" << height << endl;
    for (int r = 0; r < height; r++)
        for (int c = 0; c < width; c++)
            cout << "(" << r << "," << c << ") ="
                 << " R" << (int)src(c,r,0,0)
                 << " G" << (int)src(c,r,0,1)
                 << " B" << (int)src(c,r,0,2) << endl;
    return 0;
}

Compile and run:

g++ cimg_test.cpp -lX11 -lpthread -o cimg_test

./cimg_test 
3x3
(0,0) = R0 G0 B0
(0,1) = R255 G0 B0
(0,2) = R0 G255 B0
(1,0) = R0 G0 B255
(1,1) = R128 G128 B128
(1,2) = R0 G0 B128
(2,0) = R128 G0 B0
(2,1) = R0 G128 B0
(2,2) = R255 G255 B255

It works.

like image 54
Vanni Totaro Avatar answered Sep 21 '22 12:09

Vanni Totaro


From the CImg documentation -- section 6.13 on page 34, and section 8.1.4.16 on page 120 -- it looks like the data method can take four arguments: x, y, z, and c:

T* data(const unsigned int x, const unsigned int y = 0, 
        const unsigned int z = 0, const unsigned int c = 0)

...where c refers to the color channel. I'm guessing that if your image is indeed an RGB image, then using values of 0, 1, or 2 for c will give you the red, green, and blue components at a given x, y location.

For example:

unsigned char *r = src.data(10, 10, 0, 0);
unsigned char *g = src.data(10, 10, 0, 1);
unsigned char *b = src.data(10, 10, 0, 2);

(But this is just a guess!)

Edit:

It looks like there's also an operator() for CImg that works in a similar manner:

unsigned char r = src(10, 10, 0, 0);
like image 39
Nate Kohl Avatar answered Sep 22 '22 12:09

Nate Kohl