From 311842404c67a249ac9d24861747e59910bebda0 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Symisc Systems Date: Tue, 5 Jun 2018 04:14:55 +0200 Subject: [PATCH] Perform Hilditch thinning on an input image. * Skeletonization is useful when we are interested not in the size of the pattern but rather * in the relative position of the strokes in the pattern (Character Recognition, * X, Y Chromosome Recognition, etc.). * The target image must be binary (i.e. images whose pixels have only two possible intensity * value mostly black or white). You can obtain a binary image via sod_canny_edge_image(), * sod_otsu_binarize_image(), sod_binarize_image() or sod_threshold_image(). --- samples/hilditch_thin.c | 62 +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ 1 file changed, 62 insertions(+) create mode 100644 samples/hilditch_thin.c diff --git a/samples/hilditch_thin.c b/samples/hilditch_thin.c new file mode 100644 index 0000000..f90c716 --- /dev/null +++ b/samples/hilditch_thin.c @@ -0,0 +1,62 @@ +/* + * Programming introduction with the SOD Embedded Image Processing API. + * Copyright (C) PixLab | Symisc Systems, https://sod.pixlab.io + */ +/* +* Compile this file together with the SOD embedded source code to generate +* the executable. For example: +* +* gcc sod.c hilditch_thin.c -lm -Ofast -march=native -Wall -std=c99 -o sod_img_proc +* +* Under Microsoft Visual Studio (>= 2015), just drop `sod.c` and its accompanying +* header files on your source tree and you're done. If you have any trouble +* integrating SOD in your project, please submit a support request at: +* https://sod.pixlab.io/support.html +*/ +/* +* This simple program is a quick introduction on how to embed and start +* experimenting with SOD without having to do a lot of tedious +* reading and configuration. +* +* Make sure you have the latest release of SOD from: +* https://pixlab.io/downloads +* The SOD Embedded C/C++ documentation is available at: +* https://sod.pixlab.io/api.html +*/ +#include +#include "sod.h" +/* + * Perform Hilditch thinning on an input image. + * + * Skeletonization is useful when we are interested not in the size of the pattern but rather + * in the relative position of the strokes in the pattern (Character Recognition, + * X, Y Chromosome Recognition, etc.). + * The target image must be binary (i.e. images whose pixels have only two possible intensity + * value mostly black or white). You can obtain a binary image via sod_canny_edge_image(), + * sod_otsu_binarize_image(), sod_binarize_image() or sod_threshold_image(). + */ +int main(int argc, char *argv[]) +{ + /* Input image (pass a path or use the test image shipped with the samples ZIP archive) */ + const char *zInput = argc > 1 ? argv[1] : "./acgt.png"; + /* Processed output image path */ + const char *zOut = argc > 2 ? argv[2] : "./out_hilditch.png"; + /* Load the input image in the grayscale colorspace */ + sod_img imgIn = sod_img_load_from_file(zInput, SOD_IMG_GRAYSCALE/* single channel colorspace (gray)*/); + if (imgIn.data == 0) { + /* Invalid path, unsupported format, memory failure, etc. */ + puts("Cannot load input image..exiting"); + return 0; + } + /* Binarize the input image before the thinning process */ + sod_img binImg = sod_threshold_image(imgIn, 0.5); + /* Perform Hilditch thinning on this binary image. */ + sod_img imgOut = sod_hilditch_thin_image(binImg); + /* Finally save our processed image to the specified path */ + sod_img_save_as_png(imgOut, zOut); + /* Cleanup */ + sod_free_image(imgIn); + sod_free_image(binImg); + sod_free_image(imgOut); + return 0; +} \ No newline at end of file