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  • mrjjM mrjj

    @Payx
    Hi
    can i ask what effect you are after ?
    It sounds like you want to make the image more pixelated?

    P Offline
    P Offline
    Payx
    wrote on last edited by
    #14

    @mrjj No,

    I got an image, i just want to cut the image in square 4x4 (pixels) and with this square, i want to detect the most contained color. When i have this color i replace entirely the square by the color.

    Exemple : if i got an image, if the first square 4x4 i have on the image is contained by 80% of red, that will replace the entirely square by red only.

    This project is to have a "simple" picture.

    with this simple picture i can reproduce it with candies (for exemple). Because if i got 800800 pixels i can't buy 800800 candies so i have to "reduce" it

    Im on windows 10

    kshegunovK 1 Reply Last reply
    0
    • SGaistS Offline
      SGaistS Offline
      SGaist
      Lifetime Qt Champion
      wrote on last edited by
      #15

      Then you can use the OpenCV installer, just ensure that you have an OpenCV version built with the same compiler you are using with Qt.

      Interested in AI ? www.idiap.ch
      Please read the Qt Code of Conduct - https://forum.qt.io/topic/113070/qt-code-of-conduct

      P 1 Reply Last reply
      0
      • SGaistS SGaist

        Then you can use the OpenCV installer, just ensure that you have an OpenCV version built with the same compiler you are using with Qt.

        P Offline
        P Offline
        Payx
        wrote on last edited by
        #16

        @SGaist I spoke with my teacher, he told me we dont need OpenCV

        1 Reply Last reply
        0
        • SGaistS Offline
          SGaistS Offline
          SGaist
          Lifetime Qt Champion
          wrote on last edited by
          #17

          I never said you needed it just that it might be simpler through it.

          In any case, you can use QImage::pixelColor to get the color of one pixel of your image and then do the calculation with the surrounding pixels.

          Interested in AI ? www.idiap.ch
          Please read the Qt Code of Conduct - https://forum.qt.io/topic/113070/qt-code-of-conduct

          P 1 Reply Last reply
          1
          • SGaistS SGaist

            I never said you needed it just that it might be simpler through it.

            In any case, you can use QImage::pixelColor to get the color of one pixel of your image and then do the calculation with the surrounding pixels.

            P Offline
            P Offline
            Payx
            wrote on last edited by
            #18

            @SGaist said in Picture:

            QImage::pixelColor

            Ok, i will try to use it tomorrow, but i already have a question, i can't use a function in the "void MainWindow::on_push_clicked()" no ?

            jsulmJ 1 Reply Last reply
            0
            • P Payx

              @mrjj No,

              I got an image, i just want to cut the image in square 4x4 (pixels) and with this square, i want to detect the most contained color. When i have this color i replace entirely the square by the color.

              Exemple : if i got an image, if the first square 4x4 i have on the image is contained by 80% of red, that will replace the entirely square by red only.

              This project is to have a "simple" picture.

              with this simple picture i can reproduce it with candies (for exemple). Because if i got 800800 pixels i can't buy 800800 candies so i have to "reduce" it

              Im on windows 10

              kshegunovK Offline
              kshegunovK Offline
              kshegunov
              Moderators
              wrote on last edited by
              #19

              @Payx said in Picture:

              I got an image, i just want to cut the image in square 4x4 (pixels) and with this square, i want to detect the most contained color. When i have this color i replace entirely the square by the color.
              Exemple : if i got an image, if the first square 4x4 i have on the image is contained by 80% of red, that will replace the entirely square by red only.
              This project is to have a "simple" picture.
              with this simple picture i can reproduce it with candies (for exemple). Because if i got 800800 pixels i can't buy 800800 candies so i have to "reduce" it

              It sounds to me you're after color space reduction after scaling. Just resample the image to the desired resolution with QImage::scaled as @SGaist suggested. Then the color space reduction boils down to calculating distances in 3 dimensional rectangular coordinate system (colors are vectors in RGB space). Suppose you have a table of 32 colors and an image:

              QImage image;
              
              const qint32 colorTableSize = 32;
              QColor colorTable[colorTableSize] = { Qt::Red, Qt::Blue, ... };
              

              Then for each pixel you choose the color from the table that's closest in the color space:

              // Just go around the image
              for (qint32 y = 0, height = image.height(); y < height; y++)  {
                  for (qint32 x = 0, width = image.width(); x < width; x++)  {
                      QColor pixel = image.pixelColor(x, y);
              
                      // Find the closest match from the table
                      qint32 colorIndex = 0;
                      qreal minDistance = std::sqrt(3); // Initial value is the longest possible distance
                      for (qint32 i = 0; i < colorTableSize; i++)  {
                          qreal distance = QVector3D(pixel.redF() - colorTable[i].redF(), pixel.greenF() - colorTable[i].greenF(), pixel.blueF() - colorTable[i].blueF()).length();
                          if (distance < minDistance)  {  // Found a closer color than the currently selected
                              minDistance = distance;
                              colorIndex = i;
                          }
                      }
              
                      // Now just replace the pixel color with the one from the table
                      image.setPixelColor(x, y, colorTable[colorIndex]);
                  }
              }
              

              This doesn't take into account the disparity of color sensitivity of the human eye. If you need to account for this then you need to dig deeper to find more accurate color distances, e.g. by implementing some sort of a chromaticity diagram.

              Kind regards.

              Read and abide by the Qt Code of Conduct

              1 Reply Last reply
              4
              • P Payx

                @SGaist said in Picture:

                QImage::pixelColor

                Ok, i will try to use it tomorrow, but i already have a question, i can't use a function in the "void MainWindow::on_push_clicked()" no ?

                jsulmJ Offline
                jsulmJ Offline
                jsulm
                Lifetime Qt Champion
                wrote on last edited by
                #20

                @Payx said in Picture:

                i can't use a function in the "void MainWindow::on_push_clicked()" no ?

                Sure you can, why not?

                https://forum.qt.io/topic/113070/qt-code-of-conduct

                1 Reply Last reply
                1
                • P Offline
                  P Offline
                  Payx
                  wrote on last edited by
                  #21

                  I just dont understand what your program do..

                  i got my image into my :

                  void MainWindow::on_push_clicked()
                  

                  when i want to use it in :

                  void MainWindow::on_push2_clicked()
                  

                  he say that my image isnt declared.

                  @kshegunov sorry, I just dont understand what your program do..

                  i thought use a thing like this :

                  void MainWindow::on_push2_clicked()
                     {
                  
                  
                  
                         for (int i=0;i<pix.width()+1;i=i+4){
                             for (int j=0;j<pix.height()+1;j=j+4){
                                 for(int x=0; x<i;x=x+1){
                                    for (int z=0; z<j; z=z+1){
                             
                     }
                  }
                  }
                  

                  and in that i will calculate the most contained color ( i thought with RGB ) and if my square is contained by 80% of red, replace it with red.

                  jsulmJ 1 Reply Last reply
                  0
                  • P Payx

                    I just dont understand what your program do..

                    i got my image into my :

                    void MainWindow::on_push_clicked()
                    

                    when i want to use it in :

                    void MainWindow::on_push2_clicked()
                    

                    he say that my image isnt declared.

                    @kshegunov sorry, I just dont understand what your program do..

                    i thought use a thing like this :

                    void MainWindow::on_push2_clicked()
                       {
                    
                    
                    
                           for (int i=0;i<pix.width()+1;i=i+4){
                               for (int j=0;j<pix.height()+1;j=j+4){
                                   for(int x=0; x<i;x=x+1){
                                      for (int z=0; z<j; z=z+1){
                               
                       }
                    }
                    }
                    

                    and in that i will calculate the most contained color ( i thought with RGB ) and if my square is contained by 80% of red, replace it with red.

                    jsulmJ Offline
                    jsulmJ Offline
                    jsulm
                    Lifetime Qt Champion
                    wrote on last edited by
                    #22

                    @Payx If you get your image in

                    void MainWindow::on_push_clicked()
                    

                    and you need it in

                    void MainWindow::on_push2_clicked()
                    

                    then in on_push_clicked() you need to store the image somewhere, so on_push2_clicked() can use it later. You can just add a member variable to MainWindow:

                    class MainWindow...
                    {
                    ...
                    private:
                        QImage image;
                    }

                    https://forum.qt.io/topic/113070/qt-code-of-conduct

                    P 1 Reply Last reply
                    3
                    • jsulmJ jsulm

                      @Payx If you get your image in

                      void MainWindow::on_push_clicked()
                      

                      and you need it in

                      void MainWindow::on_push2_clicked()
                      

                      then in on_push_clicked() you need to store the image somewhere, so on_push2_clicked() can use it later. You can just add a member variable to MainWindow:

                      class MainWindow...
                      {
                      ...
                      private:
                          QImage image;
                      }
                      P Offline
                      P Offline
                      Payx
                      wrote on last edited by
                      #23

                      @jsulm ok thank you !

                      For calculate the color of each pixel, what function can i use?

                      jsulmJ 1 Reply Last reply
                      0
                      • P Payx

                        @jsulm ok thank you !

                        For calculate the color of each pixel, what function can i use?

                        jsulmJ Offline
                        jsulmJ Offline
                        jsulm
                        Lifetime Qt Champion
                        wrote on last edited by jsulm
                        #24

                        @Payx Do you mean to get the pixel value? http://doc.qt.io/qt-5/qimage.html#pixel-1
                        It returns http://doc.qt.io/qt-5/qcolor.html#QRgb-typedef containing the RGB values, then you can calculate what ever you need.
                        #AARRGGBB

                        quint32 rgb = static_cast<quint32>(image.pixel(x, y));
                        int blue = rgb & x000000FF;
                        int green = (rgb & 0x0000FF00)>>8;
                        int red = (rgb & 0x00FF0000)>>16;
                        

                        https://forum.qt.io/topic/113070/qt-code-of-conduct

                        kshegunovK 1 Reply Last reply
                        2
                        • jsulmJ jsulm

                          @Payx Do you mean to get the pixel value? http://doc.qt.io/qt-5/qimage.html#pixel-1
                          It returns http://doc.qt.io/qt-5/qcolor.html#QRgb-typedef containing the RGB values, then you can calculate what ever you need.
                          #AARRGGBB

                          quint32 rgb = static_cast<quint32>(image.pixel(x, y));
                          int blue = rgb & x000000FF;
                          int green = (rgb & 0x0000FF00)>>8;
                          int red = (rgb & 0x00FF0000)>>16;
                          
                          kshegunovK Offline
                          kshegunovK Offline
                          kshegunov
                          Moderators
                          wrote on last edited by
                          #25

                          @jsulm said in Picture:

                          quint32 rgb = static_cast<quint32>(image.pixel(x, y));
                          int blue = rgb & x000000FF;
                          int green = (rgb & 0x0000FF00)>>8;
                          int red = (rgb & 0x00FF0000)>>16;
                          

                          There are the (inline) qRed(), qGreen() and qBlue() for that purpose, no need for bit-magic. :)

                          Read and abide by the Qt Code of Conduct

                          jsulmJ 1 Reply Last reply
                          2
                          • kshegunovK kshegunov

                            @jsulm said in Picture:

                            quint32 rgb = static_cast<quint32>(image.pixel(x, y));
                            int blue = rgb & x000000FF;
                            int green = (rgb & 0x0000FF00)>>8;
                            int red = (rgb & 0x00FF0000)>>16;
                            

                            There are the (inline) qRed(), qGreen() and qBlue() for that purpose, no need for bit-magic. :)

                            jsulmJ Offline
                            jsulmJ Offline
                            jsulm
                            Lifetime Qt Champion
                            wrote on last edited by
                            #26

                            @kshegunov Oh, good to know :-)

                            https://forum.qt.io/topic/113070/qt-code-of-conduct

                            1 Reply Last reply
                            0
                            • P Offline
                              P Offline
                              Payx
                              wrote on last edited by Payx
                              #27

                              So can i use :

                              for (int i=0;i<pix.width()+1;i=i+4){
                                         for (int j=0;j<pix.height()+1;j=j+4){
                                             for(int x=0; x<i;x=x+1){
                                                for (int z=0; z<j; z=z+1){
                               QColor pixel = pix.pixelColor(x, z);
                              
                              // i block here, can i use QColor [pixel] to create a tab and who will contain all my color ?
                              
                              

                              EDIT : i use a Qpixmap to display my picture, so i cant QImage pix; (the name of my picture is pix)

                              1 Reply Last reply
                              0
                              • VRoninV Offline
                                VRoninV Offline
                                VRonin
                                wrote on last edited by VRonin
                                #28

                                These 2 should help you

                                QColor dominantColour(const QImage& image,const QPoint& topLeft, const QSize& rectSize){
                                const int maxRight = qMin(image.width(),topLeft.x() + rectSize.width());
                                const int maxBottom = qMin(image.height(),topLeft.y() + rectSize.height());
                                qint64 sumRed = 0;
                                qint64 sumGreen = 0;
                                qint64 sumBlue = 0;
                                for(int x=topLeft.x();x<maxRight;++x){
                                for(int y=topLeft.y();y<maxBottom;++y){
                                const QColor tempColor=image.pixelColor(x,y);
                                sumRed += tempColor.red();
                                sumGreen += tempColor.green();
                                sumBlue += tempColor.blue();
                                }
                                }
                                if(sumRed >= sumGreen  && sumRed >= sumBlue)
                                return Qt::red;
                                if(sumGreen  >= sumBlue)
                                return Qt::green;
                                return Qt::blue;
                                }
                                
                                void fillSection(QImage& image,const QPoint& topLeft, const QSize& rectSize, const QColor& colour){
                                const int maxRight = qMin(image.width(),topLeft.x() + rectSize.width());
                                const int maxBottom = qMin(image.height(),topLeft.y() + rectSize.height());
                                for(int x=topLeft.x();x<maxRight;++x){
                                for(int y=topLeft.y();y<maxBottom;++y){
                                image.setPixelColor(x,y,colour);
                                }}
                                }
                                

                                @Payx said in Picture:

                                i use a Qpixmap to display my picture, so i cant QImage pix; (the name of my picture is pix)

                                http://doc.qt.io/qt-5/qimage.html#details

                                Qt provides four classes for handling image data: QImage, QPixmap, QBitmap and QPicture. QImage is designed and optimized for I/O, and for direct pixel access and manipulation, while QPixmap is designed and optimized for showing images on screen. QBitmap is only a convenience class that inherits QPixmap, ensuring a depth of 1. Finally, the QPicture class is a paint device that records and replays QPainter commands.

                                Use QImage for pixel manipulation. you can use QImage::fromPixmap() and QPixmap::fromImage() to convert between the two

                                "La mort n'est rien, mais vivre vaincu et sans gloire, c'est mourir tous les jours"
                                ~Napoleon Bonaparte

                                On a crusade to banish setIndexWidget() from the holy land of Qt

                                P 1 Reply Last reply
                                2
                                • VRoninV VRonin

                                  These 2 should help you

                                  QColor dominantColour(const QImage& image,const QPoint& topLeft, const QSize& rectSize){
                                  const int maxRight = qMin(image.width(),topLeft.x() + rectSize.width());
                                  const int maxBottom = qMin(image.height(),topLeft.y() + rectSize.height());
                                  qint64 sumRed = 0;
                                  qint64 sumGreen = 0;
                                  qint64 sumBlue = 0;
                                  for(int x=topLeft.x();x<maxRight;++x){
                                  for(int y=topLeft.y();y<maxBottom;++y){
                                  const QColor tempColor=image.pixelColor(x,y);
                                  sumRed += tempColor.red();
                                  sumGreen += tempColor.green();
                                  sumBlue += tempColor.blue();
                                  }
                                  }
                                  if(sumRed >= sumGreen  && sumRed >= sumBlue)
                                  return Qt::red;
                                  if(sumGreen  >= sumBlue)
                                  return Qt::green;
                                  return Qt::blue;
                                  }
                                  
                                  void fillSection(QImage& image,const QPoint& topLeft, const QSize& rectSize, const QColor& colour){
                                  const int maxRight = qMin(image.width(),topLeft.x() + rectSize.width());
                                  const int maxBottom = qMin(image.height(),topLeft.y() + rectSize.height());
                                  for(int x=topLeft.x();x<maxRight;++x){
                                  for(int y=topLeft.y();y<maxBottom;++y){
                                  image.setPixelColor(x,y,colour);
                                  }}
                                  }
                                  

                                  @Payx said in Picture:

                                  i use a Qpixmap to display my picture, so i cant QImage pix; (the name of my picture is pix)

                                  http://doc.qt.io/qt-5/qimage.html#details

                                  Qt provides four classes for handling image data: QImage, QPixmap, QBitmap and QPicture. QImage is designed and optimized for I/O, and for direct pixel access and manipulation, while QPixmap is designed and optimized for showing images on screen. QBitmap is only a convenience class that inherits QPixmap, ensuring a depth of 1. Finally, the QPicture class is a paint device that records and replays QPainter commands.

                                  Use QImage for pixel manipulation. you can use QImage::fromPixmap() and QPixmap::fromImage() to convert between the two

                                  P Offline
                                  P Offline
                                  Payx
                                  wrote on last edited by
                                  #29

                                  @VRonin Thanks for your answer, but thats very too complicated for me, and anyway i don't understand.

                                  Can you explain your code ?

                                  I tried something instead :

                                  void MainWindow::on_push2_clicked()
                                  {
                                  
                                  	QRgb pix(int x, int z);
                                  	int step=4;
                                  	for (int i=0;i<pixi.width()+1;i=i+step){
                                  		for (int j=0;j<pixi.height()+1;j=j+step){
                                  			for(int x=0; x<i;x=x+1){
                                  				for (int z=0; z<j; z=z+1){
                                  					QRgb pixa = pixi.pixel(x, z);
                                  
                                  the problem is here, how can i stock all the color of my square to after that compare them to know what is the dominant color
                                  
                                  
                                  			}
                                  	}
                                  }
                                  	}
                                  }
                                  
                                  mrjjM 1 Reply Last reply
                                  0
                                  • VRoninV Offline
                                    VRoninV Offline
                                    VRonin
                                    wrote on last edited by
                                    #30

                                    I simplified the code a bit.

                                    The first function takes an image, the coordinates of the top left corner and the size of the rectangle (4x4 in your case) and tells you what is the dominant primary colour there

                                    The second one takes an image, the coordinates of the top left corner and the size of the rectangle (4x4 in your case) and fills that rectangle with the colour in the argument

                                    "La mort n'est rien, mais vivre vaincu et sans gloire, c'est mourir tous les jours"
                                    ~Napoleon Bonaparte

                                    On a crusade to banish setIndexWidget() from the holy land of Qt

                                    1 Reply Last reply
                                    3
                                    • P Payx

                                      @VRonin Thanks for your answer, but thats very too complicated for me, and anyway i don't understand.

                                      Can you explain your code ?

                                      I tried something instead :

                                      void MainWindow::on_push2_clicked()
                                      {
                                      
                                      	QRgb pix(int x, int z);
                                      	int step=4;
                                      	for (int i=0;i<pixi.width()+1;i=i+step){
                                      		for (int j=0;j<pixi.height()+1;j=j+step){
                                      			for(int x=0; x<i;x=x+1){
                                      				for (int z=0; z<j; z=z+1){
                                      					QRgb pixa = pixi.pixel(x, z);
                                      
                                      the problem is here, how can i stock all the color of my square to after that compare them to know what is the dominant color
                                      
                                      
                                      			}
                                      	}
                                      }
                                      	}
                                      }
                                      
                                      mrjjM Offline
                                      mrjjM Offline
                                      mrjj
                                      Lifetime Qt Champion
                                      wrote on last edited by mrjj
                                      #31

                                      @Payx
                                      Hi, i added some comments. Its basically the same as what you tried , just broken up into good functions to produce clean code.

                                      // this function , you give the image and the start and size of the current rect you are processing
                                      QColor dominantColour(const QImage& image, const QPoint& topLeft, const QSize& rectSize) {
                                      // calculate start stop values for the rect
                                         const int maxRight = qMin(image.width(), topLeft.x() + rectSize.width());
                                        const int maxBottom = qMin(image.height(), topLeft.y() + rectSize.height());
                                        QVector<QColor> coloursList; // this is a list of all colors seen!
                                        for(int x = topLeft.x(); x < maxRight; ++x) {
                                          for(int y = topLeft.y(); x < maxBottom; ++x) {
                                            coloursList << image.pixelColor(x, y); // store all colors seen in this Rect
                                          }
                                        }
                                      
                                        // these are functions that count (accumulate) how many times RED, GREEN and blue been used ( using the list from before)
                                        const qint64 sumRed = std::accumulate(coloursList.constBegin(), coloursList.constEnd(), 0, [](qint64 strt,  const QColor & val)->qint64 {return strt + val.red()});
                                        const qint64 sumGreen = std::accumulate(coloursList.constBegin(), coloursList.constEnd(), 0, [](qint64 strt, const QColor & val)->qint64 {return strt + val.green()});
                                        const qint64 sumBlue = std::accumulate(coloursList.constBegin(), coloursList.constEnd(), 0, [](qint64 strt, const QColor & val)->qint64 {return strt + val.blue()});
                                        // now we check out which is most used
                                        if(sumRed >= sumGreen  && sumRed >= sumBlue)
                                          return Qt::red;
                                        if(sumGreen  >= sumBlue)
                                          return Qt::green;
                                        return Qt::blue;
                                      }
                                      
                                      // this function can fill an rect with a color. So its used with dominantColour to actually replace the colors
                                      void fillSection(QImage& image, const QPoint& topLeft, const QSize& rectSize, const QColor& colour) {
                                        // calculate start stop values for the rect
                                        const int maxRight = qMin(image.width(), topLeft.x() + rectSize.width());
                                        const int maxBottom = qMin(image.height(), topLeft.y() + rectSize.height());
                                        // go over all pixels in the rect
                                        for(int x = topLeft.x(); x < maxRight; ++x) {
                                          for(int y = topLeft.y(); x < maxBottom; ++x) {
                                            image.setPixelColor(x, y, colour); // replace color
                                          }
                                        }
                                      }
                                      
                                      
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                                      3
                                      • P Offline
                                        P Offline
                                        Payx
                                        wrote on last edited by
                                        #32

                                        Thanks for your help,

                                        I got one error

                                        undefined reference to 'MainWindow::dominantColor()'

                                        1 Reply Last reply
                                        0
                                        • VRoninV Offline
                                          VRoninV Offline
                                          VRonin
                                          wrote on last edited by VRonin
                                          #33

                                          colour vs color

                                          "La mort n'est rien, mais vivre vaincu et sans gloire, c'est mourir tous les jours"
                                          ~Napoleon Bonaparte

                                          On a crusade to banish setIndexWidget() from the holy land of Qt

                                          1 Reply Last reply
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