I have a CT image (a matrix 512 x 512) that has maximum value is 2062 and minimum ones is 64. I want to show it so that the maximum pixel get white and the minimum ones get black color. I tried to use function colormap(C), with C=[a a a], a=[0:1/2000:1]'.Then used function image (CT)to show it. I imagined a color bar that begin with black (at 1) and change along with shade value to white (at 2062 or less than that a little). But i got a figure with weird color bar. It's discrete and just black and gray like the attached image (hadn't used function image(CT) yet). I'm wondering what's wrong!

1 Commento

Nguyen Tan Duoc
Nguyen Tan Duoc il 15 Ago 2015
Are there any error with Matlab? please help me!

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 Risposta accettata

Walter Roberson
Walter Roberson il 15 Ago 2015

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This of course has nothing to do with the CT image; the question could have been posed without mentioning it.
On OS-X it looks fine:
My speculation is that you are using MS Windows and using a release before R2014b. Before R2014b, MATLAB on MS Windows only supported 256 entries in the color map. I am told that from R2014b onwards that the limit is substantially higher.

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Nguyen Tan Duoc
Nguyen Tan Duoc il 20 Ago 2015
Thanks for your answer. I'm using matlab R2013a on MS Windows 8.1 pro. I hasn't known that colormap just support 256 color. It doesn't have any notice in matlab helping center about that. You sure a bout that?
Walter Roberson
Walter Roberson il 20 Ago 2015
How about a direct statement from one of the developers? http://www.mathworks.com/matlabcentral/answers/47458#answer_58070
Mike Garrity
Mike Garrity il 20 Ago 2015
Yes, for many years the colormap was implemented on Windows using a GDI Palette, which meant a limit of 256 colors. Starting in R2014b, it is implemented on all platforms as a texturemap. This means that the max size is dependent on your graphics card, but 2,048 is pretty typical.
Nguyen Tan Duoc
Nguyen Tan Duoc il 21 Ago 2015
Thanks everybody!that's great answer.
Image Analyst
Image Analyst il 21 Ago 2015
You're welcome. Hopefully your final decision was to use imshow() and not image() with that colormap you tried to create.

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Più risposte (1)

Image Analyst
Image Analyst il 15 Ago 2015
Don't use image(). Use imshow():
imshow(CT, []); % Be sure to use [].

5 Commenti

Nguyen Tan Duoc
Nguyen Tan Duoc il 15 Ago 2015
Modificato: Nguyen Tan Duoc il 15 Ago 2015
Thanks for your answer. I had known this way. It gave a good image. But i want to know what's wrong with my command colormap(C), with C=[a a a],a=[0:1/2062:1]'. why i got a weird color bar like that?
Image Analyst
Image Analyst il 15 Ago 2015
Was CT a floating point image (double)? That might be why. You might also need to fiddle with the caxis() function. With imshow() you don't have to worry about any of that - no need to do it manually since imshow() will do it automatically for you.
Nguyen Tan Duoc
Nguyen Tan Duoc il 15 Ago 2015
CT is uint16, not double. I got that figure after command:
a=[0:1/2062:1]';
C=[a a a];
colormap(C)
colorbar
I hadn't use function image yet!
Image Analyst
Image Analyst il 15 Ago 2015
Then how did you display the image?
Nguyen Tan Duoc
Nguyen Tan Duoc il 20 Ago 2015
Modificato: Nguyen Tan Duoc il 20 Ago 2015
I would display CT. But it was too weir with that color bar.

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