Remove black pixels from RGB image.
10 visualizzazioni (ultimi 30 giorni)
Mostra commenti meno recenti
I know that variations of this question get asked a lot on here, but I haven't found a solution that works for my problem very well.
How do I remove the black border from the image above programmatically, but not by using imcrop!? I would prefer to find & remove all of the black pixels in the image, by effectively deleting that data--leaving me with a (yes) cropped image that contains only the color region of this image. My attempt is as follows:
% define scale bar:
firstFrame = read(vidObj,1);
imshow(firstFrame,'InitialMagnification',300);
title('Define the scale bar region:','FontSize',16);
scaleBar = drawrectangle('Color',[1 1 0]);
roi_Bar = scaleBar.Position;
% cropped and screwed:
I = imcrop(firstFrame, roi_Bar);
figure;
imshow(I);
% remove black border:
mask = (I(:, :, 1) == 0) & (I(:, :, 2) == 0) & (I(:, :, 3) == 0);
I(mask) = [];
figure;
imshow(I); % this returns a horrific result
Many thanks in advance!
2 Commenti
Mario Malic
il 15 Gen 2021
Hi Luke,
I'll chip in my suggestions in here, while someone else with more knowledge comes by.
The border that you want to remove consists of different colors, not only of RGB [0, 0, 0], but RGB [0, 1, 0], and many other different colors. So, I guess the solution is to find all the colors that border consists of. Unfortunatelly, I can't help with this.
Risposta accettata
Image Analyst
il 16 Gen 2021
All black pixels cannot be removed since the image must remain rectangular. You can remove whole rows or whole columns, but not randomly scattered isolated groups of black pixels. With that colorbar image you have, you could delete everything up to and including the black outline of the colormap. Is that what you want to do?
7 Commenti
Image Analyst
il 17 Gen 2021
See my attached demo. Make the necessary adaptations.
But the best solution is to just get a thermal camera that outputs the temperature image. I think it's only the very cheapest FLIR model that gives you only a pseudocolored image. Pay a few bucks more and get one that has the image directly in degrees Celsius.
Più risposte (1)
Jeffrey Daniels
il 31 Gen 2023
img_2d = reshape(img,[numrows*numcols],3);
% Find the indices of the rows that are remove_color
remove_color = [0,0,0];
color_idx = ~ismember(img_2d,remove_color, 'rows');
% Replace remove_color with white
img_2d(color_idx) = [255,255,255];
img = reshape(img_2d,[numrows,numcols,3]);
% Remove the rows that are remove_color (Optional, if you really want to "remove" them", but as stated it will no longer be rectanglar. This only works if you want statistics on your colors.)
img_2d_nw = img_2d(~color_idx, :);
1 Commento
DGM
il 31 Gen 2023
Improvements to make a better answer:
- Format the code
- Make the example complete enough that it can be demonstrated in the editor
- Make sure the example does what you say it does
% a uint8 RGB image with black border
img = imread('peppers.png');
img = padarray(img,[10 10],0,'both');
imshow(img)
% get the size
[numrows,numcols,nchan,~] = size(img);
% reshape the image into a 3-column matrix
img_2d = reshape(img,numrows*numcols,3);
% Find the indices of the rows that are remove_color
remove_color = [0,0,0];
color_idx = ismember(img_2d,remove_color,'rows'); % select the correct region
% Either replace remove_color with a new color ...
new_color = [255 255 0]; % white would be invisible against the webpage background
img_2d(color_idx,:) = repmat(new_color,[nnz(color_idx) 1]); % make sure addressing works
img = reshape(img_2d,[numrows,numcols,3]);
imshow(img)
% ... or remove the rows that are remove_color
% (Optional, if you really want to "remove" them", but as stated it will no longer be rectanglar.
% This only works if you want statistics on your colors.)
img_2d_nw = img_2d(~color_idx, :);
Vedere anche
Community Treasure Hunt
Find the treasures in MATLAB Central and discover how the community can help you!
Start Hunting!