fdh
fdh

Reputation: 5344

How to Apply Mask to Image in OpenCV?

I want to apply a binary mask to a color image. Please provide a basic code example with proper explanation of how the code works.

Also, is there some option to apply a mask permanently so all functions operate only within the mask?

Upvotes: 26

Views: 126683

Answers (6)

Pedro77
Pedro77

Reputation: 5294

Use copy with a mask.

Code sample:

Mat img1 = imread(path); // Load your image
Mat mask(img1 .size(),img1 .type()); // Create your mask
mask.setTo(0);
Point center(img1.cols/2, img1.rows / 2); 
const int radius = img1.cols / 5; // Circle radio
circle(mask, center, radius, 255, FILLED);// Draw a circle in the image center

Mat img2(img1 .size(),img1 .type()); // Outimage
img2.setTo(0); // Clear data
img1.copyTo(img2, mask); // Only values at mask > 0 will be copied.

Upvotes: 1

rudyryk
rudyryk

Reputation: 3805

Well, this question appears on top of search results, so I believe we need code example here. Here's the Python code:

import cv2

def apply_mask(frame, mask):
    """Apply binary mask to frame, return in-place masked image."""
    return cv2.bitwise_and(frame, frame, mask=mask)

Mask and frame must be the same size, so pixels remain as-is where mask is 1 and are set to zero where mask pixel is 0.

And for C++ it's a little bit different:

cv::Mat inFrame; // Original (non-empty) image
cv::Mat mask; // Original (non-empty) mask

// ...

cv::Mat outFrame;  // Result output
inFrame.copyTo(outFrame, mask);

Upvotes: 8

Ahmed
Ahmed

Reputation: 121

Here is some code to apply binary mask on a video frame sequence acquired from a webcam. comment and uncomment the "bitwise_not(Mon_mask,Mon_mask);"line and see the effect.

bests, Ahmed.

#include "cv.h"      // include it to used Main OpenCV functions.
#include "highgui.h" //include it to use GUI functions.

using namespace cv;
using namespace std;

int main(int argc, char** argv)
{
    int c;

int radius=100;
      CvPoint2D32f center;
    //IplImage* color_img;
      Mat image, image0,image1; 
        IplImage *tmp;
    CvCapture* cv_cap = cvCaptureFromCAM(0);

    while(1)  {
        tmp = cvQueryFrame(cv_cap); // get frame
          // IplImage to Mat
            Mat imgMat(tmp);
            image =tmp; 



    center.x = tmp->width/2;
    center.y = tmp->height/2;

         Mat Mon_mask(image.size(), CV_8UC1, Scalar(0,0,0));


        circle(Mon_mask, center, radius, Scalar(255,255,255), -1, 8, 0 ); //-1 means filled

        bitwise_not(Mon_mask,Mon_mask);// commenté ou pas = RP ou DMLA 





        if(tmp != 0)

           imshow("Glaucom", image); // show frame

     c = cvWaitKey(10); // wait 10 ms or for key stroke
    if(c == 27)
        break; // if ESC, break and quit
    }
    /* clean up */
    cvReleaseCapture( &cv_cap );
    cvDestroyWindow("Glaucom");

}

Upvotes: 1

Chaos_99
Chaos_99

Reputation: 2304

While @perrejba s answer is correct, it uses the legacy C-style functions. As the question is tagged C++, you may want to use a method instead:

inputMat.copyTo(outputMat, maskMat);

All objects are of type cv::Mat.

Please be aware that the masking is binary. Any non-zero value in the mask is interpreted as 'do copy'. Even if the mask is a greyscale image.

Also be aware that the .copyTo() function does not clear the output before copying.

If you want to permanently alter the original Image, you have to do an additional copy/clone/assignment. The copyTo() function is not defined for overlapping input/output images. So you can't use the same image as both input and output.

Upvotes: 69

volpato
volpato

Reputation: 1282

You can use the mask to copy only the region of interest of an original image to a destination one:

cvCopy(origImage,destImage,mask);

where mask should be an 8-bit single channel array.

See more at the OpenCV docs

Upvotes: 5

SSteve
SSteve

Reputation: 10728

You don't apply a binary mask to an image. You (optionally) use a binary mask in a processing function call to tell the function which pixels of the image you want to process. If I'm completely misinterpreting your question, you should add more detail to clarify.

Upvotes: 11

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