Hi Curtis,
A GIL image is a container of pixels. It allocates and deallocates the pixels. As such it doesn't make sense to create a container type whose elements are constant.
Instead of images you should try to pass to your containers image views. You can get a constant and a mutable view of a given image.
If you want a constant reference to an image, you can use "const gray_float_image_t&"
Lubomir
On Feb 16, 2011, at 2:13 PM, Curtis Gehman wrote:
Lubomir,
I'm finally getting back to this. In addition to what you suggested, I boldly (or naively) tried to declare const versions.
typedef boost::gil::pixel gray_float_const_pixel_t;
typedef boost::gil::image gray_float_const_image_t;
typedef gray_float_const_image_t::view_t gray_float_const_view_t;
When VC++2010 gets into the last line, it stops after reporting the following error:
1>c:\perforce\software\thirdparty\boost\boost_1_44_0\boost\gil\color_base.hpp(82): error C2758: 'boost::gil::detail::homogeneous_color_base::_v0' : must be initialized in constructor base/member initializer list
1> with
1> [
1> Element=const float,
1> Layout=boost::gil::gray_layout_t,
1> K=1
1> ]
1> c:\perforce\software\thirdparty\boost\boost_1_44_0\boost\gil\color_base.hpp(76) : see declaration of 'boost::gil::detail::homogeneous_color_base::_v0'
1> with
1> [
1> Element=const float,
1> Layout=boost::gil::gray_layout_t,
1> K=1
1> ]
...
I'm no metaprogramming expert. So figuring this out is rather intimidating. Is there anything obvious that you can suggest?
Note that I'm using Boost 1.44.
Thanks.
On Dec 22, 2010, at 11:23 AM, Lubomir Bourdev mailto:lbourdev@adobe.com> wrote:
Hi Curtis,
GIL's default float type is not "float" but a special float wrapper to ensure that the range is 0..1
The built-in float has a range from -infinity to infinity and that does not work well when converting a value from another channel type.
If you want an image with a standard float you can create it like this (untested)
typedef pixel gray_float_pixel_t;
typedef image gray_float_image_t;
typedef gray_float_image_t::view_t gray_float_view_t;
...
However, don't use such images with algorithms that require channel ranges, such as color conversion.
Lubomir
On Dec 20, 2010, at 11:53 PM, Curtis Gehman wrote:
I'm trying to use GIL pixel iterators in a generic STL-style algorithm. I'm primarily using GIL for the generic 2D iterators. And in my context, I'm only interested in grayscale images.
The value_type associated with GIL iterators is a pixel type, which typically is an object representing multiple channels (e.g., colors). It makes sense that comparison operators (e.g., <) are not defined for general color pixel types.
For grayscale images, however, it makes sense that common arithmetic and comparison operators would be defined for the pixel type. This seems to be the case for the 8-bit grayscale GIL type (gray8_view_t). The iterator's value_type appears to be seamlessly evaluated to an unsigned char, exactly as I would expect.
When I try to use a float image view type, however, the same magic doesn't seem to happen. Below is some toy code that demonstrates the issue. When the last line is knocked out with "//", the code compiles. But with that second template instantiation (for floats) there, the compiler (gcc 4.2 and VC++2010) exits when it does not find an operator< for the iterator's value_type when instantiating for gray32fc_view_t.
I suppose that I can roll my own lessSrcView::x_iterator::value_type> functors. But I just started using GIL, and I'm hoping that there is a simpler solution.
Any ideas?
#include <algorithm>
#include <iterator>
#include <vector>
#include
namespace g = boost::gil;
using std::vector;
using std::iterator_traits;
template <typename SrcView> inline
vector
row_min(const SrcView& src)
{
typedef typename iterator_traits<typename SrcView::x_iterator>::value_type value_t;
vector result;
for (int y = 0; y < src.height(); ++y)
{
result.push_back(*std::min_element(src.row_begin(y), srcrow_end(y)));
}
return result;
}
// Explicit template instantiation
// Works for gray8c_view_t.
template vector::value_type> row_min(const g::gray8c_view_t& src);
// Compile error for gray32fc_view_t.
// No operator< for iterator_traits::value_type.
template vector::value_type> row_min(const g::gray32fc_view_t& src);
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