Automatic cropping

2 views (last 30 days)
Jack
Jack on 8 Apr 2011
Edited: DGM on 12 Feb 2023
I have a cbir system and the output results depends on the cropping of the query image boundary and has to be the same as the cropping of the image boundary in the database. so i was wondering is there a way to crop an image automatically. e.g i do edge detection which gives outlines of the image. i want to crop a certain part of the image automatically. image is a numberplate i want automatic cropping of the image to only include the characters of the number plate and not any other extra little characters unless necessary if the letters mix in with the tiny characters.
an example would be good.
i.e.
this is the start of my code
a=imread(numberplate.jpg);
gr=rgb2gray(a);
bw=im2bw(gr);
edge=edge(bw,'canny',[0.15, 0.3])
crp=imcrop(edge)
This is manual i need automatic.
thanks

Answers (6)

Walter Roberson
Walter Roberson on 8 Apr 2011
Do you have code now to detect the portion of the image which is the license plate?

Sean de Wolski
Sean de Wolski on 8 Apr 2011
Copy and paste that into a script||function and it'll be automatic.
  16 Comments
Jack
Jack on 22 Apr 2011
Moved: DGM on 11 Feb 2023
i tried what you said
when i reach up to reg=regionprops('BoundingBox')
you said to ceil the first two entries i ddn't know which of the 52 coordinates do i look at.
im guessing its is the bound that captures the whole numberplate. through the loop i said.
but when i ceil(first 2 entries i.e. xmin, ymin) then add entries 1 and 2 to 3 and 4 respectively after the ceil func.
its ok up this point but when i do icrop=i(ymin:ymax,xmin:max,:) it says index esceeds matrix dimension or something. if i do Capital I(ymin:ymax,xmin:xmax,:) says undefine function or variable I
i need help with this thanks
LAXMI NARAYAN SONI
LAXMI NARAYAN SONI on 7 May 2017
Moved: DGM on 11 Feb 2023
Yes this is the right way.... U also have to be use a loop.

Sign in to comment.


Wolfgang Schwanghart
Wolfgang Schwanghart on 11 Apr 2011
HTH, Wolfgang

priya
priya on 20 Apr 2011
Edited: DGM on 11 Feb 2023
I guess this should work... (not sure though). when you do imcrop() you should be able to right click and get the co-ordinates of the image which you have selected for croping.
%ime1 = findimage();
a=imread(numberplate.jpg);
gr=rgb2gray(ime1);
% BW=im2bw(gr);
edit=edge(gr,'canny',[0.15, 0.3])
im1 = imcrop(edit,[100.5 101.5 456 87]); imshow(im1);

LAXMI NARAYAN SONI
LAXMI NARAYAN SONI on 7 May 2017
Edited: Walter Roberson on 14 May 2017
if u have a yellow color no. plate then u can use color based cropping... ike u can crop only yellow color. as simple as that.
clc
clear all
close all
a = imread('car3.jpg');
%b=imshow(a)
red = a(:,:,1);
green = a(:,:,2);
blue = a(:,:,3);
figure,imshow(red);
figure,imshow(green);
figure,imshow(blue);
%d = impixel(a);
i=size(a)
for c=0:i
if a(:,:,1)>13 or <255
if a(:,:,2)>0 or <201
if a(:,:,3)>0 or <104
d = imcrop(a);
figure,imshow(d)
end
end
end
end
  1 Comment
DGM
DGM on 11 Feb 2023
Edited: DGM on 12 Feb 2023
It's a good thing that code isn't even valid, because even in concept, it would accomplish nothing worth the cost of execution.
Consider a 1000x1000x3 RGB image. For each element in the array, you ostensibly want to:
  1. test to see if the entire image is within a prismatic volume within the RGB color space
  2. if it is, display the full image in a window and request that the user interactively select a region with the mouse, right click, and then select "crop image" from a dropdown menu
  3. display the cropped region and then discard it
So either the first test fails and the code does literally nothing but spend time warming your CPU, or you're going to make the user do the exact same manual task three million times. Like I said, it's a good thing that it's not valid syntax.

Sign in to comment.


Samreen kayani
Samreen kayani on 9 Jan 2019
i want to segment each letter individually but bounding box divid 1 into 11 instead of 1.12 my answere is 11.112

Community Treasure Hunt

Find the treasures in MATLAB Central and discover how the community can help you!

Start Hunting!