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I'm currently trying to detect whether a level crossing barrier has been deployed on an image using HoughLines in OpenCV. I thought my code would draw a line on my image, so long as the barrier appears in it - but instead I get an error message saying "Mat data type is not compatible". Can show me how to detect lines in Java with OpenCV?

public class DetectLines {

public static void main(String args[]) {

    System.loadLibrary(Core.NATIVE_LIBRARY_NAME);

    Mat eventless = Highgui.imread("files/eventless.png");
    Mat barrier = Highgui.imread("files/barrier/lc-00201.png");
    Mat difference = new Mat();
    Mat lines = new Mat();

    Core.absdiff(eventless, barrier, difference);

    Mat grey = new Mat();
    Imgproc.cvtColor(difference, grey, Imgproc.COLOR_BGR2GRAY);

    Imgproc.HoughLines(grey, lines, 5.0, 4.0, 7);

    Imshow ims1 = new Imshow("Lines");
    ims1.showImage(lines);

}

}

3 Answers 3

9

The lines are returned in the lines matrix, which has two columns in which each line returns the rho and theta parameters of the polar coordinates. These coordinates refer to the distance between the top-left corner of the image and the line rotation in radians, respectively. So, in order to use the show method you must create a Mat that will represent the lines using the line coordinates.

  public Mat getHoughTransform(Mat image, double rho, double theta, int threshold) {
    Mat result = Image.getInstance().getImage().clone();
    Mat lines = new Mat();
    Imgproc.HoughLines(image, lines, rho, theta, threshold);

    for (int i = 0; i < lines.cols(); i++) {
        double data[] = lines.get(0, i);
        double rho1 = data[0];
        double theta1 = data[1];
        double cosTheta = Math.cos(theta1);
        double sinTheta = Math.sin(theta1);
        double x0 = cosTheta * rho1;
        double y0 = sinTheta * rho1;
        Point pt1 = new Point(x0 + 10000 * (-sinTheta), y0 + 10000 * cosTheta);
        Point pt2 = new Point(x0 - 10000 * (-sinTheta), y0 - 10000 * cosTheta);
        Imgproc.line(result, pt1, pt2, new Scalar(0, 0, 255), 2);
    }
    return result;
}

And this is a easier way to do it. It involve the Imgproc.HoughLinesP method.

public Mat getHoughPTransform(Mat image, double rho, double theta, int threshold) {
    Mat result = Image.getInstance().getImage().clone();
    Mat lines = new Mat();
    Imgproc.HoughLinesP(image, lines, rho, theta, threshold);

    for (int i = 0; i < lines.cols(); i++) {
        double[] val = lines.get(0, i);
        Imgproc.line(result, new Point(val[0], val[1]), new Point(val[2], val[3]), new Scalar(0, 0, 255), 2);
    }
    return result;
}
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1 Comment

lines are returned in rows not columns - therefore use lines.cols() in loop and lines.get(i, 0)
1

in Android or Java its the same idia.you must to do it in for (); to get the theta and row after you get start point and the end point ,you can core the line.(core.line) but dont forget to transfer the mat that you get the values from her to other. after this>>release the mat. hope thats its help u. r.i enjoy

Comments

-1

Edit: See lordache's answer which is Java specific.

Useful reading: How are two-element vector represented in a OpenCV Mat in Java?


Check this tutorial and look for the section "Standard Hough Line Transform".

lines should not be a cv::Mat, but a std::vector<cv::Vec2f> lines; that later on you can visualize with a code like the one showed in the link:

for( size_t i = 0; i < lines.size(); i++ )
{
  float rho = lines[i][0], theta = lines[i][1];
  Point pt1, pt2;
  double a = cos(theta), b = sin(theta);
  double x0 = a*rho, y0 = b*rho;
  pt1.x = cvRound(x0 + 1000*(-b));
  pt1.y = cvRound(y0 + 1000*(a));
  pt2.x = cvRound(x0 - 1000*(-b));
  pt2.y = cvRound(y0 - 1000*(a));
  line( cdst, pt1, pt2, Scalar(0,0,255), 3, CV_AA);
}

7 Comments

Thanks for this. Is there any chance you could write it in Java though? That's the trouble I'm having - almost all the tutorials are for C++ or Python...
@Zetland Interesting. Where's the Java interface defined? In fact it's not documented at all on OpenCV guide. Besides, I haven't written in Java for ages, I won't be able to support you in the translation.
I don't know if it's defined anywhere. It's very annoying. I'm having to use it for my course...
@Zetland I have posted this question
@Zetland I got an answer to the question, can you let me/him know if it works?
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