3

I am writing a GUI program using Qt and doing some video processing with OpenCV. I am displaying the result of the OpenCV process (which is in a separate thread) in a label in the main GUI thread.

The problem I am having is cv::waitKey doesn't work unless I open a native OpenCV window opened using cv::namedWindow or cv::imshow. Does anybody know how to solve this?

Short example:

void Thread::run()
{
    //needed variables
    cv::VideoCapture capture(0);
    cv::Mat image;

    //main loop
    //cv::namedWindow("test");
    forever
    {
        capture>> image;
        if(!image.data)
            break;
        emit paintToDisplay(convertToQImage(image));
        cv::waitKey(40);
    }
}

With //cv::namedWindow("test"); i.e. commented, the program crashes with access violation error.

With cv::namedWindow("test"); i.e. uncommented, the program displays perfect but there's a window (named test) I don't want or need. Anybody?

3
  • Re-read your question, it doesn't make sense that with namedWindow() you have one behavior, and then with namedWindow() you have another. May 17, 2012 at 14:10
  • One is commented, the other isn't
    – Dyps
    May 17, 2012 at 14:11
  • @karlphillip I have edited to make it clearer.
    – Dyps
    May 17, 2012 at 14:20

4 Answers 4

4

cv::waitKey() only works with OpenCV windows, which is not what you are using right now.

I suggest you investigate a QT alternative, most probably qSleep(), which is provided by the QTest module:

QTest::qSleep(40);
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  • 1
    Yes I think it's a bit silly that waitKey() can't work on it's own. I found the solution: msleep(). It's a member of class QThread.
    – Dyps
    May 17, 2012 at 15:36
2

cv::waitkey is part of opencv's gui loop for show window

If you simply want to wait for a key press see QWaitcondition.

OR you could display another named window with no image in it, or a small 1,1 pixel image and just ignore the window

1

I found a solution to use msleep(). It's easy to use since it's a member of the class QThread.

Just thought i'd update this in case someone with a similar problem finds this thread.

1

You can call

qApp->processEvents();

instead of

cv::waitKey(40);

in the loop to make your application responsive and let the rest of the loop do their job.

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