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Why OpenCV using BGR colour space instead of RGB. We all know that RGB is the convenient colour model for most of the computer graphics and also the human visual system works in a way that is similar to a RGB colour space. Is there any reason behind OpenCV BGR colour space?.

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    possible duplicate of BGR Color Space Jan 28, 2013 at 19:56
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    here you can find an information about the question
    – sturkmen
    Nov 8, 2015 at 1:11
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    @KateGregory, it not a dup. That question is a what. This question is a why. Jul 18, 2016 at 11:37
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    The human visual system does not work like RGB at all. May 11, 2021 at 9:14

3 Answers 3

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As Satya Mallick, CEO, OpenCV, blogged in 2015:

"The reason why the early developers at OpenCV chose BGR color format is probably that back then BGR color format was popular among camera manufacturers and software providers. E.g. in Windows, when specifying color value using COLORREF they use the BGR format 0x00bbggrr."

"BGR was a choice made for historical reasons and now we have to live with it. In other words, BGR is the horse’s ass in OpenCV."

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OpenCV reads in images in BGR format (instead of RGB) because when OpenCV was first being developed, BGR color format was popular among camera manufacturers and image software providers. The red channel was considered one of the least important color channels, so was listed last, and many bitmaps use BGR format for image storage. However, now the standard has changed and most image software and cameras use RGB format, which is why, in programs, it's good practice to initially convert BGR images to RGB before analyzing or manipulating any images.

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    Do you have a reference for this? As far as I know, it has always been RGB. Apr 26, 2021 at 14:30
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Why? For historical reasons. In 1987, Microsoft Windows ran on the IBM PS/2, and an early IBM video display controller, VGA, made use of the INMOS 171/176 RAMDAC chip, which was easier to use when images were stored in BGR format.

See details at Why BGR color order - Retrocomputing Stack Exchange

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  • This still doesn’t explain why OpenCV stores blue in the first byte. The linked Q&A specifically talks about storing x0bgr such that red is the first byte read. On a little endian machine, x0bgr has red in the first byte, OpenCV stores blue in the first byte. Apr 26, 2021 at 14:36

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