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I am using openCV and I have a 95,1 mat object of type CV_32F, which I would like to write to a binary file. I am using the code below however I cannot cast a 32F to an char type. Are there any suggestions? I also want to perform the reverse procedure of reading a binary file and storing the values into a mat object of the same type.

try{
    ofstream posBinary;
    posBinary.open("C:/Users/Dr.Mollica/Documents/TSR Datasets/signDatabasePublicFramesOnly/posSamps.bin", ios::out | ios::binary);
    posBinary.write((char *)featureVector, sizeof(featureVector);
}
catch (exception X){ cout << "Error! Could not write Binary file" << endl; }

Also to note, the reason I want to do it in a binary file is I will be writing a large number of these vectors to the file which will be read in to a machine learning algorithm. And from my understanding reading and writing to a binary file is the fastest way possible.

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1 Answer 1

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I recommend you to use OpenCV APIs to write cv::Mat to xml or yml files, which you can later read the cv::Mat back from them easily.

For example:

cv::Mat yourMatData;

// write Mat to file
cv::FileStorage fs("file.yml", cv::FileStorage::WRITE);
fs << "yourMat" << yourMatData;

// read Mat from file
cv::FileStorage fs2("file.yml", FileStorage::READ);
fs2["yourMat"] >> yourMatData;

Updated: If you prefer to write/read them to/from binary files, you can first convert cv::Mat to array/vector. And then write the array/vector to files.

To read on, check out Convert Mat to Array/Vector in OpenCV.

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    From my understanding reading an writing using binary files is faster. I am going to have a large number of these vectors to be fed to a learning algorithm so I would like to write and read them as fast as possible.
    – pdm
    Apr 19, 2015 at 2:23
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    @pdm I also suggest you use xml or yml. It's true that using binary files is faster, but xml or yml is fast enough for most cases. Remember not to test the speed in Visual Studio debugger, using xml or yml for large files in the debugger is VERY VERY slow. If you think xml or yml is too large, you can use xml.gz or yml.gz and OpenCV will automatically compress the file. Apr 19, 2015 at 2:43
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    Thank you I think I will stick with using a xml or yml file but for future reference would it be possible to give an example of how this could be done with a binary file. Thank you again for the speedy responses.
    – pdm
    Apr 19, 2015 at 2:54
  • @pdm After converting cv::Mat to array/vector, you can just write them into files as you normally did, e.g. posBinary.write((float *)yourArray, sizeof(float)*num); Apr 19, 2015 at 3:01
  • @herohuyongtao just as a correction for reading it was just cv::FileStorage fs2("file.yml", FileStorage::READ); fs2["yourMat"] >> yourMatData;
    – pdm
    Apr 19, 2015 at 3:40

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