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I have written an openCV code and my code has following statement:

cv::imshow("Matches", matchesImg);
cv::waitKey(0);

When I run the code either in Debug or Release I am not able to see window which shows me the output.

And this is happening for every project I create.

Not able to figure out the reason, Can someone please guide me on this?

I am coding on Windows 7 and Visual studio 2010, with opencv version of 2.4.6

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  • Can you demonstrate how you are confident matchesImg is valid? What error do you get?
    – KobeJohn
    Oct 24, 2013 at 12:15
  • Make sure matchesImg is not empty. Oct 24, 2013 at 12:19
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    Had a similar problem, see if this works: cv::namedWindow("Matches"); cv::imshow("Matches", matchesImg); cv::waitKey();
    – Alexey
    Oct 24, 2013 at 13:35
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    @CTZStef Yep you said it first. you should post it as answer! I think the fact that you have to explicitly create a window first with namedWindow is a bug in OpenCV.
    – Alexey
    Oct 24, 2013 at 14:19
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    @Armin Mustafa, could you post more code around the two lines you provided so we can understand why cv::namedWindow("Matches"); apparently fixes the problem? Also, are you using a prebuilt version of OpenCV, or have you rebuilt yourself. Anything else noteworthy, like OpenGL or QT?
    – Bull
    Oct 26, 2013 at 14:21

1 Answer 1

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As I mentioned in the comments, you have to create a window first, using namedWindow with the same window name as in imshow See this tutorial for details.

EDIT

This strongly suggest that you have to create the window beforehand. Some may argue that it didn't work this way for previous versions of OpenCV. Then, let's say this solution apply at least to OpenCV 2.4.6, which is the version of concern here (and it solved the problem).

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    While this may be true for 2.4.6, it isn't (for me, at least) on 2.4.4.
    – Bull
    Oct 24, 2013 at 23:17
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    I just checked the 2.4.4 source. imshow() just calls cvShowImage() and, on Windows at least, if the named window doesn't already exist cvNamedWindow() is called to create it. Therefore your answer does not apply to OpenCV 2.4.4 on Windows 7, and possible not other platforms.
    – Bull
    Oct 26, 2013 at 0:54
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    At the link you provided I can't see anything that suggests (even weakly) that the window must be created beforehand. Looking at the C++ source for the function imshow() I see that it just calls the C function cvShowImage(). You can see that at github.com/Itseez/opencv/blob/2.4.6/modules/highgui/src/…. Also you can see what cvShowImage() does at github.com/Itseez/opencv/blob/2.4.6/modules/highgui/src/… . Try it for yourself? Probably there is something else going on the OP's code. The links are for OpenCV 2.4.6.
    – Bull
    Oct 26, 2013 at 3:00
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    You need to call namedWindow() if you want non-default window propertties.
    – Bull
    Oct 26, 2013 at 14:17
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    @CTZStef - KeillRandor is correct. Don't bother with the tutorials, look at the source! imshow() calls cvShowImage() and, for windows at least, if the window does not exist this code gets executed: cvNamedWindow(name, CV_WINDOW_AUTOSIZE);. You ONLY need to call namedWindow() first if for some reason CV_WINDOW_AUTOSIZE doesn't suit you. OTH, perhaps there IS a bug in icvFindWindowByName(). But that doesn't affect me - never used namedWindow()
    – Bull
    Jul 22, 2014 at 13:58

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