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I have a problem with my flood fill function:

void floodfill(int x, int y,Pixel old, Pixel new){

Pixel current = getPixel(x,y);

if(current.r == old.r && current.g == old.g && current.b == old.b){

    setPixel(x,y,new);

    floodfill(x+1,y,old,new);
    floodfill(x-1,y,old,new);
    floodfill(x,y+1,old,new);
    floodfill(x,y-1,old,new);
    floodfill(x+1,y+1,old,new);
    floodfill(x-1,y-1,old,new);
    floodfill(x+1,y+1,old,new);
    floodfill(x-1,y+1,old,new);
}
}

In struct 'Pixel' I have rgb values of the pixel. I am trying to fill a square and when I come to the border of the square (color changes from white to black, the border is at point x=200) the function is not changing to other pixels but just endlessly changing the x value to 198 and 199 (nevermind the y value). Can someone tell me what I am doing wrong?

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  • You're only filling if the current color is equal to the old color. Don't you want to fill only if the current color is not equal to the old color? P.S - new is a reserved keyword in C++ so you should not be trying to use it as a variable name.
    – aardvarkk
    Jun 19, 2014 at 20:15
  • What happens if new is equal to old?
    – Daniel
    Jun 19, 2014 at 20:19
  • 2
    ?? new is a keyword in C++; you can't use it for variable names.
    – Cornstalks
    Jun 19, 2014 at 20:21
  • Aardvarkk, the square is white inside and has a black borders. I set the old color to white, I want to set pixel and start recursion when the current color is white. When I get to the border of the square current changes to black. Jun 19, 2014 at 20:37

2 Answers 2

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This sounds like setPixel isn't setting the colour of (x,y) to the "new". So, what's happening is the following sequence of recursive calls:

(199,y)->(200,y) [This stops because the border doesn't have the same colour as old] ->(198, y)->(199,y) [(199, y) is getting called because setPixel likely didn't change the colour of (199, y)]->...

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One possible issue is that you are filling (x+1,y+1) twice and missing (x+1,y-1):

floodfill(x+1,y,old,new);
floodfill(x-1,y,old,new);
floodfill(x,y+1,old,new);
floodfill(x,y-1,old,new);
floodfill(x+1,y+1,old,new);
floodfill(x+1,y-1,old,new); //Missing this case
floodfill(x-1,y+1,old,new);
floodfill(x-1,y-1,old,new);
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  • Thank you for correcting my mistake but just after the first fill (x+1,y) my program loops. Jun 19, 2014 at 21:31
  • Do you mean your program gets into an infinite loop or something else? I assume your square border has a complete solid outline including its corners filled with the old color?
    – uesp
    Jun 19, 2014 at 21:40
  • Yes, infinite loop and the square border is solid black and corners are black too (square inside is white). Jun 19, 2014 at 21:50
  • What sort of system are you on? Does setPixel() actually set the pixel's color or is there a buffering layer that may interfere with subsequent getPixel() calls?
    – uesp
    Jun 19, 2014 at 22:31
  • I did a quick test and with the above fixes to the function and changing new to newColor it works fine (using a virtual pixel screen). This means the likely culprit is related to the setPixel()/getPixel() functions.
    – uesp
    Jun 19, 2014 at 22:53

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