1

I have a small bmp file and I want to get the RGB values of each pixel and output those values into a txt file if R, G, and B aren't all zero. I wrote the following program; it reads the header data correctly, but the RGB values aren't coming up. I assume I did something wrong in the for loop.

#include <iostream>
#include <fstream>
#include <cstdlib>

using namespace std;

int main()
{
ifstream ifs;
ofstream ofs;
char input[80];
char output[80];

cout<<"Input file name"<<endl;
cin>>input;
ifs.open(input, ios::binary);

if(!ifs)
{
    cout<<"Error in opening file"<<endl;
    system("pause");
    return 0;
}

cout<<"Output file name"<<endl;
cin>>output;
ofs.open(output, ios::binary);

ifs.seekg(2);

int file_size;
ifs.read((char*)&file_size, sizeof(int));

ofs<<"Bitmap size: "<<file_size<<"\r\n";

ifs.seekg(10);
int beg;
ifs.read((char*)&beg, sizeof(int));

ofs<<"Beggining of image: "<<beg<<"\r\n";

ifs.seekg(18);
int columns;
ifs.read((char*)&columns, sizeof(int));

ofs<<"Column number: "<<columns<<"\r\n";

ifs.seekg(22);
int rows;
ifs.read((char*)&rows, sizeof(int));

ofs<<"Row number: "<<rows<<"\r\n";

int image_size=0;
columns+=(3*columns)%4;
image_size=3*columns*rows;

ofs<<"Size of image"<<image_size<<"\r\n";

ifs.seekg(beg);

unsigned char R,G,B;
for(int i=0; i<image_size; i+=3)
{
    ifs.read((char*)&B, sizeof(unsigned char));
    ifs.read((char*)&G, sizeof(unsigned char));
    ifs.read((char*)&R, sizeof(unsigned char));

    if(R!=0 || G!=0 || B!=0)
    ofs<<"R: "<<R<<" G: "<<G<<" B: "<<B<<"  position in file: "<<ifs.tellg()<<"\r\n";
}


system("pause");
    return 0;


}
1
  • 2
    The BMP file format is a fair bit more involved than you assume. Use a library instead of rolling your own BMP importer. Dec 11, 2015 at 20:40

2 Answers 2

1

I ran the code and it works fine, I presume you mean by 'RGB values aren't coming up' you are not seeing the integer values, in which case this will fix it:

ofs<<"R: "<<int(R)<<" G: "<<int(G)<<" B: "<<int(B)<<"  position in file: "<<ifs.tellg()<<"\r\n";

Update: I posted earlier that you could replace ifs.read() with ifs >> R >> G >> B; As @Benjamin Lindley points out, this is incorrect as the >> operator is for formatted text, not binary. This means if the file contains eg a space/newline/etc character, the operator will skip it and take the next char. Better to use ifs.get(char) in this simple case.

4
  • Unless of course as @IInspectable points out, the file is not as simple as the one I used to test, in which case, get a library and use it to inspect the image internals Dec 11, 2015 at 20:53
  • I've missed that cast many times! Glad it helped. Can you mark my post as answer? Dec 11, 2015 at 21:00
  • 1
    You definitely cannot read the RGB values like that. They are stored as binary values, not as text. Dec 11, 2015 at 21:18
  • Bruce, of course! :) Sorry for the delay, this site is new to me
    – Matt
    Dec 11, 2015 at 21:29
0

You make several assumptions on the encoding of the image that you need to check.

If you look at the BMP header, you'll see:

  • at offset 28 that the file doesn't necessarily have 3*8 bits per pixel as you assume. It can have 1, 4, 8, or 24 bits per pixel;

  • at offset 30, the compression type is specified. It can be 0 for none (your assumption) but also be Running Length Encoding: 1=RLE-8 or 2=RLE-4.

  • at offset 34 you can directly read the size of image data in bytes so that you don't need to calculate it on your own.

Attention also that sizeof(int) could be in theory different from 4. It's not the problem here, but this explains the practice of using microsoft's DWORD (for int) and WORD (for short) as documented here.

I suspect that RLE is used in you file: In this case, due to the compression, you can no longer look at the pixel bytes at a fixed position: you'd need to uncompress the data first.

1
  • In my case it's that simple, it's an assignment for class I need to do :) but thanks for the feedback, i really appreciate it :) And thanks for the info about the size of the image! :)
    – Matt
    Dec 11, 2015 at 20:57

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.