55

The documentation on this seems incredibly spotty.

I've basically got an empty array of IplImage*s (IplImage** imageArray) and I'm calling a function to import an array of cv::Mats - I want to convert my cv::Mat into an IplImage* so I can copy it into the array.

Currently I'm trying this:

while(loop over cv::Mat array)
{
    IplImage* xyz = &(IplImage(array[i]));
    cvCopy(iplimagearray[i], xyz);
}

Which generates a segfault.

Also trying:

while(loop over cv::Mat array)
{
    IplImage* xyz;
    xyz = &array[i];
    cvCopy(iplimagearray[i], xyz);
}

Which gives me a compile time error of: error: cannot convert ‘cv::Mat*’ to ‘IplImage*’ in assignment

Stuck as to how I can go further and would appreciate some advice :)

2
  • possible duplicate of OpenCV C++ and cvSmooth May 31, 2011 at 14:07
  • Update: from OpenCV 4, IplImage and all of what they now call "the legacy C API" will be progressively removed. In OpenCV 4.0 "alpha", IplImage is already gone - as is CvMat.
    – godot
    Oct 9, 2018 at 17:47

8 Answers 8

22

cv::Mat is the new type introduce in OpenCV2.X while the IplImage* is the "legacy" image structure.

Although, cv::Mat does support the usage of IplImage in the constructor parameters, the default library does not provide function for the other way. You will need to extract the image header information manually. (Do remember that you need to allocate the IplImage structure, which is lack in your example).

10
  • 41
    It does provide a conversion to IplImage, creating a header without copying the data. So IplImage* img = new IplImage(mat); should work.
    – etarion
    Jan 12, 2011 at 13:12
  • 40
    Actually, you can do this: IplImage iplimg = mat; and just use &iplimg wherever you need an IplImage. There is no need for dynamic allocation.
    – Adi Shavit
    Jun 23, 2011 at 19:09
  • @etarion The IplImage doesn't have any function which can do that conversion. Why does IplImage* img = new IplImage(mat) is working?
    – ajaxhe
    Dec 10, 2013 at 3:52
  • @ajaxhe cv::Mat has a conversion operator to IplImage.
    – etarion
    Dec 11, 2013 at 15:02
  • 7
    This answer is false. See other answers, it can be converted very easily, should be removed from accepted answer as it might confuse other users.
    – Ariel M.
    Aug 1, 2015 at 17:31
21
Mat image1;
IplImage* image2=cvCloneImage(&(IplImage)image1);

Guess this will do the job.

Edit: If you face compilation errors, try this way:

cv::Mat image1;
IplImage* image2;
image2 = cvCreateImage(cvSize(image1.cols,image1.rows),8,3);
IplImage ipltemp=image1;
cvCopy(&ipltemp,image2);
6
  • Could you explain this snippet ?
    – chepseskaf
    Dec 3, 2012 at 12:57
  • 1
    @chepseskaf cast syntax explicit conversion.
    – LovaBill
    Dec 3, 2012 at 14:13
  • @William: I am getting taking address of temporary warning while using above code
    – Deepak
    Dec 16, 2014 at 7:09
  • That's a suboptimal solution as you need to copy pixels manually.
    – Ariel M.
    Aug 1, 2015 at 17:30
  • Did you manage to convert it using only the header? Also, IplImage is obsolete. If you need efficient code, use cv::Mat instead.
    – LovaBill
    Aug 3, 2015 at 8:07
14
 (you have cv::Mat old)
 IplImage copy = old;
 IplImage* new_image = ©

you work with new as an originally declared IplImage*.

4
  • this is the best way and it works as like a charm! all the other ways are too complicated and this is the best one. Worked for me
    – Hassen Ch.
    May 6, 2015 at 0:37
  • The first line gives compiler error "no suitable user-defined conversion from "cv::Mat" to "IplImage" exists".
    – Andyrey
    Mar 3, 2020 at 10:34
  • beware this create a use after free if you are not careful Mar 30, 2022 at 20:08
  • This does not work anymore. Error message: "No suitable conversion existis from cv:Mat to IplImage."
    – Laszlo
    Sep 23, 2023 at 13:23
12

Here is the recent fix for dlib users link

cv::Mat img = ...
IplImage iplImage = cvIplImage(img);
2
  • 2
    This is the only solution, which doesn't generate compiler error. I inserted it in my project with opencv420+dlib-19.8
    – Andyrey
    Mar 3, 2020 at 10:56
  • This should be the accepted answer.
    – Laszlo
    Sep 23, 2023 at 13:24
1

Personaly I think it's not the problem caused by type casting but a buffer overflow problem; it is this line

cvCopy(iplimagearray[i], xyz);   

that I think will cause segment fault, I suggest that you confirm the array iplimagearray[i] have enough size of buffer to receive copyed data

0

According to OpenCV cheat-sheet this can be done as follows:

IplImage* oldC0 = cvCreateImage(cvSize(320,240),16,1);
Mat newC = cvarrToMat(oldC0);

The cv::cvarrToMat function takes care of the conversion issues.

1
  • I think cvarrToMat no longer exists in opencv 2.4.5 Apr 21, 2013 at 7:01
0

In case of gray image, I am using this function and it works fine! however you must take care about the function features ;)

CvMat * src=  cvCreateMat(300,300,CV_32FC1);      
IplImage *dist= cvCreateImage(cvGetSize(dist),IPL_DEPTH_32F,3);

cvConvertScale(src, dist, 1, 0);
0
0

One problem might be: when using external ipl and defining HAVE_IPL in your project, the ctor

_IplImage::_IplImage(const cv::Mat& m)
{
    CV_Assert( m.dims <= 2 );
    cvInitImageHeader(this, m.size(), cvIplDepth(m.flags), m.channels());
    cvSetData(this, m.data, (int)m.step[0]);
}

found in ../OpenCV/modules/core/src/matrix.cpp is not used/instanciated and conversion fails.

You may reimplement it in a way similar to :

IplImage& FromMat(IplImage& img, const cv::Mat& m)
{
    CV_Assert(m.dims <= 2);
    cvInitImageHeader(&img, m.size(), cvIplDepth(m.flags), m.channels());
    cvSetData(&img, m.data, (int)m.step[0]);
    return img;
}

IplImage img;
FromMat(img,myMat);

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