155

I am kind of confused with type() method of Mat object in OpenCV.
If I have following lines:

mat = imread("C:\someimage.jpg");
type = mat.type();

and type = 16, how do I find out what type of mat matrix is?.
I tried to find the answer in its manual and in a couple of books in vain.

4
  • 9
    For human interpretation, prefer the use of depth() and channels(), instead of using type() which returns a complex mix between datatype and number of channels.
    – BConic
    Feb 28, 2014 at 8:14
  • @Aldur, The return value of depth() still isn't human readable. you have to compare it to the defines: CV_8U, CV_8S, etc...
    – Octopus
    Jul 31, 2015 at 16:21
  • 1
    @octopus sure but with a bit of practice you can learn the common depth() codes, which is far harder for type().
    – BConic
    Jul 31, 2015 at 16:29
  • 1
    Please note that depth() returns the CV enum value for this type (a bit misleading to beginners). If you need size of one number stored in the Mat in bytes use Mat.elemSize1(). If you need the type at runtime, e.g. within a function where different types are passed into it, you can find a template type TypeDepth<> (maybe we should rename it since it is no CV depth) here: stackoverflow.com/questions/15245262/…
    – karsten
    Sep 27, 2017 at 16:07

6 Answers 6

270

For debugging purposes in case you want to look up a raw Mat::type in a debugger:

C1 C2 C3 C4 C(5) C(6) C(7) C(8)
CV_8U 0 8 16 24 32 40 48 56
CV_8S 1 9 17 25 33 41 49 57
CV_16U 2 10 18 26 34 42 50 58
CV_16S 3 11 19 27 35 43 51 59
CV_32S 4 12 20 28 36 44 52 60
CV_32F 5 13 21 29 37 45 53 61
CV_64F 6 14 22 30 38 46 54 62

So for example, if type = 30 then OpenCV data type is CV_64FC4. If type = 50 then the OpenCV data type is CV_16UC(7).

6
  • 11
    What does the C(X) mean?
    – Alan
    May 8, 2017 at 2:39
  • 9
    ^The number of channels in the matrix
    – A B
    Jun 26, 2017 at 4:48
  • 5
    ^ What's the difference between C5 and C(5), then? Aug 24, 2017 at 8:07
  • 1
    There is no difference.
    – empty
    Mar 5, 2018 at 6:31
  • 6
    @MateenUlhaq just a small note: You can create images(Mat Objects) of upto 4-bit channels without the bracket (in the type parameter) but creating images of >=5 channels will return an error. Example: Mat img(23, 53, CV_64FC(5)) is valid but Mat img(23, 53, CV_64FC5) is invalid. Aug 5, 2020 at 11:03
262

Here is a handy function you can use to help with identifying your opencv matrices at runtime. I find it useful for debugging, at least.

string type2str(int type) {
  string r;

  uchar depth = type & CV_MAT_DEPTH_MASK;
  uchar chans = 1 + (type >> CV_CN_SHIFT);

  switch ( depth ) {
    case CV_8U:  r = "8U"; break;
    case CV_8S:  r = "8S"; break;
    case CV_16U: r = "16U"; break;
    case CV_16S: r = "16S"; break;
    case CV_32S: r = "32S"; break;
    case CV_32F: r = "32F"; break;
    case CV_64F: r = "64F"; break;
    default:     r = "User"; break;
  }

  r += "C";
  r += (chans+'0');

  return r;
}

If M is a var of type Mat you can call it like so:

string ty =  type2str( M.type() );
printf("Matrix: %s %dx%d \n", ty.c_str(), M.cols, M.rows );

Will output data such as:

Matrix: 8UC3 640x480 
Matrix: 64FC1 3x2 

Its worth noting that there are also Matrix methods Mat::depth() and Mat::channels(). This function is just a handy way of getting a human readable interpretation from the combination of those two values whose bits are all stored in the same value.

7
  • 1
    I've created Gist with method from the answer in Objective-C. Enjoy! Dec 18, 2014 at 9:57
  • 1
    For an overview of the types also see this answer (5=32F, 6=64F): stackoverflow.com/questions/12335663/…
    – Lenar Hoyt
    Jan 22, 2016 at 0:04
  • 1
    Can someone actually make this into a handy function for openCV?
    – SDG
    Jan 30, 2017 at 10:18
  • 3
    To get depth and chans you could use the macros CV_MAT_DEPTH(type) and CV_MAT_CN(type), respectively. Their type should also be int, which would allow you to use to_string(chans) instead of chans+'0'.
    – John
    Sep 1, 2017 at 13:46
  • 1
    @John On the other hand, to_string is slightly slower if it's known in advance that the number is exactly 1-digit.
    – user202729
    Aug 14, 2021 at 1:42
37

In OpenCV header "types_c.h" there are a set of defines which generate these, the format is CV_bits{U|S|F}C<number_of_channels>
So for example CV_8UC3 means 8 bit unsigned chars, 3 colour channels - each of these names map onto an arbitrary integer with the macros in that file.

Edit: See "types_c.h" for example:

#define CV_8UC3 CV_MAKETYPE(CV_8U,3)
#define CV_MAKETYPE(depth,cn) (CV_MAT_DEPTH(depth) + (((cn)-1) << CV_CN_SHIFT))

eg.
depth = CV_8U = 0
cn = 3
CV_CN_SHIFT = 3

CV_MAT_DEPTH(0) = 0
(((cn)-1) << CV_CN_SHIFT) = (3-1) << 3 = 2<<3 = 16

So CV_8UC3 = 16 but you aren't supposed to use this number, just check type() == CV_8UC3 if you need to know what type an internal OpenCV array is.
Remember OpenCV will convert the jpeg into BGR (or grey scale if you pass '0' to imread) - so it doesn't tell you anything about the original file.

2
  • It's useful to know that types_c.h is located in the core module, e.g. if you have OpenCV installed directly on C drive in a folder opencv_2.4.11 the header file would be at C:\opencv_2.4.11\build\include\opencv2\core\types_c.h Aug 29, 2016 at 17:49
  • Also, if you're using an IDE which includes "go do definition" functionality like Visual Studio you can type cv::CV_8U right-click and select Go to Definition to open the file where cv::CV_8U is defined which is types_c.h. Aug 29, 2016 at 17:53
19

This was answered by a few others but I found a solution that worked really well for me.

System.out.println(CvType.typeToString(yourMat.type()));
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  • 5
    C++: cv::typeToString
    – Matt Eding
    Mar 12, 2021 at 22:04
  • Note: This API is added since 3.4.2 for 3.x branch. The 4.x branch has this API since 4.0.0.
    – ChrisZZ
    Jan 27, 2022 at 0:46
16

I've added some usability to the function from the answer by @Octopus, for debugging purposes.

void MatType( Mat inputMat )
{
    int inttype = inputMat.type();

    string r, a;
    uchar depth = inttype & CV_MAT_DEPTH_MASK;
    uchar chans = 1 + (inttype >> CV_CN_SHIFT);
    switch ( depth ) {
        case CV_8U:  r = "8U";   a = "Mat.at<uchar>(y,x)"; break;  
        case CV_8S:  r = "8S";   a = "Mat.at<schar>(y,x)"; break;  
        case CV_16U: r = "16U";  a = "Mat.at<ushort>(y,x)"; break; 
        case CV_16S: r = "16S";  a = "Mat.at<short>(y,x)"; break; 
        case CV_32S: r = "32S";  a = "Mat.at<int>(y,x)"; break; 
        case CV_32F: r = "32F";  a = "Mat.at<float>(y,x)"; break; 
        case CV_64F: r = "64F";  a = "Mat.at<double>(y,x)"; break; 
        default:     r = "User"; a = "Mat.at<UKNOWN>(y,x)"; break; 
    }   
    r += "C";
    r += (chans+'0');
    cout << "Mat is of type " << r << " and should be accessed with " << a << endl;
    
}
1
  • Mats can have upto 512 channels. this code will struggle beyond 9 channels. since that's very unusual, it's something to fix but not an immediate problem. Jul 2, 2022 at 11:36
8

Base on @Matt Edding's comment (Thanks Mat(T) pun intended ;)):

cout << cv::typeToString(inputMat.type()) << endl;

Works like a charm.

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